Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across New Canaan
Chimney liner installation and chimney rebuilds in New Canaan typically cost between $2,800 and $12,500 depending on scope, and most projects are completed within one to three days. We’re Anthony Perez and the crew at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut — eight years, one specialty, and we make the drive up the Merritt to New Canaan regularly for jobs that other sweeps won’t touch. If you’re seeing cracked mortar, white efflorescence staining your brick, or smelling smoke where you shouldn’t, call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate. We know the difference between a quick liner patch and a full rebuild, and we’ll tell you straight which one your chimney actually needs.

New Canaan’s not a town where you want generic work. The homes here — from the Georgian estates along Oenoke Ridge to the Harvard Five mid-century moderns tucked into the woods — demand tradespeople who understand what they’re looking at. Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team has handled multi-flue restorations on properties with four, five, six working fireplaces, and we’ve fabricated custom liners for flue geometries that standard catalogs don’t even list.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is New Canaan’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve built our reputation in Fairfield County job by job — 800+ customer reviews averaging 4.7 stars, and a significant share of those come from New Canaan homeowners who found us after another company walked away from a complex liner or rebuild project. Anthony leads every job personally. That means the person quoting your work is the same one on the roof measuring your flue, not a subcontractor you’ve never met.
Our response time to New Canaan is typically same-day or next-day for urgent issues — cracked crowns letting water into the flue, liner collapses, or rebuilds where the chimney is actively deteriorating. We carry DuraFlex, HeatShield, and Copperfield materials on our trucks, so we’re not ordering parts and making you wait. And we know the local conditions: the heavy oak and maple canopy that dumps debris on crowns, the freeze-thaw cycles that open mortar joints on pre-WWII masonry, the town’s particular mix of century-old estates and architecturally significant modern homes. Eight years of chimney-only focus means we’ve seen the patterns. We recognize spalled mortar before it becomes structural failure. We know when a clay flue tile crack is cosmetic and when it’s a carbon-monoxide risk.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in New Canaan
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most New Canaan homes with deteriorated clay flue tiles, a stainless steel liner is the permanent fix. We fabricate and install DuraFlex and HeatShield systems sized precisely to your flue — critical on the larger estate homes where multiple fireplaces share a chimney mass, and essential on the mid-century moderns where non-standard flue geometries make prefab liners impossible. A typical stainless steel liner install in New Canaan runs $2,800–$4,500 for a single flue, with multi-flue estates running higher depending on access and configuration.
Flexible Liner Solutions
Flexible liners work well for straight or gently curved flues, but they’ve got limits. In New Canaan’s older homes with offset flues — common in the 1920s Colonials along Smith Ridge — we’ll tell you honestly if a flexible liner will kink or if you need rigid sections or full custom fabrication. We don’t install products that won’t last. When flexible is the right call, we use DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney products rated for the BTU output of your appliance.
Liner Replacement
This is our most common call in New Canaan. Clay flue tiles crack. They spall. They shift. And on a 100-year-old chimney that’s seen decades of wood-burning, the liner is often the weakest link. We remove the damaged liner — sometimes in pieces, sometimes intact — and install a new system that meets current NFPA 211 standards. On a recent job near the Glass House campus, we replaced a failed flexible liner that a previous installer had forced into a geometrically incompatible flue. The new custom-fabricated stainless system dropped the draft pressure to where it should have been all along.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
When the crown, upper flue, and top courses of brick are compromised but the lower structure is sound, a partial rebuild saves you thousands over starting from scratch. This is common on New Canaan’s pre-WWII estates where the crown has cracked from freeze-thaw cycling and water has infiltrated the top five to eight feet of masonry. We rebuild with matching brick where possible, pour a new concrete crown with proper overhang and drip edge, and install a new liner system as part of the scope. Partial rebuilds in New Canaan typically run $4,500–$7,500.
Full Chimney Rebuild
Some chimneys are too far gone. Spalling brick through the full height, shifted or leaning structure, compromised firebox — at that point, a full rebuild is the only safe option. We’ve done full rebuilds on New Canaan estates where the original chimney was 80+ years old and had never had proper maintenance. We dismantle carefully, salvage usable brick when matching matters for historical character, and rebuild to current code with a new stainless liner integrated from the start. Full rebuilds start around $8,500 and can exceed $12,500 for large multi-flue structures on estate properties.
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 Canaan
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. Our trucks carry DuraFlex and HeatShield stainless systems, Famco and Copperfield caps and dampers, and Gelco mesh for crown protection. For New Canaan’s mid-century modern homes with custom flue requirements, we work with fabricators who can produce non-standard diameters and geometries that prefab catalogs don’t stock. Having the right parts on hand means we’re not making multiple trips or leaving your chimney open while we wait for shipping. On a town like New Canaan where many homeowners have second homes or travel schedules, efficiency matters — we aim to complete liner and rebuild projects in the fewest site visits possible.

Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in New Canaan Homes
- Freeze-thaw destruction of original clay flue tiles. New Canaan’s inland position means full New England freeze-thaw cycling from November through April. Water penetrates cracked crowns, saturates the chimney mass, and expands as it freezes — opening mortar joints and shattering clay tiles. We see this constantly on the pre-WWII estates along Smith Ridge and Oenoke Ridge.
- Glazed creosote in rarely-used secondary fireplaces. On the larger wooded estates, guest wing and library fireplaces often get only a few low-temperature fires per season. That pattern deposits creosote that never gets hot enough to dry and flake off — it builds into glazed, third-degree accumulation that restricts the flue and accelerates liner deterioration. These flues need inspection as much as the main hearth, sometimes more.
- Ill-fitting liners in mid-century modern chimneys. The Harvard Five homes and their descendants feature low-profile, architecturally integrated chimneys with flue geometries that standard flexible liners simply cannot accommodate. We’ve found kinked, compressed liners in these homes that were creating dangerous draft problems — the “repair” was worse than the original condition.
- Moisture retention from heavy tree canopy debris. New Canaan’s dense oak and maple cover means crowns and caps accumulate leaves, twigs, and organic matter that holds moisture against masonry. On an 80–120-year-old chimney, that moisture accelerates spalling and mortar decay — especially on north-facing exposures that never fully dry.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in New Canaan, CT
| Service | Typical Range in New Canaan |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner (single flue) | $2,800 – $4,500 |
| Multi-flue liner system (estate properties) | $5,500 – $9,000 |
| Liner repair / partial relining | $1,800 – $3,200 |
| Partial chimney rebuild (crown + upper flue) | $4,500 – $7,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild (single flue) | $8,500 – $12,500+ |
What moves the needle on cost: flue height, number of flues, access (steep roof pitches common on New Canaan estates add labor), whether the existing liner can be removed intact or must be demolished in place, and whether custom fabrication is needed for non-standard geometries. We provide itemized quotes before any work begins — no vague “we’ll see” pricing. Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate; most New Canaan properties can be assessed and quoted in a single site visit.
We Also Serve Cities Near New Canaan
We regularly travel from our Bridgeport base to chimney liner and rebuild jobs in North Stamford, Norwalk, Darien, and Wilton — the same service, same materials, same Anthony-led crew. If you’re in Fairfield County and your chimney needs more than a sweep, we likely already know the housing stock and local conditions.
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 Liner & Rebuild in New Canaan
Clay tile relining is rarely practical on New Canaan’s older chimneys because the original flue is too narrow to accommodate a second clay lining, and the mortar joints between existing tiles are already compromised. Stainless steel liners from DuraFlex or HeatShield install within the existing flue, seal all gaps, and handle thermal expansion without cracking — critical on a century-old chimney that’s already shown it can’t keep clay intact through another freeze-thaw cycle. Call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll show you exactly what your flue looks like with our camera inspection.
We coordinate closely with homeowners and, when required, preservation consultants to match materials and maintain the low-profile, integrated aesthetic that defines these homes. On a Harvard Five property near the Glass House campus, we fabricated a custom stainless liner to fit a non-standard flue angle and rebuilt the chimney crown with tinted concrete to blend with the original architectural intent. Anthony leads these jobs personally — no crew member is making aesthetic decisions without the owner on site. Call (833) 719-7193 to discuss your specific home.
Yes, and possibly more urgently than your main hearth. Infrequent, low-temperature fires in New Canaan’s secondary fireplaces produce glazed creosote that builds silently over years, and the liner deterioration that follows often goes unnoticed until there’s a draft failure or smoke incident. On multi-flue estates, we inspect every flue during our visit — not just the one you use most. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule a full inspection; estimates are free.
A partial rebuild addresses the crown, upper flue, and top courses of brick — typically the first 5–8 feet — while preserving the sound lower structure. A full rebuild is necessary when deterioration extends through the full height, the chimney has shifted or leaned, or the firebox itself is compromised. On New Canaan’s 1920s Colonials, we often find that the lower 20 feet are solid but the top has taken the worst of the weather; a partial rebuild with a new liner runs roughly half the cost of starting over. We’ll show you camera footage of the full height so you can see exactly what we’re seeing. Call (833) 719-7193 for an assessment.
We do, and we understand the additional coordination that may be required with the New Canaan Historical Society or local preservation officials. Our approach prioritizes reversible, non-destructive methods where possible — stainless liners install within existing flues without altering exterior masonry, and we document conditions with pre- and post-installation camera surveys. Anthony has worked with preservation requirements on several Fairfield County properties and can speak directly with your consultant or board. Call (833) 719-7193 to discuss the process for your specific property.
On a Tudor-Revival estate along Oenoke Ridge, our crew found a century-old chimney with spalled mortar and cracked clay tiles during an annual multi-flue inspection. We installed a custom-welded DuraFlex stainless steel liner and completed a partial rebuild of the crown and upper flue, ensuring the homeowner’s four fireplaces met code for safe wood burning this season. That’s the kind of work we do — not quick fixes, but solutions that match the lifespan of the homes we work on.
New Canaan’s housing stock demands more than a standard sweep with a brush and a vacuum. The estate-scale properties with four to six working fireplaces, the mid-century moderns with their non-standard flue geometries, the 80–120-year-old masonry that’s survived a century of New England weather — these require a specialist who’s seen the patterns, carries the right materials, and stands behind the work personally. Eight years, one specialty, and 800+ homeowners have reviewed us at 4.7 stars. If your chimney needs a liner or a rebuild, call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate. We’ll give you a straight answer and a fair price.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving New Canaan and Fairfield County since 2016.