I just did some bats in mine, they are a little more expensive but I think a little easier to work with. I did mine myself so it made more sense for me, I was told the blowers for the blow in would only shoot about 4 ft and the hose was only 50 ft long so it would not have went very far once I got it up into my attic. Either way you go, wear a mask as the dust goes everywhere
i personally like a r-19(6") bat insulation covered with 6" of blown on top. Depending on where you are, most places call for at least r-30 in a ceiling. For price comparison on your question. Lowes and hd sale 22.5lb bags that cover 61.1' @ r-13 for $10.75, and 40 sq ft of faced bats @ r-13 for $9.98. So thats $0.18/sq ft for loose vs $0.25/sq ft for batt not including taxes.
i personally like a r-19(6") bat insulation covered with 6" of blown on top. Depending on where you are, most places call for at least r-30 in a ceiling. For price comparison on your question. Lowes and hd sale 22.5lb bags that cover 61.1' @ r-13 for $10.75, and 40 sq ft of faced bats @ r-13 for $9.98. So thats $0.18/sq ft for loose vs $0.25/sq ft for batt not including taxes.
I was told once that you are not supposed to insulate an non heated/air conditioned space.

Why would you?![]()
From using both, cellulose has a better r value and resists air infiltration if installed correctly, is fireproof if it is purchased with a chemical addition. The only negative aside from the dust, is if it get wet..weighs a ton and dries slowly, which could be an issue with Sheetrock ceilings, wall areas becoming wet, much less an issue as it does dry out.
