Fast, Reliable Chimney Repair Across New York City
Chimney repair in New York City typically costs between $450 for targeted mortar repointing and $8,500 for a full rebuild of a shared brownstone stack, with most standard repairs completed in one to two days. Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York handles everything from spalling brick on exposed Park Slope chimneys to full liner replacements mandated by the city’s heavy-oil phase-out — and Robert Garcia, our owner, personally leads every job site.

We’ve spent 17 years navigating the specific challenges of New York City’s pre-war housing stock: crossing rooftops through bulkhead doors in Manhattan, coordinating with licensed master plumbers for DOB sign-off on boiler conversions, and working around the tight alley-load access that makes this city’s chimney work fundamentally different from suburban service calls. When you call (866) 884-9512, you’re talking to Robert directly — not a dispatcher, not a subcontractor.
Why Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York Is New York City’s Preferred Chimney Repair Company
New York City homeowners have left us 1,096 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars, and that volume matters — it means consistency across thousands of jobs in every borough, from Harlem tenements to Financial District co-ops. Our Chimney Repair team doesn’t rotate anonymous crews; Robert Garcia arrives as the lead technician, makes the diagnostic call on-site, and stands behind the work personally.
We understand the urgency when water’s coming through a ceiling on East 7th Street or when a Park Slope brownstone’s shared stack is blocking a mandated gas conversion. Our response time to Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the core New York City neighborhoods is same-day or next-day for active leaks and carbon monoxide concerns, because we’ve learned that rooftop access logistics in this city don’t forgive delays.
That local knowledge runs deep. We know which Harlem blocks still have original terra cotta liners from the 1920s, which Financial District co-ops sealed their decorative fireplaces in the 1960s heat conversion and never capped the flues, and how the urban heat island’s freeze-thaw cycling chews through above-roofline masonry faster here than across the river in Jersey. Seventeen years of chimney-only focus in this market means we’ve seen the failure modes before they surprise us.
Our Chimney Repair Services in New York City
Mortar Repointing
New York City’s pre-war brownstones and tenements were built with lime-based mortar that has a finite lifespan — typically 50 to 80 years in our coastal climate. When we repoint a chimney on a Harlem rowhouse or a Park Slope townhome, we’re matching the original mortar composition to prevent accelerated deterioration, not just packing in modern Portland cement that will crack again in five years. A typical repointing job on a standard New York City brownstone chimney runs $1,800–$3,200.
Spalling Brick Repair
The urban heat island effect creates sharper daily temperature swings at New York City rooflines than in surrounding lowlands, and that freeze-thaw cycling blows the faces off bricks on exposed chimneys. We see this constantly on above-roofline sections in Manhattan and Brooklyn — loose brick that can slide onto neighboring rooftops or into air shafts. Our spalling repairs remove compromised units, install matching replacements, and address the water source, whether it’s failed crown flashing or condensation from an improperly lined flue.
Chimney Waterproofing
New York City’s humid coastal winters drive heavy condensation inside masonry flues, and the driving rain off the harbor hits exposed chimney stacks hard. We apply vapor-permeable sealers — never film-forming coatings that trap moisture — specifically formulated for the freeze-thaw abuse these chimneys take. For brownstones with shared multi-flue stacks, waterproofing is preventive maintenance that protects multiple households from a single point of failure.
Flashing Repair
Flashing failure is the single most common source of interior water damage we see in New York City co-ops and condos, especially in pre-war buildings where the original step flashing has corroded or separated from the masonry. We recently repaired a shared chimney stack in a Park Slope brownstone where the original terra cotta liner had collapsed into three separate flues, blocking the tenants’ gas boiler conversions. We installed three DuraFlex stainless steel liners and repointed the crown, coordinating with a licensed master plumber to meet DOB sign-off requirements. Flashing repair on a typical New York City townhome runs $850–$1,600.
Chimney Rebuilding
When a New York City chimney has deteriorated beyond targeted repair — common in buildings that deferred maintenance through multiple ownership changes — we rebuild from the roofline up or perform full-stack reconstruction. This is specialized work in dense Brooklyn and Manhattan blocks where scaffolding may not be feasible and materials get hoisted through bulkhead doors. A full rebuild of a shared brownstone stack typically runs $6,500–$8,500 in the New York City market, reflecting the access complexity and coordination required.

What happens when you call
- 1
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 York City
We install professional-grade materials from DuraFlex, HeatShield, and Copperfield — the same product lines specified by commercial contractors for high-occupancy buildings. For New York City’s mandated boiler conversions, we keep DuraFlex stainless steel liner components in stock for common flue diameters, which means faster turnaround when a Park Slope or Harlem building needs relining to meet DEP compliance deadlines. We don’t source from big-box retailers; these are trade-specification products installed to manufacturer requirements, with the documentation needed for NYC DOB sign-off.
Common Chimney Repair Problems We See in New York City Homes
- Rooftop water infiltration through abandoned decorative fireplace flues. Pre-war co-ops throughout Manhattan and the Financial District converted to central steam heat in the 1950s–1970s and simply sealed the fireplace openings, leaving flues uncapped and uninspected. Decades of rain entry rot the framing above, and owners first notice it as ceiling stains — often misdiagnosed as roof leaks.
- Carbon monoxide migration in shared multi-flue stacks. Harlem tenements and East Village walk-ups frequently have four or five flues in a single masonry mass. When mortar joints between flues deteriorate, exhaust from a boiler can cross-leak into an adjacent unit’s vent path. This is a genuine safety issue that requires immediate repointing between flues and often liner installation.
- Freeze-thaw spalling on exposed brownstone chimneys. The urban heat island creates temperature swings at roofline that exceed what’s typical in suburban New Jersey, accelerating the deterioration of above-roofline masonry. We’ve replaced entire courses of brick on Park Slope and Crown Heights chimneys where spalling had progressed to structural compromise.
- Terra cotta liner collapse blocking mandated conversions. Local Law 43’s heavy-oil phase-out forces tens of thousands of pre-war buildings to reline or decommission their chimneys, creating a repair market driven by mandated boiler conversions, not just seasonal maintenance. Original terra cotta liners — never designed for modern gas appliance exhaust — are failing in place, and the collapse debris blocks proper venting.
Pricing for Chimney Repair in New York City, NY
Here’s what chimney repair costs in the New York City market, based on jobs we’ve completed across Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the core boroughs:
| Service | Typical Range in NYC |
|---|---|
| Targeted mortar repointing (局部) | $450–$1,200 |
| Full chimney crown rebuild | $1,400–$2,800 |
| Flashing repair or replacement | $850–$1,600 |
| Spalling brick repair (partial) | $1,200–$2,500 |
| Stainless steel liner installation (single flue) | $2,800–$4,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild (shared stack) | $6,500–$8,500 |
What moves a job toward the higher end: rooftop access complexity in dense Manhattan blocks, coordination with licensed master plumbers for DOB sign-off on conversion-related work, and the need to match historic masonry in landmarked districts. What keeps costs down: catching deterioration before it reaches structural failure, which is why we recommend annual inspection for any New York City chimney serving an active appliance. Every estimate we provide is free, detailed, and delivered by Robert Garcia himself — call (866) 884-9512 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near New York City
Our service radius covers the dense core of New York City and immediately adjacent neighborhoods, including Chinatown, Manhattan, Financial District, and East Village. If you’re in a bordering district and unsure whether we cover your building, call — we’ve likely worked on a chimney within a few blocks.
Serving New York City, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the New York City 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 Repair in New York City
Minor repointing and crown repairs typically do not require a permit, but any flue relining tied to a boiler conversion requires sign-off by a licensed master plumber or registered design professional under NYC DOB rules. We coordinate this documentation as part of our conversion-related jobs, because the permitting layer separates experienced NYC chimney contractors from out-of-town operators who don’t understand the requirement. Call (866) 884-9512 and we’ll clarify what your specific job needs.
Technicians routinely cross multiple neighboring rooftops through bulkhead doors to reach a single chimney stack in dense Manhattan and Brooklyn rowhouse blocks — it’s a genuine trade skill that suburban contractors rarely develop. We carry the liability coverage and building coordination experience to navigate this access legally and safely, including proper notification to adjacent properties when required. If your building has restricted roof access, we’ll walk through the logistics when you call.
For New York City’s coal-to-gas conversions, we typically specify DuraFlex stainless steel liners — they’re listed for the temperature and corrosion profile of modern gas appliances and carry the documentation needed for NYC DOB compliance. The original flue was sized for coal draft, which is radically different from gas appliance requirements; a properly sized liner restores safe venting without rebuilding the masonry shell. We assess each flue individually, since many pre-war buildings have multiple flues in varying condition.
Your brownstone chimney was built as a shared masonry structure serving multiple units or appliances — a single crown on a Park Slope or Harlem rowhouse may conceal four or five distinct flues, each with its own liner and deterioration pattern. We use video inspection to identify which flue is failing and whether the problem is isolated or affecting the shared masonry; this matters because repair scope and cost depend on whether we’re sealing one flue or stabilizing the entire stack. The inspection itself is part of our standard service call.
We don’t recommend it. Spalling brick on an above-roofline chimney involves working at height on a structure that may also have compromised mortar, and the freeze-thaw damage you can see often masks deeper deterioration in the courses below. In New York City’s dense housing, there’s also the liability of dislodged material falling onto neighboring properties or into air shafts. We handle this with proper scaffolding or boom access, masonry matching, and structural assessment — call (866) 884-9512 for a free evaluation.
Written by Robert Garcia, Owner at Apex Chimney Cleaning Greater New York, serving New York City since 2007.