Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Jericho
Chimney liner replacement and structural rebuilds in Jericho typically cost $2,800–$8,500 depending on liner material and rebuild scope, with most inspections scheduled within 48 hours and liner installations completed in one to two days. If your Jericho home was built during the 1950s–1970s suburban boom and you’ve converted from oil to natural gas, your original clay liner is almost certainly deteriorating from the inside out—hidden damage that a standard sweep won’t catch.

We’re familiar with the raised ranches along Old Cedar Swamp Road, the split-levels near Jericho Turnpike, and the colonials tucked behind the Jericho Public Library. Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, personally handles every liner inspection and rebuild call we get in the 11753 and 11853 ZIP codes. From Hicksville to Syosset, we’ve made the short drive to Jericho enough times to know which homes have the original 8-inch terracotta liners that were never meant for today’s high-efficiency gas systems. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule a free estimate—Anthony will walk your flue himself, not send a subcontractor.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is Jericho’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference between a chimney company that understands what Jericho’s housing stock demands and a generalist who treats every flue the same. Anthony Perez leads every job personally, which means the person quoting your liner replacement is the same one installing it—not a rotating crew you can’t hold accountable.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team has completed dozens of liner installations and crown rebuilds in Jericho specifically. We’ve worked on the mid-century split-levels near the Long Island Rail Road corridor and the older colonials south of Jericho Turnpike. That pattern recognition matters. When Anthony opens a cleanout door and sees that characteristic white powdery efflorescence on clay tiles, he already knows the flue has been running below dew point for years—classic oil-to-gas conversion damage.
800+ homeowners have reviewed us at a 4.7-star average. That volume reflects sustained, high-volume work across Nassau and western Suffolk counties, not a handful of curated testimonials. Jericho customers specifically mention our willingness to explain why a simple sweep isn’t enough when the liner is compromised. We don’t sell fear—we show the damage, explain the mechanism, and let you decide.
Response time to Jericho is typically next-day for inspections and within a week for scheduled liner installations or rebuilds. We keep DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney liner components in stock, which means we’re not waiting on shipments while your boiler is tagged out of service.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Jericho
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
Stainless steel is the standard for gas conversions in Jericho’s 50–70 year old chimneys. We install 316Ti alloy and 304-grade liners from DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney, sized precisely to your appliance’s BTU output and venting category. A 6-inch round liner for a high-efficiency gas boiler. A 7-inch for certain wood-burning inserts. The original 8-inch square terracotta in your Jericho colonial? It’s creating turbulent, slow-moving exhaust that condenses acidic moisture on the clay surface. That condensate seeps through hairline cracks, dissolves mortar joints, and eventually causes tile collapse. We’ve pulled entire sections of liner that looked intact from the top but crumbled at the touch because the mortar had turned to sand.
Stainless steel liners in Jericho run $2,800–$4,500 for a standard single-flue install, including the connector, top plate, and cap. Homes with multiple flues—common in Jericho’s larger colonials with both a heating appliance and a decorative fireplace—add $1,800–$2,800 per additional liner.
Flexible Liner Systems
Not every Jericho chimney is straight. The offset flues in some split-levels—built to dodge around stairwells or second-floor additions—need a liner that can navigate bends without creating ledges where condensation pools. We use DuraFlex flexible corrugated liners for these applications, pulled through from the top and connected with rigid sections only where the flue straightens above the smoke chamber. Flexible liner installs in Jericho typically cost $3,200–$5,000, reflecting the additional labor and specialized tooling for offset navigation.
Liner Replacement (Clay Tile Removal)
When the original clay tile liner in your Jericho home has spalled, cracked, or partially collapsed, removal and replacement is the only safe option. This isn’t a sweep. This is demolition inside a confined vertical shaft, followed by precise measurement and custom liner fabrication. We recently relined a 1957 raised ranch on Old Cedar Swamp Road where the original clay tile had spalled from decades of gas conversion condensation. We installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner to match the new high-efficiency boiler, and rebuilt the crown with a Copperfield cap to keep out Long Island’s freeze-thaw moisture.
Full liner replacement with clay removal in Jericho: $4,500–$6,500. This includes disposal of the old tile, flue resurfacing if needed with HeatShield cerfractory foam, and the new stainless system.
Partial and Full Chimney Rebuild
Sometimes the liner damage is a symptom, not the disease. In Jericho’s salt-exposed west-facing chimneys—particularly those within a few miles of the South Shore—we see crown failure that lets water cascade down the flue, destroying everything inside. Spalling brick. Deteriorated mortar joints. Leaning stacks. When the structural shell is compromised, relining alone is putting a bandage on a broken leg.

Partial rebuilds (crown, upper courses, flue wall reconstruction) run $3,500–$6,000 in Jericho. Full rebuilds from the roofline up, including new liner, cap, and waterproofing: $7,500–$12,000. Anthony will tell you honestly when a rebuild is necessary versus when strategic repairs plus a new liner will suffice. We’ve walked away from jobs where the homeowner expected a $5,000 rebuild and we quoted $1,200 in targeted repairs. That honesty is why our review volume stays high.
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.
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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 Jericho
We don’t use hardware-store substitutes. For Jericho liner installations, we specify DuraFlex stainless steel and Olympia Chimney components—products that carry the same UL listings and warranties that chimney professionals nationwide rely on. For crown rebuilds and resurfacing, we use HeatShield cerfractory foam and Copperfield caps, not generic mortar mixes that crack in the first freeze-thaw cycle. We keep common diameters and fittings in stock at our Bridgeport warehouse, which means most Jericho jobs don’t wait on shipping. When you need a liner installed before your boiler inspection deadline, that turnaround matters.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Jericho Homes
- Original 8-inch terracotta liners in oil-to-gas conversions cool too fast, condense acidic moisture, and erode mortar joints from within. Jericho’s housing stock is almost entirely product of Long Island’s 1950s–70s post-war suburban boom, meaning the vast majority of masonry chimneys are now 50–70 years old and were originally sized for oil-fired burners. As Nassau County homeowners have steadily converted to natural gas, those oversized flues now run cooler, trap condensation, and rapidly deteriorate clay tile liners—making inspection and relining far more urgent here than in newer-build communities on the Island.
- Decorative wood-burning flues in split-levels accumulate creosote that bonds with residual moisture from gas appliances sharing the same chimney. Many Jericho homes feature decorative wood-burning fireplaces as a selling point of the affluent neighborhood, adding a second or third flue that may have seen decades of light or inconsistent use—a common creosote-accumulation scenario that complicates liner decisions.
- Salt-laden air from the South Shore and Long Island Sound accelerates spalling of the crown and upper courses. The proximity to the South Shore and Long Island Sound means residual salt-laden air works into porous mortar, hastening deterioration at the crown and upper courses—especially on west-facing exposures that catch prevailing winds.
- Freeze-thaw cycling destroys chimney crowns faster than inland Nassau County. Jericho typically sees repeated sub-freezing nights followed by above-freezing days each winter, which accelerates spalling and mortar joint erosion in aging brick chimneys. A crown that might last 15 years in Plainview fails in 8–10 here.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Jericho, NY
Here’s what Jericho homeowners actually pay, based on jobs we’ve completed in the 11753 ZIP code:
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Chimney inspection with video scan | $175–$275 |
| Stainless steel liner (single flue, gas appliance) | $2,800–$4,500 |
| Flexible liner (offset flue) | $3,200–$5,000 |
| Liner replacement with clay tile removal | $4,500–$6,500 |
| Partial rebuild (crown, upper courses) | $3,500–$6,000 |
| Full chimney rebuild with new liner | $7,500–$12,000 |
Factors that push costs higher: multiple flues, offset or unlined construction requiring demolition, significant spalling requiring brick replacement, and accessibility issues (steep roofs, tight side yards). We provide fixed quotes after inspection—no open-ended estimates. Call (833) 719-7193 for your free estimate.
We Also Serve Cities Near Jericho
We regularly travel from our Bridgeport base to Nassau County for liner and rebuild work. If you’re in Hicksville, Syosset, Plainview, or New Cassel, the same response times and pricing structures apply. Anthony has relined chimneys on both sides of the Nassau-Suffolk line and understands the similar housing stock and conversion history these communities share with Jericho.
Serving Jericho, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Jericho 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 Jericho
Yes, almost certainly. The original 8-inch terracotta liner in your Jericho home was engineered for 400–500°F oil exhaust; your high-efficiency gas appliance may vent at 250°F or below. That temperature drop means acidic condensate forms on the clay surface, seeps into hairline cracks, and dissolves the mortar joints you can’t see from outside. We’ve removed liners that appeared intact from the roof but crumbled when touched because the internal structure had turned to powder. Call (833) 719-7193 for a video inspection—estimates are free.
If the flue is unlined or has damaged clay tile, yes—especially in Jericho’s split-levels and colonials where decorative fireplaces share chimney mass with heating appliances. Light, inconsistent use creates a cycle of partial heating and cooling that bonds creosote to tile surfaces more stubbornly than regular hot fires. An unlined or compromised flue also creates a path for carbon monoxide migration between flues. We can inspect with a video camera and tell you whether a stainless liner, a HeatShield resurfacing, or simple repair is appropriate. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule.
316Ti stainless steel from DuraFlex or Olympia Chimney. The “Ti” denotes titanium stabilization, which resists the chloridic acid condensation that attacks standard 304-grade steel in gas-venting applications. We size the diameter to your appliance’s category (typically 6-inch for residential boilers up to 150,000 BTU), never forcing an oversized liner that recreates the condensation problem you’re trying to solve. For Jericho’s oil-to-gas conversions, 316Ti is the industry-specified material, not a premium upgrade. Call (833) 719-7193 for exact sizing and pricing.
Not necessarily. Crown deterioration in Jericho is common and often localized to the top surface and upper 2–3 courses of brick. If the structural walls below are sound and the flue is intact, we can pour a new concrete crown, install a Copperfield cap with proper drip edge, and waterproof the exposed masonry—typically $1,800–$3,200 versus $7,500+ for full rebuild. Anthony evaluates crown damage with a hammer test and moisture meter; he’ll tell you honestly when repair suffices and when the spalling has compromised structural integrity. Call (833) 719-7193 for an assessment.
A Level 2 inspection with video scan is the only way to know for certain. But warning signs specific to Jericho’s housing stock include: white efflorescence or powdery staining on clay tiles (acidic condensate residue), pieces of tile in the cleanout, rust stains on the boiler jacket or water heater (moisture backing up from a compromised flue), and any history of oil-to-gas conversion without documented relining. If your home matches Jericho’s typical 1950s–1970s construction and you’ve never had the flue video-inspected, assume the liner is suspect until proven otherwise. Call (833) 719-7193 to schedule—Anthony performs every inspection personally.
Ready to protect your Jericho home’s chimney? Call Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut at (833) 719-7193 for your free liner and rebuild estimate. Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, will inspect your flue personally and give you a straight answer on what your chimney actually needs.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Jericho and Nassau County since 2016.