Fast, Reliable Chimney Repair Across Newington
Chimney repair in Newington typically runs $450–$2,800 depending on scope, and most jobs we book are completed within one to three business days. If you’re seeing crumbling mortar, white staining on brick, or water pooling around your fireplace, the root cause is often traceable to Newington’s distinctive housing stock and weather patterns. We’re based in Bridgeport and regularly run calls up Route 15 to zip codes 06111 and 06131 — usually within 45 minutes during the work week. You can reach our Chimney Repair team directly at (833) 719-7193.

Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut Is Newington’s Preferred Chimney Repair Company
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference. Anthony Perez, our owner, leads every job personally — not a subcontractor, not a seasonal hire. When you call (833) 719-7193, you’re talking to the person who’ll be on your roof.
Our reputation in Newington is built on pattern recognition. We’ve worked enough 1950s–1970s Cape Cods and ranches off Franklin Square and around the Department Store Historic District to know what failure looks like before it becomes an emergency. 800+ homeowners have reviewed us at a 4.7-star average — that’s volume you can verify, not a handful of curated testimonials.
Response time matters when water’s coming through the crown. We typically schedule Newington inspections within 48 hours, and we carry DuraFlex liner stock and HeatShield materials on our trucks so we’re not ordering parts after we arrive.
Our Chimney Repair Services in Newington
Mortar Repointing
The freeze-thaw cycling in the Connecticut River Valley is brutal on mortar joints. Water seeps into hairline cracks, expands overnight when temperatures drop below 20°F — common from December through March in Newington — and by spring you’ve got crumbling joints and loose bricks. We grind out deteriorated mortar to proper depth and repoint with color-matched, high-PSI mortar formulated for Newington’s temperature swings. On homes near East River Drive, where wind exposure is higher, we often see accelerated joint erosion on the north and west faces.
Spalling Brick Repair
Spalling — the flaking and crumbling of brick faces — is epidemic in Newington’s conversion-era chimneys. When a gas appliance vents through an oversized oil-era flue, the lower exhaust temperatures produce acidic condensate that migrates through porous brick. In a 1960s ranch on Burnside Avenue, we found a chimney that had been converted to gas 12 years earlier. The original clay tiles were fractured from acidic condensate, and we installed a DuraFlex stainless steel liner and repointed the crown to stop moisture intrusion. Without intervention, spalling progresses from cosmetic to structural. We replace damaged brick with matching units and address the moisture source — usually liner sizing or crown failure — so the repair lasts.
Chimney Waterproofing
Newington’s older masonry wasn’t built with modern water repellents, and the town’s clay-heavy soils can direct groundwater toward foundations, increasing hydrostatic pressure on basement-level chimney bases. We apply vapor-permeable silane/siloxane treatments that let brick breathe while shedding liquid water. Critical on homes near the Horticultural Gardens at Elizabeth Park, where mature tree canopies slow evaporation and keep masonry damp longer. Waterproofing isn’t a substitute for fixing cracked crowns or failed flashing — we diagnose first, then treat.
Flashing Repair
Flashing is the metal seam where your chimney penetrates the roof, and it’s the single most common leak point we find in Newington. Salt-air corrosion from Long Island Sound — carried on prevailing winds up the Connecticut River Valley — attacks copper and galvanized steel flashings, particularly on homes within a few miles of the coast. We fabricate and install custom step flashing and counterflashing using materials rated for coastal exposure, sealed with high-temperature sealants that flex through freeze-thaw cycles. We also inspect the surrounding roof deck for rot, since leaks often travel laterally before showing inside.
Chimney Rebuilding
When deterioration exceeds 30–40% of the structure, partial or full rebuilding becomes the only sound option. We’ve rebuilt chimneys in the Downtown North Historic District where decades of deferred maintenance met incompatible gas conversion exhaust. Anthony Perez scopes every rebuild personally — we don’t delegate structural decisions. We match existing brick and mortar profiles for aesthetic continuity, and we always install properly sized liners in rebuilt flues to prevent the same failure mode from recurring.

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 Newington
We use Copperfield flashing components, DuraFlex stainless steel liners, and HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing systems — the same materials specified by chimney industry professionals, not hardware-store substitutes. For Newington customers, this means faster turnaround: we stock common liner diameters and flashing profiles on our Bridgeport trucks, so most jobs don’t wait on parts. When we specify Gelco caps or Famco dampers, it’s because we’ve seen them outlast cheaper alternatives in Newington’s specific combination of freeze-thaw stress and coastal metal corrosion.
Common Chimney Repair Problems We See in Newington Homes
- Oil-to-gas conversion damage: Thousands of Newington chimneys were sized and lined for fuel-oil boilers, then converted to natural gas without proper liner resizing. The result is chronic acidic condensate that fractures terra-cotta liners and saturates masonry — often invisible until advanced spalling appears.
- Freeze-thaw mortar destruction: The Connecticut River Valley sees more extreme temperature swings than coastal Fairfield County. Ice forms in micro-cracks overnight, expands with mechanical force, and widens joints progressively. Crown cracks are usually the first visible sign.
- Salt-air metal corrosion: Chimney caps, flashing fasteners, and damper hardware on Newington’s eastern and southern exposures corrode faster than inland equivalents. We replace with marine-grade materials where exposure is severe.
- Undersized or abandoned flues: In split-levels near Connecticut Boulevard, we regularly find original chimneys serving new high-efficiency furnaces through flues too large to maintain proper draft, causing condensation pooling and backdrafting risks.
Pricing for Chimney Repair in Newington, CT
| Service | Typical Range in Newington |
|---|---|
| Mortar repointing (partial chimney) | $450–$1,200 |
| Spalling brick repair (localized) | $600–$1,800 |
| Chimney waterproofing | $350–$850 |
| Flashing repair/replacement | $500–$1,400 |
| Stainless steel liner install (DuraFlex) | $1,800–$3,500 |
| Partial chimney rebuild | $2,200–$5,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild | $4,500–$8,500+ |
These ranges reflect what we typically quote in the 06111 and 06131 zip codes. Final pricing depends on access difficulty, height, and the extent of hidden damage we find once work begins. We provide written, itemized estimates before any work starts — call (833) 719-7193 for a free inspection and exact quote.
We Also Serve Cities Near Newington
Our service radius covers Wethersfield to the east, West Hartford to the north, Farmington to the west, and Hartford proper to the northeast. If you’re in one of these surrounding towns and dealing with conversion-era chimney issues similar to what we see in Newington, the same diagnostic approach and material specifications apply.
Serving Newington, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Newington 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 Repair in Newington
The original flue diameter and clay-tile liner were engineered for the hotter, drier exhaust of a fuel-oil boiler. Natural gas burns cooler and produces more moisture. When that cooler, wetter exhaust rises through an oversized flue, it cools below the dew point, condenses into acidic liquid, and saturates the liner and surrounding masonry. Within 10–15 years, the terra-cotta tiles fracture and the brick faces spall. The fix is a properly sized stainless steel liner — we typically specify DuraFlex — and crown repair to stop additional water intrusion. Call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll scope your flue to confirm the condition.
Annually, without exception. The damage from condensate exposure is progressive and often hidden inside the flue until it’s advanced. We recommend a Level 2 inspection with video scanning every year for any chimney serving a gas appliance installed in an oil-era flue. Pre-season timing — September or October — lets us catch problems before you need heat daily. Estimates are free: (833) 719-7193.
Efflorescence — mineral salts carried to the surface by moisture moving through the masonry. In Newington, it’s often a sign that condensate from an improperly lined gas flue is migrating outward, or that crown cracks are letting rainwater saturate the chimney body. The staining itself is cosmetic, but the moisture driving it is structural. We diagnose the source with a top-to-bottom inspection, then repair the underlying failure rather than just cleaning the surface. For an exact diagnosis, call (833) 719-7193.
If your chimney was originally built for oil or solid fuel, yes — and it must be properly sized for the BTU output of your gas appliance. An unlined or oversized flue will condense acidic moisture, just as it does with gas furnaces. We install DuraFlex liners sized to manufacturer specifications, which also satisfies code requirements for gas venting in Connecticut. We’ll measure your flue and appliance output during a free estimate visit.
Yes. Salt-laden air carried up the Connecticut River Valley accelerates corrosion of chimney caps, flashing, damper hardware, and steel fasteners — particularly on east- and south-facing exposures. We see accelerated cap and flashing failure in Newington compared to inland Hartford County towns. We specify Copperfield and Gelco components with enhanced corrosion resistance, and we inspect metalwork annually as part of our maintenance recommendations. If your cap or flashing is showing rust, call (833) 719-7193 before the underlying masonry is compromised.
Ready to stop the leak, fix the spalling, or finally address that conversion-era flue? Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate. Anthony Perez will inspect your chimney personally, explain what we find, and give you a written quote with no pressure to decide on the spot.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Newington and the Connecticut River Valley since 2016.