Chimney Cleaning Cost in Greater New York: What You’ll Actually Pay in 2024
Chimney cleaning in Greater New York typically runs $180–$450 per flue, with most single-flue wood-burning systems falling in the $220–$320 range. Gas fireplace service starts lower at $150–$250, while oil-burning systems with heavy soot accumulation often reach $280–$400. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free, exact quote based on your specific setup — Robert Garcia, our owner and lead technician, answers every call personally and can price your job in about two minutes.

The most common thing Robert hears on a first call? “The last guy charged me $150, why are you quoting more?” The answer is usually one word: flues. Most New York homes have more than one, and each is a separate, billable service. A brownstone in Park Slope might have three flues sharing one chimney stack — a heating flue, a fireplace flue, and an abandoned flue that still needs inspection. That “$150” guy either missed two flues entirely or planned to upsell once he was on-site. Neither approach sits right with us.
Why Greater New York Chimney Cleaning Costs Aren’t One Flat Number
We’ve spent 17 years on roofs and in basements across the five boroughs and surrounding counties, and we’ve learned that “chimney cleaning cost” is a function of three variables most service pages won’t mention: fuel type, flue count, and access difficulty. A gas-fireplace cleaning in a Manhattan high-rise is a fundamentally different job than a wood-burning flue in a Westchester colonial. Conflating them into one price range misleads buyers and wastes everyone’s time.
Here’s how those variables break down in the field:
- Fuel type determines labor intensity and risk profile — wood creosote requires aggressive mechanical removal, gas systems demand camera inspection discipline, and oil soot carries acidic chemistry that eats metal
- Flue count multiplies base cost linearly — each flue is a separate pass, separate inspection, separate report
- Access difficulty adds real time and coordination cost — elevator scheduling, co-op board protocols, and rooftop safety requirements in dense urban construction
Robert grew up in the Bronx, not far from Yankee Stadium, and learned early that New York housing stock doesn’t follow suburban rules. Pre-war multi-families in Washington Heights, 1970s split-levels in Staten Island, and new construction in Long Island City all present different challenges. That variation is why we don’t publish a single flat rate and call it honest.
Price Breakdown by Fuel Type and Configuration
The table below reflects what we actually charge across Greater New York. These are 2024 ranges based on jobs we’ve completed in the last 12 months — not theoretical numbers pulled from a national survey.
| Service Description | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Single-flue gas fireplace cleaning & inspection | $150 – $250 |
| Single-flue wood-burning sweep & creosote removal | $220 – $320 |
| Single-flue oil-burning system cleaning | $280 – $400 |
| Each additional flue (same visit, any fuel type) | $120 – $200 |
| Level 2 camera inspection (required for real estate transactions) | $250 – $400 |
| High-rise/co-op access surcharge (Manhattan, Brooklyn towers) | $75 – $150 |
| Chimney cap removal/reinstall for access | $50 – $100 |
| Heavy creosote glaze removal (stage 3 buildup) | $100 – $250 additional |
Wood-burning systems command the middle-to-high range because creosote removal is physical, dirty work. We’re not waving a vacuum hose — we’re running professional-grade Copperfield polypropylene brushes and Olympia Chimney wire whips sized precisely to your flue diameter. A single pass with the right tool cleans more completely than three passes with hardware-store equipment, which is how we avoid the “come back next month” scenario that cheap sweeps often create.
Gas systems cost less in base labor but require different expertise. The cleaning itself is lighter — we’re removing dust, debris, and occasional bird nests — but the inspection is where the value lives. We run a camera up every gas flue we touch, because carbon monoxide leaks don’t announce themselves. That camera work is built into our gas pricing, not sold as an add-on.
Oil-burning systems sit at the top of our range because the chemistry is genuinely nasty. Oil soot is acidic, corrosive, and tenacious. It degrades stainless steel liners faster than wood creosote, and it demands specific disposal protocols. We’ve replaced more prematurely-failed liners in oil-heated homes in Queens and the Bronx than anywhere else — usually because the previous owner skipped cleanings for three or four years.
The Flue Count Surprise: Why Your “One Chimney” Is Probably Two or Three
This is the detail that catches most Greater New York homeowners off guard. You look up and see one brick stack. You assume one cleaning. But inside that stack, you likely have multiple flues — separate terracotta or metal liners, each serving a different appliance, each requiring independent service.
Last month in a Crown Heights brownstone, Robert found four flues in what the owner swore was “just the fireplace chimney.” One active fireplace flue, one abandoned heating flue from a long-removed boiler, one active furnace flue, and one mysterious fourth flue that turned out to be a 1920s kitchen vent — still drafting, still collecting debris. The owner had been paying for single-flue cleanings for six years and wondered why their fireplace still smoked.
Common multi-flue configurations we see across Greater New York:
- Pre-war brownstones and row houses (Park Slope, Bed-Stuy, Harlem, Washington Heights): 2–3 flues typical, sometimes 4 in larger structures
- Post-war brick ramblers (Bayside, Flushing, parts of Staten Island): 2 flues standard — one for fireplace, one for furnace
- High-rise conversions and co-ops (Upper East Side, Tribeca, Downtown Brooklyn): Often 1 flue per unit, but access complexity dominates cost
- Center-hall Colonials in Westchester and Nassau: 2 flues common, occasionally 3 with wood stove additions
We price each flue separately because each flue requires separate brush passes, separate visual or camera inspection, and separate documentation. There’s no honest way to bundle three flues into one “chimney cleaning” without cutting corners somewhere. We’d rather explain the math upfront than surprise you on the invoice.
Manhattan and Brooklyn High-Rise Realities: Access Costs Real Money
If you live in a doorman building in Manhattan or a co-op in Brooklyn Heights, your chimney cleaning carries coordination costs that a suburban sweep company never encounters. We’re not complaining — it’s just physics and bureaucracy.
Elevator scheduling in a Midtown high-rise often requires 48-hour advance notice and a certificate of insurance naming the building. Lobby and hallway protection — drop cloths, corner guards, shoe covers — adds 15–20 minutes each way. Rooftop access may mean navigating a mechanical penthouse with lockout/tagout protocols, not stepping out a back door onto a gently sloping shingle roof.
Robert handled a cleaning last winter in a Financial District tower where the flue access was through a mechanical room three floors below the roof. The “chimney” was a 35-foot stainless steel run terminating through a bulkhead surrounded by HVAC equipment. The cleaning itself took 45 minutes. The access coordination took two hours. That’s why our high-rise surcharge exists, and why we’ll ask about your building type when you call (866) 884-9512.
We’ve also learned which buildings have which quirks. The pre-war co-ops on Central Park West with their original terracotta flues. The new-glass towers in Long Island City with engineered chimney systems that barely resemble traditional masonry. The converted industrial lofts in DUMBO with fireplaces added as amenities in buildings never designed for them. Seventeen years of this work means we’ve probably been in your building type before.
What Professional-Grade Equipment Actually Means for Your Total Cost
Here’s a cost-of-ownership angle most competitors won’t offer: the brushes and tools we use directly affect how often you need us back.
We run Copperfield and Olympia Chimney professional brushes — sized by quarter-inch increments, with bristle stiffness matched to flue liner material. A poly brush on terracotta, a wire whip on stainless steel, never the reverse. A single proper pass with the right tool removes more deposits than three sloppy passes with a hardware-store brush that doesn’t fit correctly.
What does this mean in dollars? A cheap sweep who leaves 30% of creosote behind creates a return visit in 12–18 months instead of the proper 24-month interval for moderate-use wood burners. At $280 per cleaning, that’s an extra $280 every two years — or put another way, the “expensive” proper cleaning at $280 just saved you $280 over the cycle. We’ve had customers in Scarsdale and Great Neck tell us their previous sweep came annually “because it needed it,” and when Robert inspected, the flue was barely dirty. That’s not maintenance — that’s a subscription plan.
For liner and rebuild work, we specify DuraFlex and HeatShield materials — the same lines commercial contractors use. A properly installed DuraFlex liner with correct insulation and sizing will outlast two improperly installed generic liners. When we quote liner work, we’re quoting once, not quoting low and returning with “surprise” corrosion findings.

The Annual Cost Versus the Repair Cost: Reframing the Math
We understand that $220–$320 for a wood-burning flue cleaning feels like an expense. Here’s how we encourage customers to think about it.
Annual chimney cleaning for a typical Greater New York wood-burning fireplace: $220–$320.
Median chimney liner replacement cost in our market, based on jobs we’ve completed: $2,800–$5,500 for stainless steel, more for specialty configurations.
Full chimney rebuild after neglected water infiltration and freeze-thaw damage: $8,000–$25,000+, depending on height, access, and whether scaffolding is required.
The cleaning isn’t the expense. The cleaning is the insurance policy against the expense. A chimney problem doesn’t get smaller by waiting — I’ve seen 17 years of proof. The creosote layer thickens, the moisture finds its way through cracked crown mortar, the freeze-thaw cycles of a New York winter widen hairline cracks into structural failures. We’ve done emergency rebuilds in February that could have been prevented with a September sweep and a $200 crown seal.
Robert still remembers a job in the Bronx — not far from where he grew up — where a family had skipped cleanings for four years because “the fireplace worked fine.” The flue was coated with stage 3 glazed creosote, the liner had cracked from thermal stress, and smoke had been leaking into the wall cavity for two heating seasons. The remediation cost exceeded $12,000. The annual cleanings they skipped would have totaled about $1,000. That’s not a sales pitch — that’s arithmetic.
Common Greater New York Scenarios and What They Cost
Instead of generic feature bullets, here are actual situations we handled in the last year, with real cost outcomes. These illustrate how the variables combine in practice.
Scenario: The Park Slope Brownstone with Three Flues
Active wood-burning fireplace, active gas furnace, abandoned oil flue from prior heating system. Full service on two active flues, Level 2 inspection and debris removal on abandoned flue for safety and insurance documentation. Total: $640. Customer had been quoted $180 by a competitor who planned to “see what’s up there” — which would have meant two missed flues or a mid-job upsell.
Scenario: The Upper West Side Co-op Gas Fireplace
Single flue, 22nd floor, doorman building with 48-hour elevator reservation requirement. Cleaning, camera inspection, and draft testing. Total: $295 including high-rise access surcharge. Building management required COI and specific lobby protection — all handled in our standard co-op protocol, no additional paperwork fees.
Scenario: The Westchester Colonial with Stage 2 Creosote
Two wood-burning flues, moderate use (3–4 fires weekly October–March), two years since last cleaning. Standard sweep on both, no glaze removal required. Total: $480. Recommended return interval: 18 months based on usage pattern.
Scenario: The Queens Oil-Heated Cape with Neglected Maintenance
Single oil flue, four years since last cleaning, heavy acidic soot accumulation, deteriorating terracotta liner visible on camera. Cleaning completed, liner replacement recommended and scheduled. Cleaning: $340. Liner replacement (scheduled separately): $3,200. Customer’s prior “sweep” had been a furnace technician with a shop vac who never inspected the flue.
What’s Included in Every Apex Cleaning — No Upsell Required
We don’t parse our services into confusing tiers. Every Chimney Cleaning & Sweep we perform in Greater New York includes:
- Full visual inspection of accessible chimney components — crown, cap, flashing, exterior masonry
- Mechanical brushing of the entire flue length with properly sized professional equipment
- Smoke chamber and firebox evaluation
- Debris and soot removal with HEPA-contained vacuum systems — your home stays clean
- Written condition report with photographs and specific recommendations
- NFPA 211 compliance documentation for insurance or real estate requirements
Camera inspection is automatic for gas systems and included for wood-burning systems when visual access is limited. We don’t charge extra for “discovering” problems — we document what we find, explain what it means, and let you decide on timeline and priority. Robert handles every diagnosis himself, which means you’re getting 17 years of pattern recognition, not a technician reading from a script.
FAQs
Most homeowners pay $180–$450 per flue depending on fuel type, with single-flue wood-burning systems averaging $220–$320 and gas fireplaces starting at $150–$250. Multi-flue homes common in brownstones and pre-war buildings multiply base cost by flue count. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free exact quote — Robert Garcia, our owner and lead technician, can price your specific setup in about two minutes.
Repair is cheaper when damage is localized and the liner material is compatible — HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing runs $800–$1,800 versus $2,800–$5,500 for full stainless steel replacement. However, oil-burning systems with widespread corrosion or terracotta liners with multiple vertical cracks almost always require replacement. We run a camera first and show you exactly what we’re seeing before recommending either path. Call (866) 884-9512 to schedule an inspection with camera documentation.
Same-day service is sometimes available for urgent situations — blocked flue, suspected animal intrusion, or pre-closing real estate requirements — but we typically book 3–5 days out in peak season (September–January) and 1–3 days in slower months. Co-op and high-rise buildings with advance elevator scheduling requirements need more lead time. Your best move is calling (866) 884-9512 now to hold a slot; we don’t charge until work is completed.
Your neighbor likely has a single gas flue in a single-family home with ground-level roof access; you may have multiple wood-burning flues in a brownstone with three stories of ladder work, or a high-rise unit with building coordination requirements. Fuel type, flue count, and access difficulty are the three cost drivers, and they’re rarely identical between properties. We’ve cleaned $150 gas fireplaces and $840 four-flue brownstones in the same week — both priced fairly for what the job required.
Ready for an Exact Quote? Call Robert Directly
We’ve been serving Greater New York homeowners for 17 years with one simple approach: the owner shows up, diagnoses honestly, and prices transparently. No dispatchers, no upsell scripts, no surprise charges when we’re already on your roof. Robert Garcia answers calls personally at (866) 884-9512, and estimates are always free. Whether you need a routine sweep before burning season or you’re trying to understand why your fireplace smokes every time the wind blows northeast, we’ll give you a straight answer and a fair number.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner & Lead Technician at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving Greater New York, NY.