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What to Expect During Your First Chimney Service Visit

May 27, 2026

If you’ve never had your chimney professionally serviced, scheduling that first appointment can feel like a small leap of faith. You’re inviting someone into your home to work on a part of the house you can’t really see, doing things you may not fully understand, and you’re not sure what’s going to happen, how long it’ll take, or how much mess it’ll make.

That uncertainty stops a lot of homeowners from booking the service their chimney actually needs. So let’s clear it up. This post walks through exactly what happens during a typical first chimney service visit — from the moment you book to the moment we leave — so you know precisely what to expect and can schedule with confidence.

Before the Visit: Booking and Scheduling

It starts with a phone call or an online request. When you contact us, we’ll ask a few questions to understand what you need and what we’re working with:

  • What kind of chimney and appliance you have (fireplace, wood stove, pellet stove, furnace flue, etc.)
  • What’s prompting the call (routine maintenance, a specific concern, a home purchase, a problem you’ve noticed)
  • The age of your home and chimney, if you know it
  • Whether you’ve had the chimney serviced before
  • Your location, so we can schedule efficiently within our service area

These questions help us bring the right equipment and allot the right amount of time. A routine cleaning on a known chimney is a different visit from a first-time inspection of an older chimney with a suspected problem, and knowing in advance lets us prepare properly.

We’ll then schedule a date and time, give you a window for arrival, and let you know roughly how long the visit should take. If you have questions before the visit, just ask — a good chimney company wants you informed, not anxious.

How to Prepare Your Home

You don’t need to do much, but a few simple steps make the visit go smoothly. Our appointment tips page covers this in detail, but here are the essentials:

Don’t use the fireplace for at least 24 hours beforehand. The firebox and flue need to be cool and the ashes need to be cold. A fire the night before means we can’t safely work the next morning. For wood stoves, the same applies — no fires for a full day before the appointment.

Clear the area around the fireplace. Move furniture, rugs, decorations, and anything fragile away from the front of the fireplace, giving us a clear working space of several feet. We bring drop cloths and protective coverings, but a clear area lets us set up properly and protects your belongings.

Secure pets. The work involves equipment, open doors, and movement in and out of the house. Keeping pets in another room keeps them safe and lets us work without worry.

Make sure we can access the chimney. This means both the interior (clear path to the fireplace) and, if roof access is needed, a reasonably clear approach to the exterior. If there’s anything unusual about access — a gated yard, a particular door to use, parking considerations — let us know in advance.

Have your questions ready. If you’ve noticed anything — a smell, a draft issue, staining, a sound — make a note of it so you can mention it. The more context you give us, the more targeted our inspection.

That’s genuinely it. You don’t need to clean the chimney, move heavy things, or prepare anything technical. Just a cool fireplace, a clear space, and secured pets.

When We Arrive

A professional chimney service visit starts with protecting your home and confirming the plan.

We’ll introduce ourselves and confirm what we’re there to do. You should always know who’s in your home and what the scope of the visit is. If anything has changed since you booked — a new concern, a question that came up — this is the time to mention it.

We protect your space. Before any work begins, we lay down drop cloths and protective coverings around the work area. Chimney work, especially cleaning, has the potential to produce soot and debris, and a professional company takes care to contain it. Your floors, furniture, and surrounding surfaces should be protected throughout the visit. A reputable crew leaves your home as clean as they found it.

We set up our equipment. Depending on the visit, this might include brushes and rods for cleaning, a vacuum system designed to capture soot and fine particulate, inspection cameras, ladders for roof access, and various tools. You’ll see us bring in and set up what the job requires.

The setup phase tells you a lot about a company. Careful protection of your home and organized equipment are signs of professionalism. We covered how to recognize a reputable chimney service in detail if you want the full picture.

The Inspection

Most first visits include an inspection, and understanding what level of inspection you’re getting helps you know what to expect. We explained the three inspection levels in depth elsewhere, but here’s how it plays out during the visit.

A Level 1 inspection — appropriate for routine maintenance on a chimney in normal use — involves a visual examination of the readily accessible parts of the chimney, inside and out. We check the firebox, the damper, the visible flue, the smoke chamber, and the accessible exterior, looking for damage, deterioration, blockages, and warning signs.

A Level 2 inspection — recommended for first-time customers, home purchases, older chimneys, or any situation with a concern — adds a video scan of the flue interior and examination of accessible attic, basement, or crawl space portions, plus a closer look at the chimney exterior over its full height.

The video scan is often the eye-opening part for first-time customers. A camera on a flexible rod travels the full length of the flue, and you can watch the footage in real time. For the first time, you actually see the inside of your own chimney — the condition of the liner, any cracks or gaps, creosote buildup, and anything else going on in there. We document what we find with photos and video so you have a record and can see exactly what we’re talking about.

If you’re present for this part (and we encourage it), you’ll understand your chimney’s condition far better than any verbal description could convey. You see what we see.

The Cleaning (If Needed)

If your visit includes a cleaning — common for wood-burning fireplaces and stoves that have accumulated creosote — here’s what happens.

We use brushes sized to your flue, run on rods or a powered system, to scrub the creosote, soot, and debris from the interior of the flue. The loosened material is captured by a specialized vacuum system designed to handle fine soot, so it doesn’t end up in your living space. We clean the firebox, the smoke chamber, and the accessible components.

A few things first-time customers often ask about:

Will it make a mess? Done properly, no. The combination of drop cloths, sealed work areas, and a soot-rated vacuum system contains the mess. There may be some unavoidable dust, but a professional cleaning shouldn’t leave soot through your house. If a company isn’t using proper containment, that’s a red flag.

How long does it take? A routine cleaning is typically completed within an hour or so, though it varies with the chimney’s condition and how much buildup there is. A combined inspection and cleaning takes longer. We’ll have given you a time estimate when you booked.

Will I smell anything? There may be a faint creosote or soot smell during the work, which dissipates after we finish and clear our equipment. It’s normal and temporary.

Going Over the Findings

After the inspection and any cleaning, we sit down with you and go over what we found. This is one of the most important parts of the visit, and a good company takes the time to do it properly.

We’ll explain:

  • The overall condition of your chimney
  • Anything we found that needs attention, with photos or video showing you exactly what we mean
  • What’s urgent versus what can wait versus what’s optional
  • Your options for addressing any issues, with the tradeoffs of each
  • Honest guidance on what we’d recommend and why

This is where the documentation matters. Rather than asking you to take our word for it, we show you. If we found a cracked liner, you see the crack on the video. If we found crumbling mortar or a damaged crown, you see the photos. You leave the conversation understanding your chimney’s actual condition and what, if anything, it needs.

And importantly — sometimes the finding is simply that your chimney is in good shape. A first inspection that comes back clean is a real and common outcome, and it’s exactly the peace of mind a lot of homeowners are looking for. An honest company tells you when you don’t need work just as readily as when you do.

What You’ll Receive

Before we leave, you should have:

  • A clear verbal walkthrough of the findings
  • Photo and/or video documentation of any issues identified
  • A written report or record of the inspection (especially for Level 2 inspections)
  • A written estimate for any recommended repairs, with the work specified and the cost laid out
  • Answers to any questions you have

You’re never left guessing. You should understand what was done, what condition your chimney is in, and what (if anything) the recommended next steps are.

If Repairs Are Recommended

If the inspection turns up something that needs fixing, there’s no obligation to decide on the spot. A reputable company gives you the information and the estimate, then lets you make the decision in your own time. You’re welcome to think it over, get a second opinion, or schedule the work for a later date that suits you.

For repairs that are genuinely urgent — a safety issue that means the chimney shouldn’t be used until addressed — we’ll tell you clearly and explain why. But “urgent” should always come with a real explanation, not pressure. If you ever feel rushed or pressured into immediate expensive work, that’s a warning sign we discussed in our guide to choosing a chimney service.

Common repairs that might come out of a first inspection include repointing, crown repair or sealing, cap installation, flashing repair, or liner replacement. Each is its own job, scheduled separately, and we’ll walk you through what’s involved.

How Long the Whole Visit Takes

A rough guide, though it varies with your specific situation:

  • A routine cleaning on a known chimney: about an hour
  • A Level 1 inspection: under an hour
  • A Level 2 inspection with video scan: somewhat longer, often an hour to ninety minutes depending on the chimney
  • A combined inspection and cleaning: typically one to two hours total

We’ll give you a realistic estimate when you book, and we respect your time. A professional visit is thorough but efficient.

After We Leave

Once we’ve finished, cleared our equipment, removed our drop cloths, and gone over everything with you, your part is simple:

  • Keep the written report and any documentation for your records (useful for insurance, future service, and home sale purposes)
  • If repairs were recommended, decide on your timeline and reach out when you’re ready to schedule
  • Note when your next annual service is due — most chimneys benefit from annual inspection, so marking your calendar for next year keeps you on track

If you used the fireplace concern that prompted the visit, you’ll now know whether it’s safe to use and under what conditions. If the chimney came back clean, you can light a fire with confidence.

Why the First Visit Matters Most

The first professional chimney service visit is the one that establishes the baseline. It tells you what condition your chimney is actually in, catches any problems that have been quietly developing, and gives you the documentation and knowledge to make good decisions going forward. For many homeowners, it also replaces years of vague worry with concrete information — which, one way or another, is a relief.

It’s also the visit that builds the relationship. A company that protects your home, documents its findings, explains things clearly, and gives honest recommendations is a company you can keep calling year after year, without the uncertainty you felt the first time.

Schedule Your First Visit

If you’ve been putting off that first chimney service because you weren’t sure what to expect — now you know. It’s a straightforward, professional process designed to inform and protect you, not to surprise or pressure you.

Spring Hill Chimney serves homeowners across Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, Gouldsboro, Dupont, Hawley, Moscow, Stroudsburg, the Poconos, and the surrounding NEPA region. Licensed and insured in Pennsylvania. We document our findings, explain everything clearly, and — because we manufacture our own stainless steel liners — we can handle anything your inspection turns up, from a routine cleaning to a full restoration. You can see our work in our project gallery and read what first-time and repeat customers say on our reviews page.

Call 1-800-943-1515 or request a free quote online to schedule. Be sure to review our appointment tips before your visit, and ask about our current discount offer for up to 70% off qualifying services.

The hardest part of chimney maintenance is making the first call. Everything after that, we handle.

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