Two of the most frequently confused terms in sustainable architecture are Passive House and net zero energy. Both aim to dramatically reduce energy consumption — but they take fundamentally different approaches, have different costs, and suit different projects. Here is a clear comparison for Seattle homeowners.
What Is Passive House?
Passive House (Passivhaus) is a rigorous building performance standard focused on reducing heating and cooling demand through superinsulation, airtight construction, triple-pane windows, and mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (HRV). A certified Passive House uses roughly 90% less heating energy than a code-minimum building.
Key requirements: Max 15 kWh/m²/year heating demand, max 0.6 air changes/hour at 50 Pa, specific primary energy limits.
Cost premium in Seattle: 10-20% over conventional construction
What Is Net Zero Energy?
A net zero energy home produces as much energy as it consumes over a year — typically through rooftop solar combined with a highly efficient building envelope. It is a performance target, not a prescriptive standard, which gives designers more flexibility.
Cost premium in Seattle: 5-15% over conventional construction (solar adds $20,000-$40,000)
Which Is Better for Seattle?
Seattle’s mild climate makes Passive House somewhat easier to achieve than in colder climates — but also means the energy savings are smaller in absolute terms. Net zero is often more cost-effective per dollar of investment in Seattle’s climate because solar production is meaningful (despite clouds) and heating loads are moderate.
Choose Passive House if: Maximum comfort and airtightness are priorities; you want third-party certification; you are building a very high-performance envelope regardless of solar.
Choose net zero if: You want carbon neutrality at lower cost premium; you are retrofitting an existing home; flexibility in how you achieve the target matters.
Piper Cole Architects has designed Passive House and net zero projects in the Seattle area. Contact us for a free consultation on sustainable design for your project. Call 425-753-6452.
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Piper Cole Architects offers a free initial consultation for all project types — residential, commercial, ADU, and renovation. No obligation. Based in Kirkland, WA. Serving the entire Seattle metro area since 2000.