Fast, Reliable Fireplace Services Across Farmingdale
Fireplace services in Farmingdale typically cost $180–$650 depending on whether you need a gas insert tune-up, firebox repair, or full fireplace conversion, and we’re usually on-site within the same day you call. Our Fireplace Services team knows the 11735 ZIP inside out — from the Cape Cods off Main Street to the split-levels near Republic Airport — because Robert Garcia, our owner and lead technician, has been diagnosing chimney problems in post-war Nassau County homes for 17 years. If your fireplace is smoking back into the room, your gas insert won’t light, or you’re worried about that original clay flue from the 1950s, call us at (866) 884-9512 for a free estimate.

What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
- 3
A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
- 4
You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Why Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York Is Farmingdale’s Preferred Fireplace Services Company
We’ve earned 1,096 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars — and plenty of them come from Farmingdale homeowners who found us after another company couldn’t figure out why their “repaired” chimney still leaked. Robert handles every job personally, so when you schedule fireplace service in Farmingdale, you get the decision-maker on your roof, not a subcontractor learning your chimney layout for the first time.
Our response time to Farmingdale averages same-day or next-day because we’re already working the South Shore corridor from Bethpage to Massapequa. We know which streets flood in heavy rain, which blocks catch the worst nor’easter winds off the Hempstead Plain, and which homes were built by Republic Aviation contractors versus the later Levittown-style ranches. That local fluency means faster diagnosis and repairs that actually last.
Our Fireplace Services in Farmingdale
Gas Fireplace Service
Gas fireplaces in Farmingdale’s 1940s–1960s housing stock often sit in chimneys that were never properly relined during the 1980s–90s conversion boom. We clean burner assemblies, check pilot and thermopile function, inspect gas line connections, and run a camera up the flue to verify your liner integrity. A typical gas fireplace service in Farmingdale runs $180–$280.
Wood Burning Fireplace
Original masonry fireplaces in Farmingdale Cape Cods and ranches were built for coal or oil-era draft patterns, not modern wood-burning loads. We inspect firebox brick, check for creosote buildup in undersized flues, and evaluate whether your chimney can safely handle the BTU output you’re asking from it. Most wood-burning inspections and cleanings in Farmingdale fall between $220–$340.
Fireplace Insert
This is where Farmingdale’s housing history creates the most hidden risk — and where we do our most important work. Thousands of local homes had gas or wood inserts installed decades ago without the stainless steel reliner required by code. The original terra-cotta flue tiles, sized for oil burners, crack under the different thermal expansion patterns of insert operation. We measure your firebox, specify the correct insert for your chimney’s actual capacity, and install a proper DuraFlex stainless liner so exhaust gases exit safely. Fireplace insert installation with liner in Farmingdale typically runs $2,800–$4,500.
Damper Repair
Cast-iron throat dampers in 60-plus-year-old Farmingdale chimneys corrode, seize, or warp from decades of heat cycling and salt-air exposure. A stuck damper wastes energy and can force smoke into your living space. We repair or replace with precision-fitted dampers that seal properly. Damper repair or replacement in Farmingdale costs $280–$550.
Firebox Repair
The firebox — the actual chamber where combustion happens — takes the most direct thermal abuse. In Farmingdale’s post-war homes, we’ve found cracked refractory panels, deteriorated mortar joints, and even heat-compromised structural steel behind the facing. Robert assesses whether repair with HeatShield refractory coating will suffice or if section rebuild is needed. Firebox repair in Farmingdale ranges from $450–$1,200.
Fireplace Conversion
Converting from wood to gas — or gas to a more efficient direct-vent system — in a Farmingdale home requires understanding what your chimney can actually handle. Many conversions here were done incorrectly the first time. We evaluate your flue size, draft characteristics, and appliance compatibility, then execute the conversion to current standards with proper venting. Fireplace conversion in Farmingdale typically runs $1,800–$3,800.

Trusted Brands We Service in Farmingdale
We install and service professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, and Famco — the same lines commercial chimney contractors use on Long Island. We keep common parts stocked for Farmingdale customers, so when your gas insert needs a new burner assembly or your crown needs HeatShield sealant, we’re not ordering and making you wait. That local inventory, combined with Robert’s 17 years of chimney-only focus, means most Farmingdale fireplace repairs finish in a single visit.
Common Fireplace Services Problems We See in Farmingdale Homes
- Cracked clay tile liners from unrelined gas conversions. The 1980s–90s oil-to-gas conversion boom hit Farmingdale hard, and most installers skipped the stainless reliner. Those original terra-cotta tiles are now cracked and offset, letting flue gases bypass into wall cavities — a hazard camera inspections in the 11735 ZIP uncover weekly.
- Soft or missing crown mortar letting water penetrate. Sixty years of Atlantic nor’easters beating across the flat Hempstead Plain have eroded crown mortar on Farmingdale’s original chimneys. Once water gets in, freeze-thaw cycles spall the brick and damage interior flue walls.
- Salt-accelerated flashing corrosion. Farmingdale’s coastal proximity — closer to the Atlantic than inland Nassau towns — means salt-laden air attacks chimney flashing faster. We routinely find rotted roof sheathing around chimney bases that inland inspectors miss because they’re not looking for this pattern.
- Undersized flues struggling with modern insert loads. Original chimneys built for oil-fired furnaces can’t handle the exhaust volume of contemporary wood or gas inserts. The mismatch creates poor draft, smoke backup, and accelerated creosote buildup.
Pricing for Fireplace Services in Farmingdale, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Farmingdale |
|---|---|
| Gas fireplace service & inspection | $180 – $280 |
| Wood-burning fireplace inspection & cleaning | $220 – $340 |
| Damper repair or replacement | $280 – $550 |
| Firebox repair (refractory/mortar) | $450 – $1,200 |
| Fireplace conversion (wood to gas / upgrade) | $1,800 – $3,800 |
| Fireplace insert with stainless liner install | $2,800 – $4,500 |
What moves you within these ranges? Accessibility of your chimney (steep roof pitches near Republic Airport add time), extent of liner damage we find, and whether your firebox needs structural repair versus cosmetic refractory work. We quote upfront after inspection — no open-ended billing. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free estimate and we’ll give you a firm number.
We Also Serve Cities Near Farmingdale
Our service radius covers South Farmingdale (11735 south of Conklin Street), East Farmingdale near the airport industrial corridor, Bethpage to the north, and Plainedge to the west. If you’re in a bordering ZIP and unsure whether we cover your address, call — we’re likely already working your neighbor’s chimney.
Serving Farmingdale, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Farmingdale area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Fireplace Services in Farmingdale
Because the 1980s–90s oil-to-gas conversions in Farmingdale’s Republic Aviation housing stock almost never included the code-required stainless steel liner. The original terra-cotta flue tiles, sized for oil burners, crack under gas exhaust temperatures and thermal expansion patterns different from oil combustion. Those cracked joints let carbon monoxide and other flue gases leak into wall cavities — a hazard our camera inspections find regularly in the 11735 ZIP. If your home was converted during that era and hasn’t been inspected with a camera, call (866) 884-9512 to schedule one; estimates are free.
Every 12–18 months, sooner if you notice debris or water in the firebox. Farmingdale’s position on the flat Hempstead Plain, with no topographic wind breaks, exposes chimneys to direct nor’easter assault and salt-laden air that erodes crown mortar faster than inland Nassau County. We include crown condition in every inspection and can apply HeatShield crown sealant before small cracks become major water entry points. Call (866) 884-9512 to add a crown check to your next service.
Only with a properly sized stainless steel liner installed from firebox to cap. The original clay flue tiles in Farmingdale’s 1947–1965 Cape Cods were never designed for the concentrated heat and exhaust volume of a wood-burning insert. Installing an insert without relining creates a fire hazard and violates code. We measure your firebox, specify the correct insert and DuraFlex liner combination, and handle the full installation. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free assessment of your Cape Cod chimney.
A gas fireplace insert fits into an existing masonry fireplace and uses your chimney (with a liner) for exhaust; a direct-vent fireplace is a self-contained unit that vents horizontally through an exterior wall, needing no chimney at all. For Farmingdale homes with deteriorated original chimneys, a direct-vent conversion sometimes makes more sense than rebuilding — Robert evaluates your specific structure and gives you both options with honest cost comparison. Call (866) 884-9512 to discuss which fits your home.
Probably, but not certainly — we need to inspect. Farmingdale’s salt-air exposure accelerates flashing corrosion, and the 60-plus-year-old mortar on Main Street ranches is often soft enough that wind-driven rain penetrates the chimney base even with intact flashing. On a recent call near Main Street, we found both corroded step flashing AND missing crown mortar, with water tracking down the interior flue wall. We repaired the flashing with copper and sealed the crown, stopping a leak the homeowner had chased with roofers for two years. Call (866) 884-9512 — we’ll find the actual source, not guess.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving Farmingdale and Nassau County since 2008.