Fast, Reliable Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Across New Canaan
A typical chimney cleaning and sweep for a New Canaan home runs $220–$380 for a single flue, with multi-flue estates on Oenoke Ridge or Smith Ridge commonly seeing $480–$900 for a full property service. Most appointments in New Canaan are scheduled within 48 hours, and we’re familiar with the winding roads and gated drives that characterize the 06840 and 06842 ZIP codes. If you’re burning seasoned hardwood from your own wooded lot, annual sweeping isn’t optional—it’s what keeps creosote from glazing into a chimney fire hazard. Call (833) 719-7193 to book your sweep.

We’ve been driving to New Canaan for eight years, and the pattern is unmistakable: large homes, multiple fireplaces, and owners who aren’t always sure which flue was last cleaned when. Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, personally handles the work—no seasonal crews, no subcontractors. When you call Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, you’re getting the person whose name is on the business, not a dispatcher sending out whoever’s available.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is New Canaan’s Preferred Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Company
New Canaan homeowners know the difference between a generalist and a specialist. We’re not handymen who “also do chimneys.” Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep team works on flue systems exclusively—eight years, one specialty. That focus shows in the details: we recognize the sound of a cracked clay liner before we ever camera it, and we know which mid-century modern chimney profiles need brush extensions that standard kits don’t include.
Our reputation here is built on volume and accountability. Over 800 homeowners have reviewed us at a 4.7-star average, and that number matters because it reflects hundreds of completed jobs, not a curated handful. New Canaan customers specifically mention Anthony by name in their feedback—they remember who was in their home, who explained what their flue needed, and who did the actual work.
Response time to New Canaan is typically next-day or within 48 hours, depending on season. We know the local routing: whether you’re off Ponus Ridge, near the Silvermine area, or back on the wooded stretches of Frogtown Road, we’re not guessing at drive times. We’ve done the drive enough to account for the morning traffic on Route 123 and the afternoon backup near the Merritt.
Our Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Services in New Canaan
Level 1 Inspection
A Level 1 inspection is the baseline for any New Canaan home with an actively used fireplace—required annually by NFPA 211 standards. We examine the readily accessible portions of your chimney structure, flue, and appliance connection for soundness, blockages, and creosote accumulation. For the typical Colonial or Tudor estate off Oenoke Ridge, this means checking the firebox, damper, smoke chamber, and flue interior from the roof or cleanout. If you’ve been burning your own seasoned oak or maple from property woodlots, expect us to find more than city-gas customers—organic fuel produces creosote, period.
Level 2 Inspection
Level 2 is where our expertise pays off for New Canaan’s older housing stock. We camera-scan the full flue interior, inspect attics and crawl spaces where chimney structure is exposed, and document everything with photo evidence. This is the standard scope when buying a home, after a chimney fire, or when changing appliance types. On a 1930s Tudor with original clay-tile liner, we’re looking for tile shifting, mortar loss between joints, and any signs of flue gas leakage into chimney walls. We’ve found cracked crowns hiding behind attic insulation on Smith Ridge homes that would have gone undetected in a visual-only sweep. The camera doesn’t lie, and we show you what it sees.
Creosote Removal
Creosote builds in stages. Stage one is flaky soot—brushable. Stage two is tar-like and requires mechanical removal. Stage three is glazed, hardened, and genuinely dangerous: it reduces flue diameter, restricts draft, and ignites at lower temperatures. In New Canaan, we see stage three most often in secondary fireplaces—guest wings, libraries, master bedroom hearths—that get lit for ambiance a dozen times a winter, never hot enough to burn off deposits. That low-temperature burn pattern is a silent hazard. We use rotary cleaning systems and specialized chains for glazed buildup, not standard brushes that just polish the surface. Anthony has removed third-degree creosote from flues that hadn’t been opened in five years.
Soot Removal & Fireplace Cleaning
Soot is the visible residue, but it’s also an indicator. Excessive soot points to poor combustion, wrong fuel moisture content, or draft problems. In New Canaan’s tightly constructed older homes, negative pressure from modern HVAC systems can reverse draft and dump soot into living spaces. We clean fireboxes, smoke shelves, and damper assemblies as part of our sweep service—not just the flue. For homes with multiple fireplaces, we mark each flue with date and service tags so you can track what’s been done. Lost track of your service history? We’ll reconstruct it from what we find.

Annual Sweep
For New Canaan’s multi-hearth estates, “annual sweep” often means a rolling schedule: main fireplace before heating season, secondary hearths on rotation, full Level 2 inspection every three to five years depending on use. We swept six flues at a 1920s Colonial on Oenoke Ridge last fall. The owner had lost track of which hearths were last serviced, and one guest-wing fireplace showed glazed third-degree creosote from years of infrequent, low-temperature burns. Our Level 2 inspection revealed a cracked clay liner in the main flue that HeatShield lining repaired in place, avoiding a costly tear-out. That’s the value of systematic service on complex properties.
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 Canaan
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For liner repairs and relining work in New Canaan’s older chimneys, we spec HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing and DuraFlex stainless liners—the same materials chimney professionals specify for restoration jobs. For caps, dampers, and exterior components, we source Gelco and Olympia Chimney products designed for harsh New England exposure. We keep common sizes in stock, which means when we find a failed cap or damaged damper during your sweep, we’re not ordering blind and making you wait three weeks. Fast turnaround matters when freeze-thaw season is opening mortar joints on your 100-year-old chimney.
Common Chimney Cleaning & Sweep Problems We See in New Canaan Homes
- Spalled mortar and cracked crowns from century-old freeze-thaw damage. New Canaan’s original masonry chimneys have endured 80–120 years of November–April freeze-thaw cycling. Water enters hairline cracks, expands when frozen, and progressively destroys mortar joints and crown integrity. We inspect for this on every roof-access sweep, because a cracked crown becomes a cracked flue liner becomes a house fire.
- Glazed creosote in rarely used secondary fireplaces. On the larger wooded estates, guest-wing or library hearths see only occasional use—enough to deposit creosote, never enough to burn it off. These flues quietly accumulate third-degree glazing while owners focus on the main fireplace. We find this constantly on initial visits to multi-hearth homes.
- Non-standard flue geometries in mid-century modern homes. New Canaan’s Harvard Five and related mid-century houses—including areas near the Philip Johnson Glass House campus—feature low-profile, architecturally integrated chimneys with flue dimensions and angles that don’t match standard equipment. These require custom brush extensions, careful technique, and knowledge of the specific construction era to sweep without damaging distinctive masonry.
- Moisture retention from dense tree canopy debris. New Canaan’s heavily wooded lots mean leaves, needles, and organic matter accumulate on chimney crowns and in gutters, holding moisture against masonry through winter. This accelerates deterioration on chimneys already stressed by age, and it’s why we always clear crown debris as part of our service.
Pricing for Chimney Cleaning & Sweep in New Canaan, CT
| Service | Typical Range in New Canaan |
|---|---|
| Single-flue sweep with Level 1 inspection | $220–$380 |
| Multi-flue estate sweep (3–6 flues) | $480–$900 |
| Level 2 inspection with camera scan | $320–$550 |
| Glazed creosote removal (rotary/mechanical) | $180–$340 additional per flue |
| Fireplace firebox and smoke chamber cleaning | $140–$220 |
What moves you within these ranges? Number of flues, accessibility (steep roofs, interior vs. exterior chimneys), creosote severity, and whether we find damage requiring documentation. Historic homes with original clay liners may need gentler, slower techniques that add time. We quote upfront before starting work—no open-ended billing. Estimates are free: call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll scope your specific property.
We Also Serve Cities Near New Canaan
We regularly route from our Bridgeport base through North Stamford, Norwalk, Darien, and Wilton for multi-property estate management and seasonal scheduling. If you own homes across Fairfield County or manage properties for family members in these towns, we can coordinate sweep schedules across locations. Same technician, same standards, same direct accountability from Anthony.
Serving New Canaan, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the New Canaan 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 New Canaan
Most estate homes on Oenoke Ridge or Smith Ridge have four to six working fireplaces, each with its own flue. A thorough sweep and Level 1 inspection of a six-flue property typically takes four to six hours, depending on creosote buildup and accessibility. We schedule these as dedicated morning or full-day appointments, not rushed between other jobs. Call (833) 719-7193 to book a multi-flue service slot.
Yes, with modified technique. We use softer poly brushes and reduced rotary speed on aging clay tile to avoid dislodging already-loose mortar or cracked segments. Before sweeping, we visually assess liner condition from the top and bottom; if we see significant tile failure, we’ll recommend a Level 2 camera inspection to document whether HeatShield resurfacing or DuraFlex relining is needed. We don’t sweep blindly on century-old systems. Call (833) 719-7193 for an assessment.
Annually for primary fireplaces, and every one to two years for secondary hearths—even infrequently used ones. Seasoned hardwood burns cleaner than softwood, but “seasoned” means 20% moisture or less; many homeowners think their wood is ready when it isn’t. We can check your fuel quality during service. Given New Canaan’s multi-hearth reality, we often set up rotating schedules so every flue gets attention without overwhelming your calendar. Call (833) 719-7193 to set a schedule.
A Level 2 inspection includes full camera scanning of the flue interior, accessible structural examination in attics and basements, and photo documentation of all findings. For historic homes, we’re specifically evaluating clay-tile liner integrity, mortar joint condition, crown and cap performance, and any evidence of previous repairs or modifications. We provide a written report with images, recommended actions prioritized by urgency, and repair options from maintenance to full relining. This documentation is valuable for insurance, resale, or estate planning. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule.
Yes. New Canaan’s Harvard Five-era and related mid-century homes have distinctive chimney configurations—often low-slope, integrated with rooflines, or featuring exposed architectural masonry—that require non-standard equipment and technique. We use custom brush extensions, padded contact points, and hand-finished detail work on visible surfaces. Anthony has swept chimneys on several mid-century properties in the area and understands the construction priorities of that era. Call (833) 719-7193 to discuss your specific chimney geometry.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving New Canaan and Fairfield County since 2016.