
If you’re deciding between a gas fireplace and a wood-burning fireplace — or thinking about converting one type to the other — maintenance is usually somewhere on your list of considerations. It probably shouldn’t be at the top, but it deserves an honest answer, and the answer is more nuanced than most websites make it out to be.
This post compares the two on the maintenance dimension specifically. We’ll cover what each type actually requires year to year, what each one costs to keep running, where each one fails, and what NEPA homeowners specifically should think about before committing to one or the other.
Spoiler: gas is easier to maintain in the day-to-day sense, but the chimney behind it still needs the same professional attention as any other chimney. People sometimes assume “gas means no maintenance,” and that assumption gets homes into trouble.
For pure maintenance ease, gas wins. A gas fireplace requires less of you, week to week and month to month, than a wood-burning fireplace does. There’s no firewood to manage, no ashes to clean out, no chimney sweeping frequency to track. You turn it on, you turn it off, you get heat and the look of a fire.
But the chimney venting that gas appliance still needs annual professional inspection, and certain failure modes (like a deteriorated liner) actually become more dangerous with gas because the symptoms are silent.
A wood-burning fireplace requires more day-to-day work but is generally more forgiving about what happens when something goes wrong — smoke in the room is impossible to miss, while a carbon monoxide leak from a failed gas vent is not.
Both are reasonable choices. The right one depends on your priorities, your living situation, and how you’ll actually use it.
This is the comparison most homeowners are asking about, and gas is the easier system day to day. Specifically:
Fuel handling. Gas connects to a utility line or a propane tank. You don’t see the fuel, store the fuel, move the fuel, or interact with it in any way. Wood-burning requires that you source, transport, stack, store, and split firewood, then carry it inside in batches to use. For some homeowners that’s part of the appeal. For others it’s a non-starter.
Starting a fire. Gas: flip a switch or click a remote. Wood: kindling, paper, careful arrangement, ignition, monitoring the early burn. Wood-burning takes 15 to 30 minutes of attention to get from cold to a stable fire. Gas takes seconds.
Ash management. Wood-burning produces ashes that have to be removed periodically, transferred to a metal ash bucket, kept outdoors on a non-combustible surface for several days because ashes stay hot for a long time, and eventually disposed of properly. Gas produces no ashes.
Cleanup. A wood-burning fireplace produces soot that accumulates on the firebox interior, on glass doors, and (in small amounts) on surrounding surfaces. A gas fireplace produces almost no soot when functioning properly. Glass on a gas unit may need occasional cleaning; that’s it.
Daily readiness. A wood fireplace requires you to have dry seasoned firewood available and be willing to spend time getting a fire established. A gas fireplace is ready to go any time you walk into the room.
For a homeowner who wants the look and warmth of a fire without making it a project, gas is dramatically easier on every one of these dimensions. There’s no contest on day-to-day convenience.
This is where homeowners often get the wrong impression. The marketing on gas appliances frequently implies they’re essentially maintenance-free. They’re not. They require less annual maintenance than wood, but they absolutely require professional attention.
A wood-burning fireplace generally needs:
For a wood-burning fireplace used as supplemental or occasional heat, this is typically one annual service visit. For a wood stove or fireplace used as a primary heat source, expect two visits — one before the season starts and another mid-season to address creosote buildup.
A gas fireplace generally needs:
The visit itself is generally shorter than a full wood-burning chimney sweep — there’s no creosote to scrub out, no soot to remove — but it requires a technician familiar with gas appliances specifically.
The annual cost for gas service is roughly comparable to a basic wood-burning chimney sweep, sometimes a little less. The frequency is the same — once a year minimum.
Many gas fireplace owners assume that because there’s no creosote, no soot, and no visible mess, the appliance can be ignored indefinitely. This assumption is responsible for a lot of the gas appliance problems we encounter.
A gas appliance can absolutely fail in dangerous ways:
None of these problems make visible smoke or obvious noise. They just slowly compromise the safety of the appliance until something goes wrong. Annual professional inspection is what catches them.
A gas fireplace isn’t maintenance-free. It’s lower-maintenance than wood. There’s a real difference.
Looking at maintenance over decades rather than year-to-year, the two types fail in different ways. Understanding the difference matters when comparing total cost of ownership.
A wood-burning fireplace and chimney accumulate wear from the heat and combustion byproducts of regular burning. Over years and decades:
The headline failure mode for wood-burning is the chimney fire. A heavy creosote deposit ignites and burns at 2,000°F or higher inside the flue, damaging or destroying whatever liner is in place. Prevention is a function of burning dry seasoned wood and keeping up with annual cleanings.
The slower failure modes are the same as any masonry chimney in NEPA — freeze-thaw damage, mortar deterioration, liner aging, crown failure. The fact that you’re burning wood doesn’t change any of those; it just adds creosote management on top.
Gas combustion produces less heat per cubic foot of flue gas, which sounds like it should be easier on the chimney. The catch is that cooler flue gases condense more readily inside the chimney, and what condenses is acidic.
Over years and decades, gas appliances vented through masonry chimneys:
This is the failure mode that catches gas-fireplace owners off guard. The fireplace itself can look pristine — clean glass, clean burner, no visible problems — while the chimney behind it is quietly deteriorating from acid attack on the inside of the flue.
Modern high-efficiency gas appliances produce even cooler flue gases than older models, which makes the problem worse. Many modern gas appliances aren’t actually compatible with traditional masonry venting at all without a proper stainless steel reline.
Direct-vent gas units (which use a horizontal vent through an exterior wall rather than going up a chimney) avoid the masonry corrosion problem entirely, but they have their own vent maintenance requirements.
For long-term cost of ownership:
Wood-burning requires more frequent service (one to two visits per year) and steady consumable inputs (firewood). The chimney itself often lasts well with proper care because high heat keeps the flue dry between burns.
Gas requires less frequent service (one visit per year) and no consumables you handle directly, but the chimney is silently more vulnerable to corrosive damage, and most homes that have been venting gas through masonry for decades end up needing relining work — often with a stainless steel liner manufactured for the specific appliance.
Over 20 years, total maintenance costs are surprisingly similar. The work just looks different.
Gas and wood have different risk profiles, and being honest about both helps homeowners make the right call.
The primary risks of wood-burning fireplaces:
These risks are all real and all manageable with good practice. The good news is they’re generally visible. Smoke in the room, sparks on the carpet, hot ashes in a paper bag — you can see when something is wrong.
The primary risks of gas fireplaces:
The challenge with gas risks is that most of them are invisible. CO is odorless, gas leaks (while typically odorized) can go unnoticed if subtle, and vent failures don’t produce visible symptoms. This is why working CO detectors are non-negotiable in any home with a gas fireplace, and why annual professional inspection isn’t optional.
Both types are safe when properly installed, maintained, and used. Neither type is particularly dangerous if you do the basics right. The risks just have different shapes, and the maintenance approach reflects those differences.
A few things that matter specifically for northeastern Pennsylvania homeowners deciding between gas and wood:
Power outages. Winter storms in NEPA cause power outages with some regularity. A traditional wood-burning fireplace works without electricity. A gas fireplace usually requires electricity for the ignition system, fan, and controls — so it may not function during a power outage, depending on the model. For a backup heat source, wood-burning has the edge. For everyday use, this matters less.
Firewood availability. NEPA has abundant firewood. If you have land, you can produce your own. If you don’t, local suppliers offer cord delivery throughout the region. Cost-per-BTU for properly seasoned wood is often the lowest of any heating fuel option in our area.
Natural gas availability. Natural gas service is widely available in towns like Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, and Dunmore, but spotty to nonexistent in more rural areas of the Poconos, Wayne County, and the Endless Mountains. In gas-line territory, gas is a strong option. Outside gas-line territory, you’re looking at propane, which changes the economics meaningfully.
Older masonry chimneys. A lot of NEPA homes have older chimneys that were built for wood-burning. Switching to gas usually means relining the chimney to handle the cooler flue gases and acidic condensation properly. This is the part homeowners often don’t budget for when “just adding a gas fireplace.”
Heating season length. Our six-month heating season means a fireplace used as supplemental heat sees real use. Whichever type you choose, it’s going to do real work, which means real maintenance matters.
A few common situations and what tends to work best:
You want a primary or supplemental heat source you can rely on during power outages. Wood-burning is the answer. Gas almost always needs electricity to operate.
You want fire on demand with minimal effort. Gas. There’s no contest on convenience.
You’re committed to seasoning your own wood and have storage space. Wood-burning is economical and rewarding. The work is part of the appeal for many homeowners.
You travel frequently or use the fireplace occasionally. Gas. A wood-burning fireplace that sits unused for months still needs annual maintenance, and stored firewood needs management even when you’re not burning it.
You want a fire that smells like a fire and sounds like a fire. Wood-burning. Gas units produce realistic visual flames, but they don’t smell like wood smoke and they don’t crackle.
You have small children or pets and want a unit with controlled, predictable operation. Gas, with a properly installed safety screen on the glass. Wood-burning produces flying embers and unpredictable burn behavior.
You’re converting a fireplace in an older home that hasn’t been used in years. This is the situation where the chimney itself usually drives the decision. The chimney needs a Level 2 inspection regardless, and the inspection results will tell you what conversion options are practical without major work.
A common scenario in NEPA: a homeowner has a wood-burning fireplace they rarely use, and they’re considering converting it to gas (or vice versa). What does that actually involve?
Converting a wood-burning fireplace to gas usually requires:
For most homes, this is a significant project — typically $3,000 to $8,000+ depending on the configuration. The good news is that once it’s done, you have a functional gas fireplace with all the convenience benefits, and the conversion is permanent if you change your mind later.
Converting a gas fireplace to wood-burning is usually a bigger project because you’re often dealing with:
This conversion is less common in our experience. Most homeowners who go gas stay gas. But it’s possible, and we’ve done it for homeowners who specifically wanted the wood-burning experience back.
In either direction, the right starting point is an inspection of the existing chimney to understand what you’re working with structurally. The chimney often drives the decision more than the appliance does.
A simple framework for the decision:
There’s no universally right answer. There’s a right answer for your specific home, your specific habits, and your specific priorities.
If you’re considering installing a fireplace, converting between types, or just want to understand what your existing fireplace and chimney can safely support, the inspection is the right starting point. We’ll assess what’s there, walk you through what’s possible, and give you the information you need to make a real decision rather than a guess.
We service both gas and wood-burning fireplaces, install stainless steel liners for either application, and handle the chimney side of fireplace conversions. We don’t sell gas appliances directly — that’s a separate trade — but we work alongside gas fitters and appliance retailers regularly and can recommend reliable partners in the NEPA area.
We serve homeowners across Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Gouldsboro, Dupont, Hawley, Moscow, Stroudsburg, the Poconos, and the surrounding NEPA region. Licensed and insured in Pennsylvania.
Call 1-800-943-1515 or request a free quote online to schedule.
The right fireplace is the one that fits your life. The right chimney is the one that supports it safely. We can help you sort out both.