
Make-Up Air in a Kitchen Remodel: What It Is and When You Need It
Here’s the simple reality: if your kitchen range hood exhausts air out of your home, your home needs a safe, controlled way to replace that air. Otherwise, you can create negative pressure that hurts performance, comfort, and—depending on the home—can create safety concerns.
This guide explains what make-up air is, what can happen without it, when it commonly comes up in kitchen remodels (especially in tighter homes), and what system options exist. It also outlines the planning steps that help you avoid last-minute permit surprises and change orders.
For related planning, see Kitchen Appliances & Ventilation Upgrades and the companion post Range Hood CFM Sizing: How to Choose Ventilation That Works.
What Is Make-Up Air?
Make-up air is replacement air that enters your home when air is exhausted out. The most common trigger in a kitchen remodel is a powerful range hood vented to the exterior.
If your hood exhausts 600 cubic feet of air per minute (600 CFM), your house needs ~600 CFM of air coming back in. If it can’t, the house pulls air from wherever it can—often in ways you don’t want.
What Happens Without Make-Up Air?
Some homes “get away with it,” but many don’t—especially as homes become tighter due to upgraded windows, air sealing, and better insulation.
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Common Symptoms
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Why It Comes Up More Often in Modern Remodels
Older homes are often leaky enough that air replaces itself through gaps and cracks. Remodels tend to reduce that leakage.
Make-up air is more likely to matter if:
- Your home has newer windows, air sealing, or major insulation upgrades
- You’re installing a higher-CFM range hood
- You have an open floor plan where kitchen air spreads easily
- You cook often with high heat (searing, frying, wok cooking)
When Do You “Need” Make-Up Air?
Make-up air triggers depend on local code, the hood’s airflow (CFM), and existing home conditions. Some jurisdictions commonly flag higher-CFM hoods for make-up air review (often 400+ CFM), but thresholds and enforcement vary.
Important: Requirements vary by city and project conditions. Confirm details with qualified professionals and your local building department early—before cabinets and drywall are finalized.
Make-Up Air System Options (What Homeowners Should Know)
There isn’t one universal “make-up air system.” Options range from simple to highly integrated.
A controlled intake that opens when the hood runs. Can include filtration.
Opens when negative pressure is detected, often paired with filtration and quieter operation.
Helps reduce cold drafts in winter and improve comfort. Coordination matters.
Placement Rules That Keep Make-Up Air Comfortable
Make-up air can be “technically correct” and still feel awful if it’s delivered poorly. Comfort is a design problem, not just a mechanical one.
Practical rules of thumb:
- Don’t blow make-up air directly on people (drafty)
- Don’t blow it on surfaces (can be noisy and uncomfortable)
- Keep the “air circuit” short (short, predictable airflow paths work best)
How Make-Up Air Ties Into HVAC and Permits
Make-up air is often coordinated with HVAC because incoming air affects comfort and pressure balance. It may also be reviewed during permitting and inspections depending on scope and jurisdiction.
Best practice: Treat ventilation and make-up air as part of your kitchen design blueprint—not an afterthought. The earlier it’s addressed, the easier it is to integrate cleanly.
Planning Steps (So This Doesn’t Become a Change Order)
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Choose your range and hood early
CFM and hood type drive the rest of the system. -
Confirm duct routing feasibility
Venting to the exterior is ideal when possible, but routing constraints are real. -
Ask about make-up air before cabinets are ordered
This is where cost and complexity stay manageable. -
Coordinate with HVAC and permits
Requirements vary—confirm with qualified professionals and local authorities. -
Prioritize comfort and noise
A system you hate will get bypassed. Comfort design matters.
FAQs: Make-Up Air in Kitchen Remodels
Is make-up air only needed for “big” range hoods?
It’s most commonly discussed with higher-CFM hoods, but the real driver is how tight your home is, how the system is designed, and what your local jurisdiction requires.
Can’t I just crack a window?
Opening a window can relieve pressure, but it’s not a consistent, code-aligned solution for many projects—and it’s not realistic for everyday cooking in cold or hot weather. A designed system is more reliable and comfortable.
Will make-up air make my kitchen cold in winter?
It can if it’s not planned well. Placement, filtration, and whether the air is tempered all affect comfort. This is why HVAC coordination is important.
Does make-up air add a lot of cost?
Cost varies widely depending on system type and complexity. The biggest cost driver is when it’s discovered late. Planning early usually keeps the solution simpler.
Related Kitchen Planning Resources
Want a Make-Up Air + HVAC Coordination Review?
Make-up air doesn’t have to be confusing—or discovered at the last minute. The Fortress Builders coordinates kitchen ventilation, make-up air planning, and HVAC integration early so your kitchen performs the way it should.
Request a Design Consult Explore Kitchen Remodeling
We’ll help you select the right hood, plan a clean duct path, and confirm make-up air needs before the build is underway.
