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Quick Answers

Does plywood offer any R-value?
Yes, but a modest one. Plywood has an R-value of roughly 1.0 to 1.25 per inch of thickness. It is real resistance that an energy model counts, but it is a small fraction of what a dedicated insulation layer provides. Plywood is a structural panel that insulates a little, not an insulation product.
What R-value does 3/4 inch plywood have?
About R-0.94. A 3/4-inch (18 mm) sheet at roughly R-1.25 per inch lands just under R-1. That is a useful bonus in a wall or roof build-up, but the cavity insulation or continuous rigid foam still does almost all of the thermal work.
What is the R-value of 1/2 inch plywood?
Around R-0.63. A 1/2-inch (12 mm) sheet contributes roughly two-thirds of a point of R-value. A 5/8-inch sheet sits near R-0.78, and a 1/4-inch sheet near R-0.31 — the relationship is linear with thickness.
What has more R-value, plywood or drywall?
Plywood, marginally. Plywood runs about R-1.0 to 1.25 per inch while gypsum drywall sits near R-0.9 per inch. The difference is small. Both are far below rigid foam, which reaches R-5.6 to 6.5 per inch and is the layer that actually carries an assembly's insulation.