Take Care of Your Fireplace System!

Schedule regular chimney sweepings & inspections

Homeowners don’t think about maintenance for their home appliances. Without maintenance, these appliances stop working efficiently and introduce safety risks. Home fires, water leaks, and structural damage are just some of the risks when maintenance is ignored.

#1 When should you schedule an inspection?

  • Good Weather. Doing repair work on your chimney can be challenging during the winter due to snow and ice, lower temperatures, and shorter days. If you don’t schedule an inspection until the fall or winter, you won’t know you need repairs until the middle of bad weather season. Summer is when we have better weather for repairs, so scheduling now is ideal for getting the work done safely and quickly.
  • Easier Scheduling. Scheduling is more flexible now. Once we move into the fall, our schedule is filled out weeks in advance. If you wait until fall or winter, you may not have as much flexibility in appointment availability, which also cuts into the time you could be using your fireplace.

#2 How often should you inspect your chimney?

masonry chimney with metal capThe National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and the Chimney Safety Institute of America (CSIA) both recommend a yearly inspection. The reason for this is there are many things that can go wrong in a year’s time with the chimney. You may be thinking, “what could really go wrong? I didn’t even use my wood stove, wood-burning fireplace, or gas burning fireplace all that much this past year.”

Well, we’re not just worried about a dirty chimney, we’re also inspecting to see:

  • If anything happened to the chimney exterior
  • If anything shifted or settled
  • If any large tree branches hit and damaged the chimney
  • What has happened in a year’s time from wind or rain
  • If there has been any spalling from freeze/thaw

#3 How often should you sweep your chimney? Does it need to be swept every time you have an inspection?

The NFPA and CSIA both make it crystal clear that you need an inspection every year. But what do they have to say about chimney sweepings? According to both, a chimney should be swept on a yearly basis only if it needs it. At first glance, that answer is not very helpful, but here’s the thing: if you’re scheduling an annual inspection like the NFPA and CSIA recommended, you’ll know if your chimney needs to be swept.

The truth is, the frequency of needing a chimney sweeping is going to be based on the use and the efficiency of whatever product you’re burning. That’s why there is no hard and fast rule about when you’ll need to have your chimney swept, so don’t skip inspections. During an annual inspection, we’ll look at the chimney internally and externally to determine if it needs swept.

The good news is, if it is in need of sweeping, that can be done during the same visit. This saves you from having to schedule a comeback call, which means you save time and money.

#4 What kinds of issues or warning signals point to you needing a chimney inspection or sweeping?

There are a few things that can signal trouble with your system, or at least let you know you’re likely overdue for a sweeping or inspection. Some things to look for are:

  • Dark smoke/exhaust. If the smoke you’re seeing at the top of your chimney is very dark in color, that is usually an indication that the chimney is not burning correctly. For an oil or gas furnace or boiler, this means it probably needs to be tuned. When you get the furnace or boiler tuned, you also need to sweep the exhaust pipe (the chimney) to make sure it is tuned correctly for the water heater, furnace, or boiler.
  • Smoky smells. You should never smell your fireplace or wood stove burning. If you ever get a smoky odor in your home, that is a sign that your system is not evacuating smoke correctly. This could be because you have a full or partial obstruction in your chimney.
  • Smoke coming out over the top of your fireplace. When smoke comes out over the top of your fireplace, it indicates non-performance of your fireplace. You could either have an obstruction or you could have a separation in your liner. Neither situation is a good, so a blockage removal or flue liner repair should be performed ASAP.

#5 What are indicators of chimney troubles that you can see on the outside of your chimney?

On a masonry chimney, you are primarily looking for discoloration. It’s very common to see dark spots, dark growth, or green growth or vegetation on the brickwork or stonework. That’s an indication that your chimney is absorbing water, which is never good. When your chimney absorbs water, you get algae, bacteria, and different forms of plant life. This can weaken the structure and create a darker appearance on brick and stonework.

There are other visible signs to look for that signal water in your chimney, such as loose mortar joints or spalling brick. If you have water in your chimney when the temperatures drop below freezing, everything freezes and expands. When things warm up, that water contracts. This constant expansion and contraction of the materials put micro-fissures in the brickwork, which can make the bricks walk off of the mortar joints or loosen the mortar joints.

#6 What can you do to keep your chimney watertight and prevent water from penetrating it?

When we’re checking a chimney to see how watertight it is and looking for ways to prevent leaks, there are a few things we look at. On a masonry chimney, we check to see:

  • If it has a proper chimney cap. A chimney cap covers the entire top of the chimney and sheds water away from the sides of the chimney.
  • If it has a quality chimney crown. The chimney crown is a crown wash splay, which is built of cement on a slight angle atop a masonry chimney to wash the water away and down the sides.
  • How the mortar joints between the brick are looking. The mortar joints between the brick need to be free of cracks, gaps, and holes to ensure that water’s not making its way into the masonry itself.
  • If the flashing is watertight and in good shape. Flashing is what covers the base of the chimney and the area where the chimney exits the roof. We’re looking to make sure it’s sealed, free of gaps or corrosion, and keeping water out of this vulnerable spot of the home.
  • If there are shoulders. Your chimney has shoulders when it is wider at the base and gets narrower as it goes up. This is a common area for water entry because that narrowing provides a 45-degree angle and an area that’s flat enough that a lot of water to sit there and soak through. Typically, this shows up as water leaking into your firebox.

Without proper upkeep, these appliances could put your home and family in danger. 

  • According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission in 2003, neglecting regular clothes-exhaust service resulted in over $107.3 million in residential fire property loss.
  • From 2012-2016, fire departments responded to more than 52,000 fires involving heating equipment.


Protect your family and your home by scheduling maintenance services with Clean Sweep of Anne Arundel County. First, our team will do an inspection and then advise you on the next steps.