Dryer Vent Cleaning & Inspection
Full-run lint removal, verified with airflow readings.
Learn moreWe sweep on evidence, not on the calendar. NFPA 211's threshold is 1/8 inch of creosote — we measure first, and if your flue is under it, we tell you and you keep your money. When sweeping is warranted, the flue, smoke chamber, and firebox get mechanical brushing with HEPA-filtered dust containment, and we verify the result visually before packing up. Every sweep includes the Level 1 checklist, so the visit produces a document, not just a cleaner flue. Wood burners running most evenings in season should expect to hit the threshold roughly annually.
Stacked ceramic tiles channel smoke and protect the masonry from heat.
Drag the model to rotate — see exactly where this component lives in your chimney.
A chimney sweep at Chimney Standard is the seasonal maintenance cleaning that keeps a wood-burning system drawing safely — the once-a-year visit that clears the soot and soft, flaky creosote a heating season leaves behind before any of it has a chance to harden. The work is brush-and-rod cleaning of the flue, smoke chamber, smoke shelf, and firebox, scaled to deposits that are still in the loose Stage 1 (dusty soot) and Stage 2 (crunchy, flaky) range that a brush is purpose-built to take down. We hold the same finish standard in every market we serve, whether it's a 1920s masonry stack in the Northeast or a builder-grade prefab in suburban Dallas, because the value of a routine sweep is consistency: a flue returned to clean every season so deposits never get the chance to accumulate into something a brush can't handle.
How this differs from our deep-cleaning (PCR) service: a sweep is the routine job for soft, brushable buildup, while PCR is the heavy intervention for hardened, glassy Stage-3 glaze that brushes slide right over. On a standard sweep our technicians run rod-and-brush for a straight clay flue and a poly-head whip on a stainless liner so the corrugations are never scored — but the moment the brush stops biting and meets a baked-on, mirror-like deposit, that is no longer a sweep. We stop, grade it, and tell you it's a deep-clean job, rather than rodding a flue we can't actually clean and charging you for a sweep that didn't work. Knowing where the routine cleaning ends is exactly the judgment that keeps an annual sweep honest.
Every PCE sweep is paired with a Level 1 visual assessment at no extra charge, and we record the creosote stage we find so you have a year-over-year baseline of how your system is burning. We document tile condition, the smoke shelf, the damper operation, and how much buildup the season produced, then hand you a written report with photos. If the deposits are heavier than a year's worth should be — a sign of unseasoned wood, a cool-burning insert, or a draft problem — you hear it straight, with the evidence, so the next season runs cleaner. A routine sweep that comes with a documented condition check is what turns annual cleaning into actual maintenance instead of just a tidy-up.
A complete sweep reaches the places a quick brush never touches: the soot that collects in 30- and 45-degree flue offsets where a brush loses contact, the smoke shelf behind the damper that catches debris and reverses downdraft, and the firebox and damper assembly. For wood-burning systems we recommend this sweep annually; heavy users and anyone burning unseasoned wood should book more often, because soft creosote left a season too long is precisely what bakes into the glaze that needs the heavier PCR treatment. Booking the sweep before the first cold snap means you light your first fire on a verified, freshly cleaned system — the routine, preventive way to keep a flue safe, rather than waiting until buildup has hardened past what a brush can do.
At Chimney Standard, a chimney sweep & creosote removal 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 sweep & creosote removal is built on.
Chimney inspectionA chimney sweep & creosote removal isn't a matter of opinion — it's held to published national standards. Chimney Standard builds every job to the named codes below and documents it, so the work is provably right for an inspector, an insurer, or a future buyer. These are the universal standards; your city's permit and inspection requirements are confirmed with the local authority before we pull the job.
A flue should be swept once creosote or soot reaches roughly 1/8 inch of accumulation, since that's enough to sustain a chimney fire. For a regularly burned wood fireplace that typically lands at about once a year — the cadence a routine sweep is built around.
NFPA 211 calls for at least a Level 1 inspection of the chimney and venting every year. Pairing it with the sweep is what confirms a routine cleaning is actually all the system needs — and catches the moment it isn't.
Codes cited are the established national standards (NFPA, UL, IRC) that govern this service. The adopted code edition, permit, and inspection requirements vary by city —Chimney Standard verifies them with your local authority having jurisdiction on every job.
Level 1 visual check + creosote-stage rating so you see what we see.
Drop cloths laid, dual-stage HEPA vacuum positioned, hearth sealed off.
Flue, smoke chamber, smoke shelf, and firebox brushed clear of soft buildup.
Photo report; if glazed Stage-3 deposits turn up, we flag deep cleaning, not a sweep.
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.
CSIA-certified sweep techs — verifiable in the CSIA directory
Brush-and-rod cleaning sized to routine Stage 1–2 buildup
HEPA vacuum + drop cloths — your floors stay spotless
Level 1 inspection + creosote-stage rating included with every sweep
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.

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