
Long Island weather can flip fast—from sunny to slushy in a day. No stress. Here’s a friendly, no-fuss plan to get your place winter-ready. Each step is easy to do yourself or simple to hire out if you’d rather not get on a ladder or deal with tools.
Start With Your Heating System: Your Winter Lifeline
Let’s start with the heat. If you can, book a quick HVAC tune-up before November. A tech will clean things up, check for gas leaks, and make sure the system is running safely. It’s fast, and it can help your home warm up quicker with less effort.
Between visits, change your heat filter once a month during the season. It’s a two-minute job that helps the system breathe better. Bump the thermostat up a few degrees to be sure the heat kicks on. Also, pull furniture and rugs back from vents so warm air can move—easy win.
Seal Your Home Like Fort Knox: Every Gap Matters
Do a quick draft check on a breezy day. Grab a stick of incense and hold it near windows, doors, outlets on outside walls, and baseboards. If the smoke wiggles, you’ve found a leak you can seal.
Swap out tired weather stripping around doors and windows—it’s inexpensive and makes a big difference. Add a door sweep if you feel cold air at the bottom of the door. For windows, run a bead of caulk in small gaps, and use a clear plastic film kit on single-pane glass. It’s basically shrink wrap for windows and installs easily with a hair dryer.
Winterize Your Sprinklers and Outdoor Water
Before nights dip below freezing, shut off the irrigation line and outdoor spigots. Have in-ground sprinklers? Schedule a quick “blowout” with a local sprinkler company—they push air through the pipes to clear water so nothing cracks underground. Disconnect hoses and stash them inside so they don’t freeze and split.
Protect Your Plumbing: Frozen Pipes Are Expensive Nightmares
Find your main water shut-off now and label it so anyone at home can spot it fast. If a pipe ever bursts, turning that valve off quickly can save you a big headache.
Wrap exposed pipes in crawl spaces, garages, and basements with foam sleeves. On very cold nights, open the cabinet doors under sinks along exterior walls to let warm air in, let faucets drip a little to keep water moving, and keep the thermostat at 55°F or higher if you’re away. Simple steps, big peace of mind.
Give Your Roof and Gutters the Attention They Deserve
Clean gutters and downspouts so melting snow has a clear path to drain. Clogs can cause ice dams, which lead to leaks and stains indoors. Not a fan of ladders? No problem—call a local gutter crew. It’s usually a quick, affordable visit.
Make sure downspouts carry water at least six feet away from the foundation. From the ground, scan for missing or curled shingles and trim back branches hanging over the roof. Good attic ventilation also keeps roof temperatures even and helps prevent ice build-up.
Have Your Chimney and Fireplace Checked
If you light fires, get the chimney inspected and cleaned before the busy season. A licensed chimney sweep will clear out the sooty buildup (called creosote), check the flue and cap, and make sure the damper opens and closes smoothly. While you’re at it, press the test button on your carbon monoxide detectors and put in fresh batteries if needed.
Smart Energy Steps That Pay for Themselves
A programmable thermostat is an easy win: set 68°F when you’re home and 60–65°F when you’re sleeping or out. Comfortable and efficient. If your attic insulation looks thin—or it’s been about 10 years—adding more can keep heat from escaping. Also, seal little gaps in the basement or crawl space where cold air sneaks in. No fancy tools needed—just patience and a good tube of caulk.
Tune Up Your Snowblower and Winter Tools
Give your snowblower a five-minute shakedown before the first storm. Add fresh fuel (use stabilizer if the manual suggests), check the oil, and do a quick start to make sure it runs. Keep a spare spark plug and shear pins on the shelf—small parts, big lifesavers mid-storm. Prefer not to tinker? Local shops do quick pre-season tune-ups. Put shovels, ice melt, and traction mats by the door now so you’re not hunting for them in bad weather.
Prepare for Power Outages and Emergencies
Put together a small kit you can grab in a pinch: flashlights, extra batteries, and portable phone chargers. Keep at least one gallon of water per person per day for three days, plus easy, no-cook foods. Extra blankets and a battery-powered or hand-crank radio are great to have handy.
Lose power often? A portable generator can keep the basics going—always run it outside, away from windows and doors. If your basement gets water, add a battery backup to the sump pump. Learn how to open the garage door by hand, and keep one corded phone if you have a landline (cordless phones don’t work without power).
Protect Your Investment and Enjoy Winter Comfort
Start with the easy wins this weekend: change the heat filter, seal obvious drafts, clean the gutters, and winterize the sprinklers. Next up, book the chimney sweep and do a quick snowblower check. Set simple reminders for monthly filter changes and detector tests.
Don’t worry about doing it all at once—just chip away. If something feels like too much, hire a local pro and call it done. Make a short checklist, label your shut-off valves, and ask questions anytime.
