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Installation · From $299

Chimney Liner Installation

When a camera scan shows gapped tiles, cracked clay, or an unlined flue, relining is the fix the standard recognizes. We size the new liner to the appliance it serves — an oversized flue drafts poorly and builds creosote faster — and spec a UL 1777-listed stainless system with insulation where the listing requires it. Installation runs with licensed & insured contractors, then we verify: connections photographed, draft confirmed, and the liner's listing documentation handed over with the report. Keep that paperwork; your insurer and your next buyer will both want it.

Duration
2–4 hours
Warranty
1-year workmanship
Certified
CSIA · NFI · NCSG
Human reply
< 2 min
What is it

What is chimney liner installation?

When a camera scan shows gapped tiles, cracked clay, or an unlined flue, relining is the fix the standard recognizes. We size the new liner to the appliance it serves — an oversized flue drafts poorly and builds creosote faster — and spec a UL 1777-listed stainless system with insulation where the listing requires it. Installation runs with licensed & insured contractors, then we verify: connections photographed, draft confirmed, and the liner's listing documentation handed over with the report. Keep that paperwork; your insurer and your next buyer will both want it.

Every chimney liner installation includes:

  • Site measurement and fit check
  • Manufacturer-spec installation
  • Post-install operation walkthrough
  • Written warranty terms

Scoped from a graded inspection

At Chimney Standard, a chimney liner installation is never guesswork. We scope every job from a graded, photographed inspection first — the NFPA 211 level the evidence calls for — so the work is matched to what your flue and masonry actually need, with the report to prove it. The documented inspection is the record the chimney liner installation is built on.

Chimney inspection
Why choose us

Why DFW homeowners pick Chimney Standard for chimney liner installation.

We've worked on 0+ DFW homes over 15+ years. Every job — small sweep or full rebuild — runs the same way: certified technicians, written quotes, photo reports, warranty in writing.

15+
Years experience
CSIA
Certified techs
22
Metros covered

CSIA-certified inspectors only

Written quote before any work begins

1-year workmanship warranty

Insurance-grade photo documentation

Who we are

Chimney Standard. 15+ years on DFW chimneys.

Family-owned, CSIA-certified, NFPA 211–compliant. We're the team you call when you want it done right the first time — no rotating subcontractors, no upsell pressure, no surprises. Same techs, same trucks, same standard.

CSIA Certified
Chimney Safety Institute of America
NFPA 211 Compliant
Code-compliant on every job
Owner on every job
Personal accountability, every time
1-year workmanship warranty
In writing, every job
Chimney Standard technicians on site
Chimney Standard
DFW Metroplex · CSIA-Certified
NFPA 211
Code compliant
FAQ

Common questions about chimney liner installation.

What's the difference between Level 1, 2, and 3 chimney inspections?

They're tiers of access, defined in NFPA 211. Level 1 covers readily accessible areas — the routine annual check when nothing has changed. Level 2 adds a camera scan of the flue interior plus attics and crawl spaces, and it's required at property sale, after a fire, or when the appliance or fuel changes. Level 3 involves removing components or finish materials to reach a suspected hidden hazard. Each tier has to be justified by the one below it.

When is a Level 2 inspection actually required?

NFPA 211 names the triggers: sale or transfer of the property, after a chimney fire or operating malfunction, after external events like storms or seismic activity, and whenever you change the fuel type or connect a new appliance. If any of those apply, a Level 1 isn't sufficient — the standard wants the flue interior scanned, not just eyeballed from the top and bottom.

What do I actually get after an inspection?

A written report, standard turnaround 48 hours. It lists every checkpoint with a pass or fail verdict, a photo behind each finding, the relevant code or standard reference, and — when something fails — what correcting it involves. It's a document you can forward to an insurer, a buyer, or another contractor for a competing bid. Nothing we say on-site counts until it's in the report.

How often does a chimney really need sweeping?

The honest answer is: when measurement says so. NFPA 211 requires annual inspection, but sweeping is triggered by creosote depth — 1/8 inch is the threshold. A fireplace burning most nights all season usually hits that in about a year. Occasional weekend fires might take two or three. We measure at each inspection and only recommend a sweep the measurement supports.

My home inspector already looked at the chimney. Isn't that enough?

General home inspectors do visual checks from the ground and the firebox — their own standards of practice put chimney flue interiors outside scope. The failures that cost real money, like gapped flue tiles and hidden cracking, only show on a camera scan. That's why NFPA 211 specifies a Level 2 at property transfer. Plenty of chimneys pass; the point is knowing before you close, not after.

Last reviewed:

15+
Years in the field
NFPA 211
Checklist
48h
Written report
< 2hr
Response
Ready when you are

Get it inspected. Get it in writing.

Flat fee confirmed when you book. Same-week scheduling. A pass/fail verdict within 48 hours.

Licensed & Insured Same-Week Scheduling Photo-Documented Findings
Emergency

24/7 Response

Chimney fire, storm hit, active leak, or a flue you're not sure about? We answer 7 AM to midnight and the assessment ends in a written safe-to-use verdict — including a do-not-use notice when the evidence supports one. After-hours dispatch runs subject to crew availability.

Emergency line
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