
In roughly two decades of chimney work across northeastern Pennsylvania, the same misconceptions come up again and again. Homeowners aren’t ignorant — they’re working from information that was either wrong from the start, was true at one point but isn’t anymore, or applies to other regions but not to NEPA’s specific conditions. And these misconceptions cost real money. They lead to deferred maintenance, unnecessary repairs, missed safety issues, and bad decisions that end up being expensive years later.
This post is a straight myth-by-myth correction of the most common ones. Some you may have heard. Some you may have repeated. A few might genuinely surprise you. The goal isn’t to make anyone feel bad about what they believed — these are widespread enough that there’s no shame in any of them. The goal is to clear up the misunderstandings that consistently lead NEPA homeowners to make expensive mistakes with their chimneys.
What’s true: Annual cleaning and inspection is recommended for every home with a chimney, regardless of how often you use it.
The reasoning behind the myth is intuitive: if nothing seems wrong, why pay for service? The problem is that chimney problems develop slowly and silently long before they produce obvious symptoms. By the time you “notice a problem,” what you’re noticing is often the late-stage version of a problem that began years earlier. Creosote that’s now thick enough to fuel a chimney fire didn’t appear overnight; it accumulated over multiple seasons of use. A liner that’s failing now didn’t fail last week; it’s been deteriorating for years.
Annual inspection catches problems while they’re still cheap to fix. It also catches things that won’t ever produce visible symptoms until they cause something catastrophic — like carbon monoxide leaks from a deteriorated liner, which give no warning before they hurt people.
The annual visit isn’t optional maintenance for “people who use the fireplace a lot.” It’s the standard for every chimney, every year.
What’s true: Burning a hot fire produces less creosote than burning a smoldering fire, but it doesn’t clean creosote that’s already accumulated, and trying to “burn out” buildup is genuinely dangerous.
This myth comes from a partial truth: hot fires produce less creosote than cool fires, and very hot fires can ignite existing creosote deposits. The first part is helpful information for fire-building technique. The second part is a chimney fire — exactly what you’re trying to avoid.
Lighting a “really hot fire” to clean the chimney is asking for a chimney fire. Creosote ignites at temperatures a wood fire can easily reach, and when it ignites, it burns at 2,000°F+ inside the flue. The damage to the liner, masonry, and potentially the surrounding structure can be catastrophic.
The correct response to creosote buildup is professional cleaning. The correct preventive approach is burning properly seasoned wood and getting annual sweeps. Hot fires aren’t a cleaning method; they’re just less polluting fires.
What’s true: Gas fireplaces produce less visible mess than wood-burning ones, but they need annual professional inspection and the venting can fail in ways that are dangerous specifically because they’re invisible.
This is one of the most expensive myths in our industry. Gas fireplace owners often assume that because there’s no creosote, no soot, and no obvious buildup, the appliance can be ignored indefinitely. The opposite is true — gas appliances can fail in ways that wood-burning ones can’t, and the failure modes are invisible until something serious happens.
Gas combustion produces acidic byproducts that condense inside cold masonry chimneys, eating away at clay tile liners and damaging mortar joints. This corrosion happens silently and isn’t visible from inside the home. A chimney that looks perfect from the firebox can have a significantly compromised liner above. When the liner fails, combustion gases — including carbon monoxide — can leak through compromised masonry into living spaces.
Burners can also clog (spider webs in pilot orifices are a real common failure), thermocouples can fail, gas connections can develop slow leaks, and venting can become obstructed. Annual professional inspection catches these issues before they become problems.
If anything, gas fireplaces need more careful annual attention than wood-burning ones — because the lack of visible symptoms means problems develop unnoticed unless someone’s actively looking for them.
What’s true: The fact that an older chimney has survived this long doesn’t mean it’s in good condition — it usually means the damage that’s been accumulating is hidden, not absent.
This is one we hear constantly, especially from owners of older NEPA homes in the coal-region towns. The thinking is that if the chimney was going to fail, it would have already. The reality is that older chimneys typically have decades of accumulated wear — failed original liners, eroded mortar joints, weathered crowns — and most of that damage is hidden inside the structure where you can’t see it without a video scan.
Some old chimneys really are in great shape — credit to skilled original builders and years of good luck. But many old chimneys that “have never had problems” are actually riddled with problems that the owner doesn’t know about yet. The “no problems” assessment is usually “no problems visible from inside the house” — which doesn’t tell you much about the inside of the flue, the upper masonry, the crown, or the liner.
The right test for an old chimney isn’t “has it caused trouble?” It’s “what does it actually look like when properly inspected?” Those are very different questions, and the answer to the second one is often surprising.
What’s true: Creosote sweeping logs can help break down some Stage 1 creosote deposits, but they don’t replace a professional sweep, don’t remove all buildup, and don’t inspect the chimney for problems.
The cleaning log products you can buy at hardware stores aren’t fraudulent — they do something. The chemical treatment in them can convert some glazed creosote deposits to a more brittle form that’s easier to remove. For a chimney that’s mostly clean, regular cleaning log use can help maintain that condition between professional sweeps.
But cleaning logs do not:
Some homeowners use cleaning logs as a substitute for professional sweeps. That’s the problematic version of this myth. Use them as a supplement to annual professional cleaning if you want, but they’re not a replacement.
What’s true: A properly sized chimney cap has essentially zero effect on draft and is one of the highest-value protective additions you can make to a chimney.
This myth probably comes from a real concern about anything restricting the flue. The misconception is that since a cap covers the flue opening, it must restrict airflow.
Quality chimney caps are designed with adequate clearance above the flue opening and sized to allow combustion products to vent freely. The mesh sides allow normal airflow. The slightly domed top sheds water but doesn’t impede vertical draft. The geometry of a properly designed cap means it doesn’t meaningfully affect how the chimney functions — except in the positive sense of keeping water and animals out.
A cap that is restricting draft is either too small, too low, clogged with debris, or a homemade improvisation that wasn’t designed for the application. Those are real problems. But “caps cause draft problems” is not a reason to leave a chimney uncapped. The right answer is a properly sized professional cap, which provides all the benefits with none of the imagined downside.
If you’ve been told (or believed) that capping your chimney would cause problems, you can let that one go. Cap installation is one of the easiest “yes” decisions in chimney maintenance.
What’s true: A ground-level visual is the least useful view of a chimney. Most chimney problems are invisible from the ground.
This is one of the most consistently expensive myths in NEPA. People look up at their chimney, see what looks like solid masonry, and assume everything is okay. But the most important parts of a chimney — the crown, the cap, the flashing, the upper masonry, the inside of the flue — aren’t visible from down on the lawn.
The crown might have multiple cracks running across it; you can’t see them from below. The flashing might be lifted or leaking; the leak shows up inside the house long before it shows on the exterior. The liner might be significantly cracked or deteriorated; from the firebox looking up, even a serious liner problem can be completely invisible.
The chimney that “looks fine” is often the chimney with the most accumulated unseen damage, because the owner has had no prompt to look closer. A real assessment requires getting close to the chimney top, examining the crown directly, and ideally video scanning the flue interior.
Don’t trust the ground-level view. It’s the friendliest view a chimney can show you, and it’s lying to you about the condition above it.
What’s true: Sealant is rarely the right answer for chimney repairs. Most repairs need actual masonry work, and sealant-only “repairs” tend to fail within a year or two while the underlying problem keeps getting worse.
The appeal of caulking a crack and calling it done is obvious — it’s cheap, fast, and looks like you fixed it. The problem is that sealant on a chimney is at best a temporary measure, and at worst it actively hides a problem that’s continuing to develop underneath.
The two main reasons sealant fails:
Sealant degrades. UV exposure, temperature swings, and weathering break down even quality sealants over time. The seal you applied this year may be failing next year, and unlike masonry repair, it doesn’t gracefully transition to a different stage — it just stops working, often without obvious warning.
Sealant doesn’t address the cause. A cracked crown sealed with caulk hides the crack visually, but the underlying structural failure that created the crack is still progressing. Water continues working on the masonry. Freeze-thaw cycles continue widening damage. When the sealant fails, the chimney is in worse shape than when you “fixed” it, because additional damage accumulated underneath.
Real repairs involve actual masonry work: grinding out failed mortar and repointing with appropriate mortar, replacing failed crown sections, properly installing or replacing flashing with embedded counter flashing rather than surface caulking. These cost more upfront than tubes of caulk, but they actually fix the problem — for decades, not seasons.
Sealant has its place as a supplementary measure at specific points, but it’s not a primary repair material. If a contractor’s solution to a structural problem is “I’ll seal it,” that’s a sign to get a different contractor.
What’s true: Chimney service pricing varies for real reasons, and the cheapest option is rarely the best total value.
The thinking is that chimney work is chimney work, and if one company quotes half what another does, you should take the cheaper option. The reality is that the price difference usually reflects real differences in what’s being delivered:
We covered the full picture in the reputable chimney service guide, but the short version: the cheap quote is almost always cheaper for a reason, and the reason almost always costs you more in the long run.
What’s true: Standard homeowners insurance covers specific covered events (storms, lightning, falling trees, fire) — not gradual wear and tear, which is what most chimney damage in NEPA actually is.
We covered this in detail in the insurance claims guide, but it’s worth including here because the assumption that “insurance will pay” is widespread and consistently leads to bad financial planning.
Insurance is for sudden accidental damage. The chimney damage most NEPA homeowners actually face — freeze-thaw damage to mortar joints, crown deterioration, liner failure from years of acidic combustion, spalled brick, weathered flashing — is gradual deterioration. None of it is typically covered by insurance, even though it’s the most common chimney damage NEPA homes experience.
If you’ve been deferring chimney maintenance on the assumption that insurance will eventually pick up the bill, that’s not how it works. Maintenance is the homeowner’s responsibility. Storm damage from a specific covered event is what insurance is for. Don’t conflate them.
What’s true: Professional chimney service should be neither. A real chimney company protects your home, contains soot and dust during cleaning, and leaves your space as clean as they found it.
This myth probably comes from horror stories of bad service experiences or memories of less-modern equipment. Today, professional chimney service uses drop cloths, sealed work areas, and specialized soot-rated vacuum systems. A proper cleaning shouldn’t leave dust through your house. A proper inspection shouldn’t disrupt your home for the rest of the day. We described what a professional visit actually looks like in the first-visit guide.
If you’ve been putting off chimney service because you remember a bad experience or imagined a worse one, the reality is much better than you think. The right company makes the visit straightforward and clean.
What’s true: Some chimney issues can wait for spring; others can’t, and the wrong choice between them is genuinely dangerous.
The reasoning isn’t unreasonable — masonry work needs warm weather to cure properly, so deferring repairs to spring sometimes makes sense. But this principle gets misapplied to issues that shouldn’t wait.
What can usually wait until spring:
What should not wait:
The judgment about which category a specific issue falls into requires professional inspection. If a contractor tells you something can wait, ask specifically why and what the risk is of waiting. If they tell you something can’t wait, ask the same questions. Either way, don’t make the call based on “it’s winter, so I’ll wait.”
What’s true: The differences between chimney companies are substantial — in capability, in honesty, in quality of work, and in long-term outcomes for your chimney.
This is the myth that keeps a lot of bad operators in business. If homeowners believe one company is essentially the same as another, they shop on price and convenience. The companies that win on price and convenience are often the ones cutting corners on everything else.
In practice, chimney companies vary enormously in:
These differences compound over the life of the chimney. The work done by a quality operator is invisible — it just works, year after year. The work done by a bad operator is visible — in recurring problems, in failed components, in additional repair bills. The economics over a decade or two are dramatically different.
A homeowner choosing a chimney company is making a real decision with real consequences. “They’re all basically the same” is exactly what an aggressive marketer wants you to believe.
Step back and look at the common thread in these misconceptions: most of them are versions of “this is fine, you don’t need to worry about it.” Don’t need to clean. Don’t need to inspect. Don’t need a cap. Don’t need real repairs. Don’t need to worry about choosing a company carefully.
There’s a reason these myths persist: they’re comfortable. Believing them lets a homeowner avoid spending money and avoid thinking about their chimney. The myths are emotionally appealing in a way the truth isn’t.
But the truth — chimneys need attention, NEPA is hard on masonry, problems develop invisibly, choosing the right company matters — leads to better outcomes for the homeowner. A chimney that’s properly maintained, sized to the home’s actual heating system, and built and repaired by people who know what they’re doing is a chimney that lasts for generations and stays safe throughout. A chimney whose owner believed the myths is a chimney that progressively deteriorates and eventually causes a much bigger problem.
This isn’t about pushing service. It’s about reality. The myths cost money in the long run. The truth costs money in the short run but saves it in the long run. The decisions homeowners make about which to believe show up clearly in the condition of their chimney a decade later.
If any of these myths sounded familiar — or if reading them made you realize your chimney might be in different shape than you thought — the way to find out for sure is a proper Level 2 inspection. We’ll document what’s actually going on, show you with photos and video, and give you honest information about what your chimney needs (and just as importantly, what it doesn’t need).
No pressure. No manufactured urgency. No mythology. Just a real look at the chimney and an honest conversation about what we found.
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 handle the full range of chimney services, manufacture our own stainless steel liners, and also handle roofing, foundation parging, and sidewalk and step repair. You can see our work in our project gallery and read what homeowners say on our reviews page.
Call 1-800-943-1515 or request a free quote online to schedule. Ask about our current discount offer for up to 70% off qualifying services.
There’s a lot of bad information about chimneys out there. Make decisions based on the real stuff.