Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Newark
Chimney liner installation and rebuild services in Newark typically run $1,800–$4,500 depending on flue configuration and masonry condition, with most relining jobs completed in a single day. Anthony Perez and our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team have been handling Wayne County’s pre-war chimney stock for 20 years — we know the difference between a flue that needs a new stainless liner and one that’s headed for full rebuild before the next lake-effect cycle hits.

Newark sits 15–20 miles south of Lake Ontario, square in one of New York’s most punishing lake-effect snow corridors. That geography isn’t abstract for us — it’s why we’re pulling spalled brick and saturated mortar out of village chimneys on Wilson Street, Union Street, and along the Erie Canal corridor every winter. We’re based in Rochester with crews routing to Newark regularly; most calls get same-day or next-day response. When you’ve got combustion gases backing up or a crown that’s disintegrated after February’s third freeze-thaw cycle, you don’t need a dispatcher in another state — you need Anthony Perez on your roof with a bag of DuraFlex and 20 years of pattern recognition. Call (888) 399-5696.
Why Premier Chimney Cleaning Greater Rochester Is Newark’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve earned our reputation in Newark one flue at a time. Nearly 700 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars — one of the largest review bases in regional chimney service — and a significant share come from Wayne County homeowners who found us after a bad experience with a generalist handyman or a franchise crew that rotated in someone new every visit.
Anthony Perez shows up on your job personally. That’s not marketing language — it’s the operating model. Where national chimney brands send whichever technician is available that week, our owner-as-technician approach means the person diagnosing your chimney has two decades of hands-on experience and the authority to make repair-versus-replace calls on the spot, not after a callback from a regional manager.
Our response time to Newark is consistently same-day or next-day during peak season, because we’re not routing from Syracuse or Buffalo. We know the local housing stock — the late-19th century wood-frames near the canal, the early-20th century brick doubles on the east side, the converted coal flues that are still open shafts in a third of the homes we inspect. That local fluency means faster diagnosis, fewer return trips, and no upsell on work you don’t actually need.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Newark
Full Chimney Rebuild
When lake-effect saturation and repeated freeze-thaw have compromised the structural integrity of the stack — spalled brick, deteriorated mortar joints, and a crown that’s crumbled past repair — a full rebuild is the only safe path. In Newark’s historic core, we see this most often on pre-WWII homes where the original clay liner failed decades ago and heat and moisture have been wicking into adjacent masonry undetected. We dismantle to sound structure, rebuild with matching brick where possible, and install a continuous new liner system before the crown goes back on. Anthony Perez has completed dozens of these rebuilds in Wayne County; the difference between a rebuild that lasts 30 years and one that needs touch-up in five comes down to proper crown slope and a sealed top plate — details we don’t shortcut.
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most Newark homes with an active wood-burning or gas fireplace, a stainless steel liner is the standard of care when the original clay is cracked, offset, or missing entirely. We use DuraFlex continuous corrugated stainless for its expansion tolerance and corrosion resistance — critical in a climate where flue gases cool rapidly and condensate is a year-round issue. Installation typically takes one day: we drop the liner, insulate per NFPA 211, and seal the top plate against the exact moisture intrusion that destroys Newark chimneys. If your home is in the 14513 ZIP or the village core near the canal, we’ve likely already lined a chimney on your block.
Partial Rebuild
Not every failing chimney needs the full treatment. When damage is concentrated in the upper stack — crown deterioration, spalled brick above the roofline, or a compromised flue shoulder — we can rebuild from the attic or roof up, preserving sound lower masonry. This is common in Newark’s double-flue chimneys where one flue was abandoned after a coal-to-gas conversion and the active flue is still structurally sound below. We assess with a camera inspection, give you an honest boundary between partial and full rebuild, and price it accordingly. Partial rebuilds typically run 40–60% less than full rebuilds and can add 15–20 years to a chimney’s service life when caught early.
Liner Replacement & Repair
Some clay liners can be repaired with HeatShield cerfractory sealant when cracks are minor and the flue is otherwise straight. But in Newark’s housing stock, we more often find liners that are cracked at the midpoint, offset by settling, or completely absent in sections — conditions that sealant can’t address. Replacement with a flexible or rigid stainless liner restores proper draft, contains combustion gases, and protects the masonry from the inside out. We pull the old material, inspect the flue for hidden damage, and install the right system for your fuel type and appliance configuration.

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 Newark
We don’t buy liner materials from the nearest big-box store. For Newark installations, we stock DuraFlex stainless liners and HeatShield cerfractory products, with Gelco and Famco caps and top plates available for same-day crown protection. Olympia Chimney components round out our inventory for rigid liner applications where straight flues allow. Keeping these materials on hand means we’re not waiting on a Rochester supply house to open while your chimney sits open to the next lake-effect band — a real factor when November storms can roll in with 24 hours’ notice.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Newark Homes
- Uncapped abandoned flues from coal-to-gas conversions. In Newark’s historic Erie Canal corridor, roughly one in three service calls uncovers a dormant coal furnace flue that was never properly sealed after a gas conversion — creating an open vertical shaft that channels starlings, squirrels, and rain directly into the chimney base year-round. That standing water accelerates brick spalling and mortar loss, especially after freeze-thaw cycles.
- Cracked or absent clay liners in pre-WWII flues. Newark’s village core is dominated by late-19th and early-20th century homes built for coal or wood burning, with multi-flue brick chimneys that were later partially converted. These older flues frequently have no proper clay liner, or have cracked and offset liner sections, causing heat and moisture to wick into adjacent masonry undetected until structural failure.
- Lake-effect wet snow loads destroying inadequate crowns. Wayne County’s position in the snow belt produces prolonged moisture-laden accumulation on chimney crowns and stacks. When the crown slope is inadequate or the concrete is porous, ponding and repeated freeze-thaw can disintegrate the crown in as few as two seasons — and water starts its descent into the stack.
- Smoke backdrafting from liner failure. A compromised liner can’t maintain proper draft, especially in taller flues common in Newark’s two-and-three-story homes. Combustion gases spill into living spaces — a carbon monoxide hazard that camera inspection and liner replacement resolve permanently.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Newark, NY
Here’s what Newark homeowners can expect:
| Service | Typical Range in Newark |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner installation (single flue) | $1,800 – $2,800 |
| Flexible liner with insulation (gas appliance) | $1,400 – $2,200 |
| Liner replacement (remove old, install new) | $2,000 – $3,200 |
| Partial rebuild (from roofline up) | $2,500 – $4,000 |
| Full chimney rebuild with new liner | $4,000 – $7,500 |
| Camera inspection and written assessment | $149 – $199 (credited toward work) |
Costs in Newark track slightly below Rochester metro averages for liner work, but full rebuilds can run higher when lake-effect damage is extensive and access is tight on narrow village lots. Fuel type, flue height, and whether we’re working around an abandoned second flue all move the number. We give upfront pricing after inspection — no open-ended estimates, no pressure to commit before you understand exactly what your chimney needs. Estimates are free; call (888) 399-5696 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Newark
Our chimney liner and rebuild crews route regularly through Wayne County and the eastern Finger Lakes region. We also serve Canandaigua, Fairport, East Rochester, and Webster — same owner-technician expertise, same DuraFlex and HeatShield materials, same honest assessment of whether you need a liner, a rebuild, or just a proper cap on that abandoned flue.
Serving Newark, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Newark 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 Liner & Rebuild in Newark
Yes. The active flue serving your gas appliance or fireplace still needs a proper liner, and the abandoned coal flue needs to be properly capped and sealed to prevent water and animal intrusion. On a February morning in the village core near Wilson Street, we found a pre-war double-flue stack where the unused coal flue had been capped with only a loose metal pan. Melt from a lake-effect event had saturated the brick, and the freeze-thaw had spalled the crown. We pulled the old clay liner from the active flue, installed a continuous new DuraFlex stainless liner with a sealed top plate, and fully rebuilt the crown — completing the job same-day before the next band of snow rolled in. Call (888) 399-5696 and we’ll inspect both flues to give you a clear picture.
Lake-effect snow is uniquely destructive because it’s heavy, wet, and persistent — saturating masonry rather than just dusting it. Wayne County’s position roughly 15–20 miles south of Lake Ontario places Newark directly in one of New York State’s most active lake-effect corridors, producing prolonged moisture-laden accumulation on chimney crowns and stacks. The repeated wet-freeze cycles throughout November through March are the primary driver of accelerated mortar deterioration and crown cracking, which then allows water to reach and destroy clay liners from the outside in. Standard dry cold doesn’t create the same saturation-and-expansion cycle. If your crown is cracked or flat, you’re on borrowed time — call (888) 399-5696 for a free inspection.
Yes, and it’s often the correct fix. Backdrafting typically indicates a liner that’s too large for the appliance, cracked and leaking, or completely missing — all conditions we diagnose with a camera inspection. In Newark’s older homes with tall, unlined flues originally built for coal furnaces, the draft dynamics are wrong for modern gas inserts or wood stoves. A properly sized stainless liner restores correct draft velocity and contains combustion gases. We won’t reline blind, though — we inspect first, show you the footage, and explain whether relining solves your specific backdraft or if there’s a broader ventilation issue. Estimates are free; call (888) 399-5696.
A partial rebuild addresses damage from the roofline or attic up — crown, top courses of brick, flue shoulder, and liner connection — while preserving sound masonry below. You’d choose it when the lower stack is structurally intact and the failure is limited to upper exposure. In Newark, this is common when lake-effect damage is caught early, or when one flue of a double-flue chimney has failed but the other is sound. A full rebuild becomes necessary when moisture has penetrated below the roofline, compromising the wythes (internal brick partitions) or causing widespread spalling. Anthony Perez makes this call on-site with a camera and a hammer test — no guesswork, no upsell. Call (888) 399-5696 to get his eyes on your stack.
Minor cracks in an otherwise straight, intact clay liner can sometimes be addressed with HeatShield cerfractory sealant. But in Newark’s housing stock, we more often find liners that are cracked at the midpoint, offset by decades of thermal cycling and settling, or missing sections entirely — conditions that repair can’t fix. The only way to know is a NFPA-compliant Level 2 inspection with a chimney camera. We run the camera, show you the footage, and explain exactly what we’re seeing. If repair is viable, we’ll say so. If replacement is the safe call, we’ll show you why. Either way, you’ll have a written report and an exact quote. Call (888) 399-5696 to schedule — estimates are free.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Greater Rochester, serving Newark and Wayne County since 2004.