Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across New Milford
Chimney liner installation and rebuild services in New Milford, NJ typically run from $2,200 for a standard stainless steel gas furnace relining to $8,500 for a partial chimney rebuild from crown to flashing, with most jobs completed in one to two days. If your New Milford home was built between the 1950s and 1970s and converted from oil to natural gas, your chimney almost certainly has an oversized clay-tile flue that’s been deteriorating from acidic condensate for years. Call (866) 884-9512 for a free inspection and exact quote.

We’ve been driving out to New Milford from our base in Greater New York for years — usually within 45 minutes during the work week. Robert Garcia, our owner and lead technician, knows the borough’s housing stock intimately: the Cape Cods along River Road, the split-levels backing up to the Hackensack River, the ranches near the New Milford border with River Edge. These aren’t theoretical chimneys to us. We’ve pulled apart enough of them to know that a 1962 brick chimney with original clay flue tiles and a 1990s gas conversion is a specific animal with specific failure modes. That’s why New Milford homeowners call us back and why we’ve earned 1,096 verified reviews at 4.7 stars — they get Robert on the job, not a subcontractor reading a work order for the first time.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team handles everything from a straightforward flexible liner installation to a full teardown and rebuild of a compromised chimney chase. In New Milford, that range matters. Some homes need a liner resized for gas; others need the crown rebuilt after decades of freeze-thaw damage; a few need both. One call gets you the full assessment.
Why Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York Is New Milford’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
New Milford sits in a pocket of Bergen County where the housing stock is remarkably consistent — and remarkably aging. Nearly every chimney we inspect here is 50 to 70 years old, with original clay flue tiles sized for oil-fired systems that were ripped out decades ago. That specific legacy is why generalist contractors from outside the area often misdiagnose the problem or propose a one-size-fits-all liner that won’t solve the condensation issue.
Robert Garcia has spent 17 years focused exclusively on chimneys. He’s the person who climbs your roof, runs the camera, and explains what he’s seeing in plain terms. New Milford customers aren’t handed off to a crew they’ve never met. The same technician who quotes the job performs the work — and stands behind it.
Our review volume speaks for itself: 1,096 verified customer reviews averaging 4.7 stars. That’s not a handful of lucky ratings; it’s the accumulated record of a specialist who shows up, diagnoses accurately, and installs professional-grade materials correctly the first time. New Milford homeowners looking for documented experience before letting someone onto their roof find that accountability in our track record.
Response time to New Milford is typically same-day or next-day during the heating season. We keep DuraFlex and HeatShield materials in stock, which means most liner installations don’t involve a two-week wait for parts. For emergency situations — a blocked flue, a suspected liner breach, a sulfur odor after running the furnace — we prioritize calls from active heating system issues.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in New Milford
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For New Milford’s converted gas systems, a properly sized stainless steel liner is often the definitive fix. The original 8×8 or 8×12 clay flue tiles were engineered for oil furnace exhaust temperatures of 500–700°F. Natural gas exhaust runs cooler — 300–450°F — and in an oversized flue, it cools even faster. The result is a sticky, acidic condensate that pools on the clay tiles and spalls them from the inside. We’ve seen this on homes that look pristine from the curb.
A DuraFlex stainless steel liner, sized precisely to the appliance BTU output, restores proper draft and eliminates the condensation problem. In New Milford’s 07646 ZIP code, a standard gas furnace relining with stainless steel typically runs $2,200–$3,800, depending on flue height and chase access. These liners carry a lifetime warranty when properly installed — and Robert handles every measurement and connection himself.
Flexible Liner Installation
Not every New Milford chimney is straight. The split-levels and ranches built during the borough’s 1960s building boom often have offset flues or tight cleanout access. A flexible stainless liner navigates these obstacles without breaking the chimney structure. We use DuraFlex and Gelco flexible products with the same corrosion-resistant alloy as rigid liners.
On Demarest Avenue near the Hackensack River, our crew relined a 1960s split-level with a DuraFlex stainless steel liner after the homeowner reported a sulfur smell. The original 8×8 clay tile for the gas furnace flue was spalled from years of acidic condensate; we installed a properly sized 6-inch flexible liner and sealed the chase. The job took six hours. That homeowner’s flue had been deteriorating for fifteen years without visible exterior damage — a textbook New Milford hidden failure.
Flexible liner installations for fireplace-to-gas-insert conversions in New Milford range from $2,800–$4,500, depending on whether the fireplace damper needs modification and whether the smoke chamber requires parging.
Liner Replacement & Resizing
Some New Milford homes already have a liner — but it’s the wrong one. We regularly find 1980s aluminum liners or corrugated flex products that were never rated for gas appliances, or stainless liners that were oversized because the installer didn’t calculate the appliance BTU and flue height correctly. A liner that’s too large creates the same condensation problem as no liner at all.

Robert pulls the old product, inspects the remaining clay for salvageability, and installs a new liner with proper sizing charts from the National Fire Protection Association. For homes on the river-adjacent western streets where moisture intrusion has accelerated exterior spalling, we’ll often pair liner replacement with crown repair or tuckpointing to stop the water entry that’s compounding the flue damage.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
When the exterior masonry has deteriorated past the point of spot repair, a partial rebuild from crown to flashing restores structural integrity without the cost of full demolition. In New Milford, this is common on chimneys that haven’t had tuckpointing since original construction. Bergen County’s freeze-thaw cycles — sometimes thirty or more per winter — grind away at mortar joints that were never designed to last seventy years.
A partial rebuild on a typical New Milford Cape Cod or ranch runs $5,500–$8,500, depending on linear feet of masonry, scaffold requirements, and whether the crown needs a poured concrete replacement or a precast unit. We match existing brick where possible and always install a proper chimney cap to prevent future water infiltration. The work typically takes two to three days, with the fireplace or furnace out of service only during active masonry work.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in New Milford
We install professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, and Gelco — the same product lines specified by commercial chimney contractors in Bergen County. DuraFlex’s 316Ti stainless alloy handles the acidic condensate from gas conversions better than standard 304 stainless, which matters in New Milford’s oil-to-gas legacy chimneys. HeatShield’s cerfractory foam resurfacing system lets us restore a deteriorated smoke chamber without a full teardown, saving substantial cost on some partial rebuilds. We keep common diameters and fittings in stock, so New Milford customers aren’t waiting two weeks for a special-order part while their heating season ticks away.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in New Milford Homes
- Oversized clay tiles from original oil-fired systems cause rapid cooling of gas exhaust, leading to acidic condensate that eats tiles from within. This is the signature New Milford failure — a chimney that looks fine outside but has a flue interior crumbling into shards. We find this on roughly two-thirds of our New Milford inspections.
- Combined fireplace and furnace flues in a single chimney create mixed creosote and condensation profiles, accelerating deterioration of unreinforced mortar joints. The fireplace flue sees intermittent high heat and wood creosote; the furnace flue sees constant low heat and acidic moisture. One liner solution doesn’t fit both without careful engineering.
- Freeze-thaw cycles, especially on river-adjacent streets, worsen spalling and efflorescence in chimneys that haven’t had tuckpointing since the 1960s. New Milford’s position along the Hackensack River means higher ambient moisture, and that moisture penetrates hairline cracks, freezes, expands, and pops off brick faces by spring.
- Homeowners converted from oil to gas decades ago but never had the flue liner resized or relined — the oversized flue draws poorly, the gas exhaust cools too quickly, and a greasy, acidic condensate has been eating the original 1960s clay tiles from the inside out for years without the homeowner knowing. By the time sulfur odors or CO detector alerts appear, the damage is extensive.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in New Milford, NJ
Here’s what New Milford homeowners can expect for the most common liner and rebuild scenarios we encounter:
| Service | Typical Range in New Milford |
|---|---|
| Stainless Steel Liner — Standard Gas Furnace | $2,200 – $3,800 |
| Flexible Liner — Fireplace to Gas Insert Conversion | $2,800 – $4,500 |
| Partial Chimney Rebuild — Crown to Flashing | $5,500 – $8,500 |
These ranges reflect New Milford’s typical flue heights, access conditions, and the specific challenges of 1950s–1970s construction. Homes with multiple offsets, buried cleanouts, or significant interior demolition needs may run higher. We don’t guess from the driveway — every quote follows a camera inspection and combustion analysis. Estimates are free, and Robert explains exactly what’s driving the number before any work begins. Call (866) 884-9512 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near New Milford
Our chimney liner and rebuild crews work throughout Bergen County, including River Edge, Bergenfield, Oradell, and Dumont. Many of these towns share New Milford’s post-war housing stock and oil-to-gas conversion history, though each has its own specific building patterns and local conditions. If you’re in a neighboring community and recognize your chimney in the problems described here, we’re likely already working on a similar house nearby.
Serving New Milford, NJ — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the New Milford 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 — Chimney Liner & Rebuild in New Milford
No, a “standard” liner sized generically will likely repeat the problem. Your chimney was built for oil exhaust temperatures, and the flue is almost certainly oversized for gas. We calculate the exact liner diameter from your furnace BTU rating and flue height, then install a properly sized DuraFlex or rigid stainless product. Call (866) 884-9512 and Robert will run the numbers on site — estimates are free.
Yes — a sulfur or “rotten egg” odor often signals liner failure or a blocked flue allowing exhaust to leak into the home. In New Milford’s converted gas chimneys, we frequently find spalled clay tiles or breached mortar joints that let combustion gases escape through the chimney wall. This is a safety issue that warrants immediate inspection. Shut down the appliance and call us; we prioritize odor calls during heating season.
Most likely yes, or at minimum a properly engineered single liner with a sealed partition. Combined flues were common in New Milford’s 1960s split-levels, but modern codes require separation between solid-fuel and gas appliance exhaust. We inspect both flue systems with a camera and design a solution that addresses each combustion profile — the intermittent high heat of wood burning versus the constant low heat of gas. Call (866) 884-9512 for a dual-flue assessment.
If the exterior masonry shows significant spalling, efflorescence, or missing mortar joints — common on river-adjacent homes with decades of moisture exposure — a partial rebuild addresses both the structural envelope and the flue interior. Relining alone leaves deteriorating brick that will continue to admit water. Robert evaluates each chimney individually; sometimes we do both in sequence. A camera inspection and moisture assessment will give you the right answer for your specific chimney.
A properly installed 316Ti stainless steel liner will outlast the remaining life of the home — typically 50 years or more, with a lifetime warranty from the manufacturer. The key phrase is “properly installed”: correct sizing, proper insulation where required, and secure top and bottom connections. New Milford’s freeze-thaw cycles attack the masonry, not the steel inside. We’ve inspected twenty-year-old DuraFlex installations that look factory-new because the original installer — Robert or one of the few he trusts — did the details right.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving New Milford and Bergen County since 2007.