Fast, Reliable Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Across Huntington Station
Chimney cleaning and sweep services in Huntington Station, NY typically cost between $180 and $340 for a standard Level 1 cleaning with inspection, and most appointments are completed in under two hours. For homes with oil-to-gas conversion history or suspected liner damage, a Level 2 inspection with video scan runs $350–$550. We’re based in Bridgeport, CT with regular routes into Suffolk County, and we typically reach Huntington Station properties within 45–60 minutes during business hours.

We know Huntington Station’s housing stock inside out. The postwar Cape Cods along Depot Road, the ranches tucked between Jericho Turnpike and the LIRR tracks, the split-levels in the West Hills border area—most were built fast during the 1950s–1970s Long Island boom with chimneys sized for oil heat. Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, has spent eight years diagnosing what happens when those original flue systems meet modern gas appliances. That’s not theoretical knowledge. Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep team has pulled cracked clay tile and white efflorescence from chimneys across the 11746 ZIP code, and we’ve relined flues that homeowners didn’t realize were failing until a routine sweep caught the damage.
Call (833) 719-7193 to book. Estimates are free, and we carry the inspection and cleaning equipment to handle most jobs in a single trip.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is Huntington Station’s Preferred Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Company
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference. Anthony Perez doesn’t split time between trades or send seasonal hires to your door. He leads every job personally, from the initial inspection to the final brush pass. For Huntington Station homeowners, that means someone who recognizes the specific failure patterns of 1950s–1970s masonry chimneys—the eroded mortar joints, the oil-era flue tiles, the condensation damage from gas conversions—without needing to guess or subcontract.
Our reputation is built on volume and consistency. 800+ homeowners have reviewed us, averaging 4.7 stars. Those aren’t curated testimonials; they’re a sustained record of completed jobs across Fairfield County and into Long Island. Huntington Station customers specifically mention our willingness to explain what we find in plain terms—why an 8×8 flue tile is wrong for a 90% AFUE boiler, what efflorescence actually means for liner integrity, whether a sweep is enough or relining is the honest recommendation.
Response time matters for chimney issues, especially heading into nor’easter season. We schedule Huntington Station appointments with buffer for the Cross-Westchester and I-95 corridor traffic patterns, and we keep DuraFlex liner stock and HeatShield refractory materials on our trucks to avoid return trips. One visit. Diagnosis, cleaning, and if needed, repair scope—done.
Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Services in Huntington Station
Level 1 Inspection
A Level 1 inspection is the baseline for any Huntington Station chimney that’s been in regular use without known changes. We examine the readily accessible portions of the chimney exterior, interior, and connecting appliance—looking for creosote buildup, obstructions, and basic structural soundness. For the ranch homes and Cape Cods that dominate Huntington Station’s 11746 ZIP code, this often reveals the first signs of mortar joint erosion or water staining from Long Island Sound-driven moisture. We document everything and give you a clear read on whether your chimney is safe for the upcoming burning season.
Level 2 Inspection
This is where our Huntington Station expertise pays off. A Level 2 inspection includes video scanning of the flue interior, and it’s non-negotiable after any fuel conversion, chimney fire, seismic event, or property sale. In Huntington Station, we order Level 2s more frequently than in newer markets because of the oil-to-gas conversion history. Our crew serviced a ranch home on Depot Road where the original 8×8 flue tile from an oil furnace was still in place after a gas conversion. We found heavy white efflorescence from condensation and cracked tiles, then relined with a DuraFlex stainless steel liner sized for the new 90% AFUE boiler. Without the video scan, that damage stays hidden until tiles collapse or carbon monoxide becomes a risk.
Creosote Removal
Huntington Station’s cold, wet winters create a specific creosote problem. Homeowners here tend to use fireplaces in short, intense bursts—weekend evenings, holiday gatherings—not the continuous low-level burning that keeps flue temperatures stable. That pattern produces stage-two creosote: hardened, tar-like deposits that standard brushes won’t touch. We use mechanical whipping systems and, when necessary, chemical creosote modifiers to break down glazed buildup. It’s slower work than a basic sweep, but it’s the difference between a clean flue and a false sense of security.
Soot Removal
Soot accumulation in Huntington Station chimneys often signals a secondary issue: poor draft from an oversized flue, a blocked cap from nor’easter debris, or a heating appliance running inefficiently. We don’t just vacuum and leave. We trace the soot source, check combustion ratios where accessible, and flag whether your chimney’s dimensions match current fuel type. For homes still burning oil or wood, we also inspect for signs of stage-one creosote progression—catching the problem before it hardens into the more dangerous stage-two or stage-three deposits.
Annual Sweep
The National Fire Protection Association recommends annual inspection; for Huntington Station’s heavy-use, moisture-exposed chimneys, we agree. Our annual sweep combines mechanical brushing, HEPA vacuuming, and a documented condition report. We schedule these proactively for repeat customers—before the first nor’easter, not after—to catch freeze-thaw damage early and keep creosote levels below NFPA 211 thresholds. Many of our Huntington Station clients book standing October appointments.

Fireplace Cleaning
Fireplace cleaning extends beyond the flue to the firebox, smoke chamber, and damper assembly. In Huntington Station’s older homes, we frequently find damaged throat dampers, degraded smoke shelf parging, and missing or deteriorated firebrick. We clean and assess, and if repair is needed, we scope it on the spot with specific materials—HeatShield for smoke chamber resurfacing, FireGuard for minor flue repairs—rather than generic patching compounds.
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 Huntington Station
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For Huntington Station relining and repair work, we stock DuraFlex stainless steel liners for gas and oil conversions, HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing products for flue joint repair and smoke chamber restoration, and Famco chimney caps and dampers for weather protection and draft control. These are the same product lines specified by chimney professionals nationwide, not budget alternatives. Keeping inventory on our trucks means Huntington Station customers don’t wait for special orders—we measure, cut, and install in the same visit when possible. For cap and crown rebuilds, we also work with Copperfield refractory cements and Gelco stainless steel caps, selected for their resistance to Long Island Sound salt-air corrosion.
Common Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Problems We See in Huntington Station Homes
- Oversized flues after gas conversion. Homeowners skip relining after gas conversion, leaving oversized flues that trap acidic condensation and cause rapid tile deterioration. We find this constantly in Huntington Station’s postwar housing stock—flues that were right for oil in 1965 and dangerously wrong for gas in 2025.
- Eroded mortar and freeze-thaw spalling. Mortar joints on 50–70-year-old chimneys are eroded, allowing water intrusion during nor’easters and accelerating freeze-thaw spalling. Huntington Station’s exposure to Long Island Sound moisture makes this worse than in more sheltered inland communities.
- Stage-two creosote from burst-use patterns. Short-burst fireplace use in cold wet winters produces stage-two creosote faster than continuous burning, leading to hidden buildup if sweeps only do a visual check. Weekend fires, holiday use, and occasional ambiance burning are the culprits we see most.
- Double-duty chimney deterioration. Many Huntington Station chimneys serve both a gas furnace and a wood-burning fireplace—a combination that accelerates creosote and condensation-related deterioration. The temperature cycling between appliance types stresses liners and masonry in ways single-use chimneys don’t experience.
Pricing for Chimney Cleaning & Sweep in Huntington Station, NY
Here’s what Huntington Station homeowners can expect:
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Level 1 Inspection + Standard Sweep | $180 – $340 |
| Level 2 Inspection with Video Scan | $350 – $550 |
| Creosote Removal (Stage-Two/Glazed) | $400 – $700 |
| Fireplace Cleaning (Firebox, Smoke Chamber, Damper) | $250 – $450 |
| Annual Maintenance Plan (Inspection + Sweep) | $280 – $380 |
What moves the needle? Roof access difficulty on split-levels and two-story Cape Cods, the severity of creosote glazing, whether video inspection reveals damage requiring immediate documentation for insurance, and travel logistics during peak fall season. We don’t quote blind. Call (833) 719-7193 for an exact estimate—free, no obligation, and specific to your Huntington Station address.
We Also Serve Cities Near Huntington Station
Our routes cover the full Huntington area and surrounding Suffolk County communities. We regularly schedule chimney cleaning and sweep appointments in Dix Hills, South Huntington, Melville, and West Hills—often clustering same-day service for neighbors who book together. If you’re near the Huntington Station border, ask about coordinated scheduling.
Serving Huntington Station, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Huntington Station 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 Cleaning & Sweep in Huntington Station
Because the original clay flue tiles in Huntington Station’s postwar homes were sized for 1400°F oil exhaust, not the 300–500°F exhaust from modern 90% AFUE gas boilers. The oversized flue cools the gas too quickly, causing acidic condensation that erodes tiles and mortar from the inside out. We’ve relined dozens of these systems with DuraFlex stainless steel liners sized precisely for the new appliance. Call (833) 719-7193 if your home was converted from oil to gas and the chimney was never inspected.
Annually, before the first heavy use. Huntington Station’s cold, wet winters and nor’easter exposure mean moisture enters chimneys year-round, and the freeze-thaw cycle accelerates damage between burns. For wood-burning fireplaces, the NFPA 211 standard applies; for gas appliances in converted systems, we recommend annual Level 1 inspection with sweep as needed. Book in early fall—our October slots fill first.
Look for flaking or popping brick faces, exposed aggregate where the red clay surface has shelled off, and mortar joints that have receded more than a half-inch. After hard winters, you may find brick fragments in your yard or on the roof. Huntington Station’s Long Island Sound exposure makes this more aggressive than in sheltered inland areas. If you see spalling, schedule inspection before the next freeze cycle widens the damage.
Yes. Huntington Station’s larger lots and rural-acreage heritage mean many properties have detached structures with wood stoves or heating appliances. We inspect and clean these chimneys to the same NFPA standards as residential systems, and we carry extension ladders and equipment for structures set back from the main house. Mention the detached location when you call so we allocate appropriate time.
It’s the combination of burst-use patterns and cold flue temperatures. Huntington Station homeowners tend to light fires for specific events—weekends, holidays, cold snaps—rather than maintaining continuous low fires. Each cold start sends unburned hydrocarbons up a cold flue where they condense as liquid creosote. Repeat this cycle weekly through December and January, and you get glazed deposits that a basic brush won’t remove. That’s why we emphasize mechanical creosote removal and, for heavy users, mid-season checks.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Huntington Station and Suffolk County since 2017.