No you cannot vent your bathroom exhaust fan into the attic.
Exhaust vent pipes in attic should be insulated and vented.
Just as is the case with insulation in other parts of your home you should regularly inspect and maintain the insulation on your duct work.
The solution properly insulate the vent ducts.
A cold duct allows condensation of moist indoor air leading to drips from the exhaust fan.
Although this isn t always possible in attic crawl spaces you should always insulate the duct to prevent condensation problems.
Does bathroom vent piping need to be insulated.
It really is a design choice.
The best exhaust fan venting is through smooth rigid ducts with taped joints and screwed to a special vent hood.
Duct already wrapped in insulation at home centers.
Of course all penetrations where drainage or vent pipe goes through walls especially into attic should be sealed around the pipe to prevent infiltration.
Otherwise the exhaust duct gets too cold when it runs through the attic.
However since the 2009 edition of the irc attics can be designed to be either vented or unvented.
We insulate the bath vent ductwork to minimize the condensation that will otherwise occur as warm moist bathroom exhaust air passes through cool ductwork in the building attic or roof cavity.
So the decision to vent an attic space is not dictated by building code.
Horizontal runs are covered with insulation bats in the attic usually.
If the insulation around your vent hood duct work becomes waterlogged because of a roof leak or similar problem the insulation s effectiveness will be compromised.
Hot air exhaust vents located at the peak of the roof allow hot air to escape.
Now that you have safely sealed the air leaks around the furnace exhaust you can work on insulating your attic space.
Your attic is not a temperature controlled environment is never the same temperature as your living space and generally closer to the temperature outside.
Although fiberglass may not burn it can melt contribute to a fire and the speed at which it spreads.
The reason exhaust pipes are insulated in unconditioned spaces your attic is because they carry warm and moist air from your home to outside.
You should never exhaust the bathroom fan directly into the attic.
Our photo above shows a long routing of bath vent fan ducts across an attic floor to an exit at the building soffit or eaves and the condensation of moisture in such vent lines.
Fiberglass insulation cannot just butt up to the vent pipe touching it.
In our neck of the woods vermont it is required by code to protect the vent stack from freezing.
Intake vents located at the lowest part of the roof under the eaves allow cool air to enter the attic.
Insulating around a furnace exhaust pipe.