Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Commack
Chimney liner replacement and chimney rebuilds in Commack typically cost between $2,800 and $8,500 depending on scope, and most jobs are completed in one to three days. If you’re smelling oil fumes near your fireplace or seeing white efflorescence on your chimney’s exterior, your 1960s-era flue system is likely failing.

We’re Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, and our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team makes the trip to Commack regularly from our Bridgeport base. We know the 11725 zip well — the postwar colonials along Commack Road, the split-levels tucked behind Jericho Turnpike, the ranch homes north of the Long Island Expressway. These aren’t generic chimneys. They’re dual-flue masonry structures built during Long Island’s suburban boom, most now 50 to 65 years old, and they present problems that wood-burning specialists from upstate simply don’t encounter. Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, personally handles the diagnostic work. Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate — we’ll usually be there within 48 hours.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is Commack’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference. Anthony Perez doesn’t subcontract chimney work to seasonal crews — he arrives with his own tools, runs the camera inspection himself, and signs off on every liner installation and rebuild we complete in Suffolk County.
Our reputation here is built on volume and accountability. 800+ homeowners have reviewed us across our service area, averaging 4.7 stars. Commack customers specifically mention the same thing: they expected a sales pitch, got a technician who explained what their 1962 chimney was actually doing wrong. From annual sweep to full rebuild, we handle the entire lifecycle — no handing you off to a separate contractor when the job turns out to be bigger than a simple cap replacement.
Response time matters in Commack, especially once October hits and every chimney company on Long Island is booked three weeks out. We keep DuraFlex and HeatShield materials stocked specifically for Suffolk County fuel-oil configurations, which cuts our turnaround on liner jobs to days, not weeks. We also know the local terrain — Commack’s inland position means harder freeze-thaw cycles than coastal towns, and that knowledge changes how we spec mortar mixes and crown coatings.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Commack
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For Commack’s oil-fired heating systems, we install rigid and flexible stainless steel liners that withstand the acidic condensate sulfurous soot produces. The terra cotta flue tiles in your 1960s chimney weren’t engineered for decades of fuel-oil exhaust — they crack, spall, and create rough surfaces that trap corrosive deposits. A 316Ti stainless liner from DuraFlex gives you a smooth, sealed flue path rated for the temperatures and chemistry your boiler actually produces. We size these precisely for the appliance, not the chimney, which matters when you’re fitting a modern high-efficiency burner into a 1960s chase.
Flexible Liner Installation
Commack’s split-levels and ranches often have offset flues or tight cleanout openings that make rigid stainless impractical. That’s where flexible liners come in. We use DuraFlex flexible stainless for these jobs — it navigates offsets while maintaining the same corrosion resistance as rigid pipe. Last fall we relined a split-level on Commack Road where the original terra cotta flue tiles had spalled from 60 winters of freeze-thaw. The homeowner’s oil boiler was venting into a shared chase with the fireplace, and our camera revealed a hairline crack in the common wythe. We installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner for the furnace and a separate 8-inch flexible liner for the fireplace, sealed the damper with a HeatShield panel, and pressure-tested both flues to confirm zero cross-contamination.
Liner Replacement
Sometimes the liner isn’t the only problem. In Commack’s 1960s colonials, we regularly find that the original terra cotta is compromised top to bottom — not cracked in one spot, but deteriorated throughout from acid attack and thermal cycling. Full replacement means removing the damaged tiles (or abandoning them in place if extraction risks wall damage), installing the new system, and addressing the root cause: usually a missing or failed cap, a deteriorated crown, or that shared-flue configuration that’s been slowly destroying both flues. We don’t drop a liner into a chase that’s going to ruin it again in five years.
Partial and Full Chimney Rebuild
When mortar joints are spalling throughout, when the crown has cracked through to the flue opening, when the exterior wythe is separating from the interior — that’s rebuild territory. Commack’s aggressive freeze-thaw, unmoderated by coastal buffers, punishes masonry harder than towns closer to the Sound. A partial rebuild might address the top six courses and crown; a full rebuild removes the exterior chimney to the roofline and reconstructs with proper reinforcement, through-wall flashing, and a poured concrete crown with drip edge. Anthony Perez oversees every rebuild personally — these aren’t jobs you hand to a crew you’ve never met.

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 Commack
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For Commack liner jobs, we specify DuraFlex stainless steel systems — the same 316Ti alloy chimney professionals nationwide use for oil and gas applications. For crown and flue resurfacing, we use HeatShield cerfractory sealant, rated to 2900°F and engineered to bond with existing terra cotta when full replacement isn’t practical. For caps, dampers, and exterior finishes, we source Copperfield and Famco — brands that hold up to Long Island’s salt-laden maritime air without the corrosion you see on cheap galvanized products after three seasons. We keep common sizes in stock, which means your Commack job doesn’t wait on a warehouse shipment from Pennsylvania.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Commack Homes
- Shared-flue-wall cracks in 1960s colonials. In Commack’s aging 1960s colonials, the shared brick wall between oil-furnace and fireplace flues commonly cracks after decades of differential thermal expansion, allowing carbon monoxide from the oil side to seep into the fireplace flue and re-enter the home — a hidden danger that requires separate liner systems or sealed damper assemblies. You won’t smell it. You won’t see it. Our camera inspection finds it, or our combustion spillage test does.
- Mortar joint spalling from unmoderated freeze-thaw. Commack’s mid-Island, inland position means it receives full Long Island winter cold without the bay or Sound moderation, driving aggressive freeze-thaw cycling through mortar and masonry each season. Caps are often missing or cheap builder-grade, leaving tops of liners exposed to direct water infiltration. By March, we’ve usually booked a dozen Commack calls where the crown washed out years ago and nobody noticed until bricks started landing in the yard.
- Acidic condensate eating terra cotta from inside. Suffolk County has one of the highest fuel-oil heating rates in the nation, so Commack chimney cleaners primarily contend with sulfurous oil-soot deposits and acidic condensate in aging terra cotta liners rather than the wood-burning creosote typical elsewhere — a chemically and mechanically different job that most generalist sweeps underestimate. The rough, glazed surface left behind traps more soot, accelerates deterioration, and restricts draft enough to cause boiler back-puffing.
- Interior condensation in dormant chimneys. The humid maritime air also keeps moisture levels high enough that dormant chimneys accumulate interior condensation over spring and summer, accelerating liner deterioration and creating draft problems when residents fire up systems in the fall. We’ve opened flues in September that looked like they’d been storing rainwater — the liner was sound in May, compromised by August.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Commack, NY
Here’s what Commack homeowners actually pay:
- Stainless steel liner installation (single flue, standard height): $2,800–$4,200
- Flexible liner installation with offset navigation: $3,200–$4,800
- Dual-liner system for shared chase (oil + fireplace): $5,500–$7,800
- Partial rebuild (crown, top courses, cap): $3,500–$5,500
- Full chimney rebuild to roofline: $6,500–$8,500+
- HeatShield flue resurfacing (when liner is structurally sound): $1,800–$2,800
What moves you up or down in these ranges: chimney height (two-story colonials cost more than ranches), accessibility (steep roof pitch, tight side yards), whether we can extract old terra cotta or must abandon and sleeve, and whether the shared-flue wall requires structural reinforcement. We don’t guess from the driveway — every estimate includes a full camera inspection. Call (833) 719-7193 for your free estimate.
We Also Serve Cities Near Commack
We regularly run liner and rebuild jobs in East Northport, Elwood, Kings Park, and Smithtown — the same 1960s housing stock, the same fuel-oil heating patterns, the same freeze-thaw exposure. If you’re in one of these towns and found this page searching for Commack chimney liner services, we cover your area too. No separate trip charge, no subcontractor handoff.
Serving Commack, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Commack 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 Commack
Builders in Commack’s postwar boom routinely constructed dual-flue chimneys with a single brick wall separating the oil-furnace flue from the fireplace flue. After 60 years of differential thermal expansion — the oil side running hot daily, the fireplace side cycling from cold to blazing — that common wythe cracks. Carbon monoxide from your boiler can then migrate into the fireplace flue and back into your living space through the damper. We find this pattern so consistently in Commack colonials that we now pressure-test every shared chase we inspect. Call (833) 719-7193 if your home was built between 1958 and 1975 and you’ve never had the flue separation checked.
Sulfur in fuel oil produces sulfur dioxide and sulfur trioxide when burned; combine with moisture in the flue gases and you get sulfuric acid condensate. Terra cotta flue tiles — standard in Commack’s 1960s construction — are alkaline and vulnerable to acid attack. The surface degrades, becomes rough, traps more acidic soot, and the cycle accelerates. Stainless steel liners, specifically 316Ti alloy like DuraFlex uses, are engineered for this chemistry. Wood-burning creosote is a different problem entirely — most sweeps who specialize in fireplaces don’t recognize oil-flue deterioration until it’s catastrophic.
If the exterior masonry is sound — no spalling bricks, no leaning, no significant mortar loss — a liner replacement or relining usually suffices. We rebuild when the structure itself is compromised: widespread mortar failure, separating wythes, or crown collapse that has allowed water to saturate the masonry core. Anthony Perez makes this call after inspection, not from the curb. The wrong choice wastes money either way — a liner in a failing chase fails again; a rebuild when a liner would do is thousands you didn’t need to spend. Our inspection gives you the specific condition of your Commack chimney, not a generic recommendation.
We install DuraFlex stainless steel liners for both rigid and flexible applications — 316Ti alloy for oil and gas, 304 for wood-only when we encounter it. For flue resurfacing where the terra cotta is damaged but structurally intact, we use HeatShield cerfractory sealant. These are the same products specified by chimney professionals nationwide, not hardware-store substitutes that corrode through in five years. We stock common diameters, so your Commack job isn’t waiting on a special order.
Annually, without exception. A 60-year-old terra cotta liner in a Commack fuel-oil chimney has exceeded its design life by decades. The NFPA 211 standard calls for annual inspection of all chimney systems, and for Commack’s housing stock, that annual check is non-negotiable. We find new cracks, new spalling, and new CO migration paths every single heating season. The inspection costs a fraction of what an emergency liner installation costs in January, and it takes about 45 minutes. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule — estimates are free, and we’ll put you on the calendar before the fall rush hits.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Commack and Suffolk County since 2016.