Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across New Haven
Chimney liner installation and chimney rebuilds in New Haven typically cost between $2,800 and $12,500 depending on scope, with most stainless steel liner replacements completed in one day and partial rebuilds taking two to three days. We’re based in Bridgeport and regularly make the 20-minute run up I-95 to New Haven, usually arriving same-day for urgent calls.

Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team knows these streets. We’ve worked on three-family Victorians in Wooster Square, done liner pulls in East Rock brownstones, and rebuilt crowns on Westville colonials. Anthony Perez leads every job personally — he’s the one on your roof, not a subcontractor sent from a dispatch center. Eight years, one specialty: chimneys only. That focus matters when you’re dealing with 130-year-old flue systems that were never designed for modern appliances.
Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate. We cover ZIP codes 06501 through 06504 and the surrounding New Haven area.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is New Haven’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve earned our reputation in New Haven one job at a time. 800+ homeowners have reviewed us, and that 4.7-star average reflects real completed work — liner installs, rebuilds, emergency repairs — not a handful of cherry-picked testimonials. Many of those reviews come from repeat customers in neighborhoods like Fair Haven and Westville who started with a sweep and called us back when their inspection revealed liner damage.
Anthony leads every job. When you hire Premier Chimney Cleaning, you get the owner on your property, accountable for the diagnosis and the fix. No rotating crews, no seasonal hires learning chimney work between gutter seasons. From annual sweep to full rebuild, we handle the complete chimney lifecycle — so when your inspection turns up a cracked liner or spalling brick, you don’t need to find a separate contractor.
Our response time to New Haven is typically same-day for urgent issues: backdrafting, carbon monoxide alarms, visible chimney damage after storms. For scheduled liner replacements and rebuilds, we book within a week. We carry DuraFlex and HeatShield materials on our truck, which means fewer delays waiting for parts — a real advantage when you’re trying to get heat restored before another cold snap rolls in off Long Island Sound.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in New Haven
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
Stainless steel liners are our most common install in New Haven, and for good reason. The pre-1920 brick two- and three-family homes that dominate Wooster Square and Fair Haven were built with unlined masonry flues or aging 4-inch terra-cotta tiles sized for coal grates. A 6-inch DuraFlex stainless liner gives you a properly sized, corrosion-resistant vent path for modern gas or oil appliances — and it meets current Connecticut fire code for liner sizing. We install these in one day on most New Haven properties, pulling the liner down from the top and making the connection at the appliance collar.
Flexible Liner Systems
Not every New Haven chimney runs straight. The offset flues in some East Rock Victorians — built around central staircases or modified during century-old renovations — need a flexible liner that can navigate bends without losing draft efficiency. We use DuraFlex flexible stainless systems for these jobs, which handle up to 30-degree offsets while maintaining the smooth interior surface that resists creosote buildup. Flexible liners cost roughly the same as rigid in materials but add labor time for tricky pulls.
Liner Replacement
Liner replacement in New Haven is often urgent. Salt-laden air off Long Island Sound accelerates corrosion in older aluminum or lower-grade stainless liners, and the 25–30 annual freeze-thaw cycles crack terra-cotta tile that was already past its service life. We remove the failed liner — whether it’s collapsed tile, corroded metal, or a HeatShield coating that’s reached end-of-life — and install a new system sized precisely to your appliance’s BTU output and draft requirements. This isn’t a swap-it-and-hope job; we run draft tests before and after to confirm proper function.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
Partial rebuilds target the damage zone without the cost of tearing down the whole stack. In New Haven, we most commonly rebuild the top three to five courses of brick where freeze-thaw spalling is worst, plus the crown and sometimes the upper flue area. On that three-family Victorian on Orange Street in East Rock, we found a 1920s terra-cotta liner split from salt-air freeze-thaw, with a collapsed section blocking the flue for a gas boiler. We removed the debris, installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner, and rebuilt the top three courses of brick with a new clay crown — fixing a draft reversal that was spilling carbon monoxide into the second-floor hallway. Two days, one crew, owner on site.
Full Chimney Rebuild
When mortar joint deterioration has progressed through the full height of the stack — common in chimneys that haven’t been inspected for 15+ years in New Haven’s coastal climate — a full rebuild is the only safe option. We dismantle to the roofline or below, salvage usable brick where possible, and rebuild with matching masonry and a new liner system integrated from the ground up. These projects run $8,500–$12,500 in the New Haven market and typically take 3–5 days. We tarp the work area and coordinate with your roofing if flashing replacement is needed.

What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
- 3
A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
- 4
You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in New Haven
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For New Haven liner work, we specify DuraFlex stainless steel liners, HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing systems, and Olympia Chimney components — the same product lines that chimney professionals specify nationwide. We stock common diameters and lengths on our Bridgeport truck, which means most New Haven jobs don’t wait on parts. When we need a specialty item for an unusual flue configuration, our distributor network delivers next-day to New Haven County. Gelco caps and Famco dampers round out our rebuild hardware. These aren’t marketing names — they’re what we install, what we’ve tested across hundreds of jobs, and what we warranty.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in New Haven Homes
- Salt-air accelerated deterioration: Sitting directly on Long Island Sound, New Haven experiences persistent onshore humidity and salt air that erodes mortar joints and terra-cotta tile liners measurably faster than in Hartford or Waterbury. We regularly find spalled brick and cracked liners in chimneys that look fine from the ground — hidden water infiltration starts long before visible exterior cracking appears.
- Oversized flues from coal-to-gas conversions: In East Rock and Westville, many homeowners who converted from oil to gas in the 1970s–80s were never told their original wide-bore flues create a severely negative draft ratio for today’s mid- and high-efficiency gas appliances. This is a recurring code deficiency New Haven sweeps flag constantly, and one that Connecticut’s liner-sizing requirements technically mandate correcting.
- Reactivated decorative fireplaces with hidden blockages: Those parlor fireplaces in late-Victorian homes, inactive for 20–40 years, often contain significant creosote glaze, collapsed liner sections, or animal nesting. When new owners try to use them — common in New Haven’s active rental market — the first fire can reveal a dangerous obstruction or flue fire hazard.
- Freeze-thaw crown failure: New Haven’s 25–30 annual freeze-thaw cycles destroy concrete crowns that aren’t properly sloped or sealed. Water enters hairline cracks, expands, and opens the crack wider each cycle. By the time you see interior water stains, the crown is often compromised enough to allow flue-gas leakage into wall cavities.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in New Haven, CT
Here’s what chimney liner and rebuild work actually costs in the New Haven market:
- Stainless steel liner installation (standard gas/oil appliance): $2,800–$4,500
- Flexible liner with offset navigation: $3,200–$5,000
- Liner replacement (remove old, install new): $3,500–$5,500
- Partial rebuild (top 3–5 courses, crown, upper flue): $4,500–$7,500
- Full chimney rebuild with integrated liner: $8,500–$12,500
- HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing (liner repair alternative): $2,200–$3,800
What moves you within these ranges? Height of the stack (three-story New Haven triple-deckers cost more than two-story singles), accessibility (steep roofs, narrow alleys between Fair Haven houses), and whether we find hidden damage once we’re inside the flue. We inspect with a video camera before quoting — no guesswork, no mid-job surprises. Estimates are free. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near New Haven
We regularly travel from our Bridgeport base to chimney liner and rebuild jobs in East Haven (where coastal salt exposure mirrors New Haven’s), Woodbridge (older homes with similar pre-war construction), West Haven (direct shoreline properties with accelerated weathering), and Hamden (mixed-era housing with conversion-era flue issues). The same owner-led crew, same materials, same day-trip scheduling.
Serving New Haven, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the New Haven 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 Haven
Yes — Connecticut fire code and the National Fuel Gas Code require properly sized liners for all gas appliances, and pre-1920 New Haven chimneys are almost always dangerously oversized for modern gas units. Those original wide-bore flues were built for coal grates, not 40,000 BTU gas inserts. The negative draft ratio can cause backdrafting and carbon monoxide spillage, especially in tightly sealed homes. We size and install DuraFlex liners specifically for your appliance’s output. Call (833) 719-7193 for an inspection — estimates are free.
Look for white efflorescence on exterior brick (salt deposits from moisture migration), rust stains at the cleanout door, or bits of tile in your fireplace or cleanout — these indicate freeze-thaw damage to terra-cotta liners. Interior warning signs include smoky odors when the appliance isn’t running, moisture in the firebox, or a draft that seems weaker than previous seasons. But many liner failures are invisible without a camera inspection. In New Haven’s coastal climate, we recommend annual inspection — the salt-air acceleration means damage progresses faster than inland standards suggest. Call (833) 719-7193 to book a video scan.
A stainless steel liner installation in New Haven runs $2,800–$4,500, while a full chimney rebuild with integrated liner costs $8,500–$12,500 — roughly triple. The deciding factor is structural integrity: if your mortar joints are sound and only the flue is compromised, a liner solves it. If spalling brick, leaning, or widespread joint failure extends below the roofline, rebuilding is unavoidable. We never recommend rebuilds when liners will suffice; our camera inspection shows you exactly what you’re dealing with before you commit. Free estimates at (833) 719-7193.
A properly sized liner improves draft efficiency, which means your appliance operates closer to its rated efficiency instead of fighting poor venting. In New Haven’s many converted multi-family homes with oversized flues, we often see appliances cycling improperly, running longer to reach temperature, or producing excess condensation — all signs of draft mismatch. A correctly sized DuraFlex liner corrects the draft ratio, which can reduce fuel consumption 5–15% depending on how badly the original flue was oversized. The primary benefit is safety; efficiency is a secondary gain. Call (833) 719-7193 to discuss your specific setup.
Annually. Pre-1930 chimneys in New Haven face a triple threat: original terra-cotta tile past its 75–100 year service life, salt-air corrosion accelerating mortar and liner degradation, and freeze-thaw cycles that exploit every existing crack. The CSIA recommends annual inspection for all active chimneys; in New Haven’s coastal environment, that standard is a minimum, not a suggestion. Many of the liner failures we repair in East Rock and Westville could have been caught years earlier with routine inspection. We offer annual inspection packages — call (833) 719-7193 to schedule.
Ready to fix your chimney? Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate on liner installation or chimney rebuild in New Haven. Anthony Perez leads every job, and we typically book within a week — sooner for urgent draft or safety issues.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving New Haven since 2016.