A standard chimney sweep runs $130–$500 as of 2026, with most residential jobs landing between $150 and $375. Repairs are a wider story: most common fixes run $300–$3,500, while structural work and full rebuilds reach $5,000–$20,000. The number you pay turns on your region, the chimney's construction, how much creosote has built up, and the scope of any repair.
Typical customer-facing ranges for common chimney work as of 2026. These are national bands — chimney type, creosote stage, roof access, and your metro market move every line. Treat them as directional, not a fixed quote.
| Service | Typical range | What moves it |
|---|---|---|
| Standard sweep (Level 1 clean + visual inspection) | $150–$375 | Chimney type, creosote stage, roof access |
| Gas-only fireplace clean | $80–$150 | Cheapest job; minimal buildup |
| Level 2 inspection (camera/video scan) | $260–$600 | Required at sale or after a chimney fire |
| Heavy creosote (Stage 2/3) removal | +$100–$600 | Glazed Stage 3 needs chemical treatment |
| Chimney cap supply + install | $150–$600 | Copper/custom caps run higher |
| Tuckpointing / mortar repointing | $500–$2,500 | $10–$25/sq ft; scaffolding adds $200–$600 |
| Stainless steel reline (most common) | $1,500–$5,000 | Materials, liner gauge, chimney height |
| Full chimney rebuild | $5,000–$20,000 | Below + above roofline; one-story brick $7k–$12k |
Bands are rough national averages for residential work and will differ in your area. Always confirm against the actual chimney, the inspection findings, and your local labor and permit costs.
Chimney pricing splits into two very different conversations. A routine sweep and inspection is a known, repeatable job that most homeowners pay $150–$375 for. Repairs are open-ended — anything from a $150 cap to a $20,000 rebuild — and the only honest way to quote them is to inspect first. Here is what each costs in 2026, why the numbers swing so widely, and how to read a quote that lands at the high end.
A standard sweep covers a Level 1 cleaning plus a visual inspection of the readily accessible portions of the chimney. Nationally that runs $130–$500, and most homeowners with a single woodburning flue pay $200–$275. A gas-only fireplace is the cheapest thing to clean — usually $80–$150, because there's little to no creosote to remove.
The biggest swing inside a routine sweep is the chimney itself. Masonry brick chimneys cost 30–50% more to sweep than prefabricated metal or factory-built systems, simply because there's more flue and more surface to work. Every additional flue adds roughly $150–$260 to the cleaning fee, so a home with a fireplace and a separate furnace flue costs more than a single-flue house.
Inspections are priced as their own service when they go beyond the visual:
Two identical-looking chimneys two towns apart can quote very differently. The real drivers, in roughly the order they matter:
Repairs are where the spread gets dramatic — $300 to $15,000+ — because "chimney repair" covers everything from a sealant touch-up to rebuilding the structure from the foundation up. These are rough 2026 customer-facing ranges; the inspection sets the real number.
Grouped by scope, that's roughly: cosmetic repairs (cap, crown sealant) $150–$500; mid-scope (flashing, tuckpointing, damper) $300–$2,500; structural (full reline, partial rebuild) $1,500–$7,000; and full rebuilds $5,000–$20,000.
If you want to know which side of the range your job will land on, this is the honest breakdown.
The single biggest lever is deferred maintenance. A sweep on a chimney cleaned every year is a predictable $200–$275; the same chimney left for five years can surface buildup, water damage, and liner issues that turn a routine visit into a multi-thousand-dollar repair.
Region is the first thing that moves a chimney quote. These bands are derived from multiple aggregator and contractor sources and should be treated as directional, not a precise city-by-city matrix.
No single source provided a fully verified, city-by-city pricing matrix, so use these as a starting point and confirm against two or three local quotes before you commit.
For a routine sweep the price is easy; for a repair, the quote is the sale. The shops that win the structural jobs are the ones that can inspect, present clear options, and make it painless to say yes on the spot. Claver for chimney pros lets you build a sweep-and-inspection pricebook once, send a clean quote with Level 1/2/3 line items from the rooftop, take a deposit to lock the rebuild on your schedule, and offer consumer financing when a $9,000 reline lands on a homeowner who wasn't planning for it — so the number you quote is the number you actually collect. See how the pieces fit on the chimney page, or browse more cost guides in the guides hub.
Build your sweep-and-inspection pricebook, send Level 1/2/3 quotes from the rooftop, and take a deposit before you leave. Claver starts at $19/mo, month-to-month — start in minutes.