Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Commack
Chimney liner installation and rebuild in Commack typically runs $2,800–$7,500 depending on scope, and most liner jobs are completed in a single day. If you’re converting from oil to gas in the 11725 ZIP, you’ll almost certainly need a new stainless steel liner sized for your new appliance — it’s not optional, it’s a safety requirement.
We’re Sterling Chimney Cleaning Bridgeport, and we’ve been crossing into Suffolk County for years to handle the exact scenario Commack homeowners face: 50- to 70-year-old masonry chimneys built for oil heat that now need to safely vent gas appliances. Gary Murphy, our owner and lead technician, makes the trip himself — not a subcontractor you’ve never met. We’ve worked on ranch homes near Commack Road, split-levels off Larkfield Road, and Cape Cods throughout the Harned Road corridor. When you call (888) 975-6389, you’re talking to the person who’ll show up with the ladder.
Commack’s inland location means harder freezes than coastal Long Island towns, and those freeze-thaw cycles don’t negotiate with old mortar. If your terra-cotta liner is cracked or your chimney was never lined at all, every heating season is a gamble with carbon monoxide exposure and structural water damage. We don’t believe in gambles.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Bridgeport Is Commack’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Real reviews from real Commack-area customers. More than 1,200 homeowners have trusted us across our service territory, and our 4.7 average star rating reflects the kind of accountability you get when the owner handles the work personally. Commack customers specifically mention Gary’s willingness to explain the oil-to-gas conversion process and his refusal to push unnecessary rebuilds when a liner solves the problem.
Response time that respects your heating season. From our Bridgeport base, we’re typically in Commack within 45–60 minutes. We know that a failed liner discovery in November doesn’t wait for spring. We’ve scheduled emergency liner installs on Higbie Lane before the first hard freeze and completed crown rebuilds on Veterans Memorial Highway homes during January thaws.
We understand Commack’s housing DNA. This isn’t theoretical knowledge. We’ve crawled the attics of 1960s ranches near Rolling Hill Drive and inspected the shared chimneys of split-levels off Townline Road. We know that a “standard” chimney in Commack often means an 8×8 terra-cotta flue serving an oil burner that’s been there since the Johnson administration. That context changes everything about how we diagnose and quote.
14 years, one trade. Gary Murphy hasn’t spent a decade as a handyman who “also does chimneys.” This is the only work he’s done since 2010. When he inspects your flue, he’s drawing on thousands of previous inspections — many of them in 11725 and neighboring Smithtown ZIPs.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Commack
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
This is the backbone of our Commack work right now. As homeowners throughout the 11725 ZIP convert from oil to natural gas, the original oversized flues designed for 500°F oil exhaust are receiving 250°F gas exhaust — and the math doesn’t work. Cooler gas condenses, creates acidic residue, and destroys mortar from the inside out.
We install DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney stainless steel liners sized precisely to your new appliance’s BTU output and venting requirements. A typical Commack ranch or Cape Cod runs $3,200–$4,800 for a full stainless reline with proper insulation, top plate, and rain cap. We recently handled a full reline on a split-level on Larkfield Road where the homeowner switched from oil to gas. The original 8×8 terra-cotta flue was too large for the new high-efficiency gas boiler, causing condensation that was eating into the mortar joints. We installed a 6-inch DuraFlex stainless steel liner, sealed the crown, and added a rain cap — now the system vents safely and the homeowner saves on heating costs.
Flexible Liner Installation
Not every Commack chimney is a straight shot. The offset flues in some 1960s split-levels near Burr Road or the angled chimneys in certain Cape Cod variants require flexible stainless liners that navigate bends without compromising draft. We stock flexible DuraFlex in multiple diameters and carry the specialized pulling equipment to install them without dismantling interior finishes. Flexible liner jobs in Commack typically fall between $3,800–$5,500 when offsets or significant height are involved.
Liner Replacement
Sometimes the liner itself is the problem — cracked terra-cotta tiles, collapsed sections from a previous chimney fire, or a deteriorated stainless liner installed by a previous owner. We extract the damaged material, inspect the surrounding masonry for hidden water damage (common in Commack’s 50-year-old housing stock), and install a new liner system that matches your current fuel type and appliance. Replacement jobs where the surrounding chimney is sound run $2,800–$4,200 in the 11725 market.
Partial Rebuild
Commack’s hard-freeze winters punish chimney crowns and upper masonry. We’ve rebuilt crowns on homes near Indian Head Road where freeze-thaw spalling had reduced the concrete cap to gravel, and we’ve replaced the top 4–6 feet of flue tile and brick on chimneys along Sunken Meadow Parkway corridors where water infiltration had compromised the structure below the roofline. Partial rebuilds typically range $4,500–$6,800 depending on accessibility and the extent of hidden damage revealed during demolition. If your 1970s Cape Cod has a crumbling crown but sound lower masonry, partial rebuild preserves what works and fixes what doesn’t.
Full Chimney Rebuild
When the damage extends below the roofline — multiple courses of spalled brick, compromised lateral support, or a chimney that’s visibly leaning — we dismantle and rebuild from the foundation up or from a designated sound course. Full rebuilds in Commack’s 1955–1975 housing stock are less common than liner work, but we’ve completed them on homes near Jericho Turnpike where decades of deferred maintenance met the wrong winter. Expect $8,500–$14,000 for a full rebuild with new flue system, depending on height and material matching. Gary handles the structural assessment personally — no guesswork on whether rebuild versus repair is the right call.
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 Commack
We don’t buy chimney materials where homeowners buy light bulbs. Our truck stocks DuraFlex stainless liners and components, HeatShield cerfractory resurfacing products for flue repair, and Copperfield chimney caps and flashing — the brands specified in NFPA 211 guidelines and trusted by certified chimney professionals nationwide. For Commack customers, this means no waiting for special orders on standard liner diameters, no substitute materials because “it’s what we had,” and no markup for middleman sourcing. We buy professional-grade, we install professional-grade, and we warranty our workmanship because we know exactly what these materials can handle in a hard-freeze climate like 11725.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Commack Homes
- Cracked terra-cotta from freeze-thaw cycling. Commack’s inland Suffolk County location delivers genuine hard-freeze winters without coastal moderation. Water penetrates hairline cracks in original flue tiles, expands on freezing, and widens those cracks season after season until the liner is structurally compromised and no longer contains combustion gases safely.
- Unlined chimneys with heavy creosote glazing. Oil burners in oversized flues produce slower exhaust velocity and cooler gas temperatures, which allows creosote and sulfur residue to coat flue walls. In unlined Commack chimneys, this glazing builds to hazardous thickness and can ignite during a hot burn — we’ve removed glazed deposits over ½-inch thick from 1960s ranches near Commack Road.
- Gas conversion without proper relining. The oversized original flue causes condensation and acidic residue that degrades both the chimney structure and the new gas appliance itself. We routinely find this during post-conversion service calls — the homeowner saved on the liner, but now faces a $6,000 appliance replacement and a $4,000 chimney rebuild.
- Water infiltration from failed crowns and flashing. Commack’s elevated humidity combined with freeze-thaw stress accelerates mortar-joint deterioration. Once water reaches the chimney’s interior, it migrates into roof framing and attic insulation. Annual cleaning inspections are the primary way we catch crown cracks before they become structural rot.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Commack, NY
Here’s what Commack homeowners actually pay for Chimney Liner & Rebuild work in 2024–2025:
| Service | Typical Range in 11725 |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner (straight flue, standard height) | $3,200 – $4,800 |
| Flexible liner with offsets | $3,800 – $5,500 |
| Liner replacement (extract and reinstall) | $2,800 – $4,200 |
| Partial rebuild (crown + upper masonry) | $4,500 – $6,800 |
| Full chimney rebuild with new flue | $8,500 – $14,000 |
| Chimney inspection with video scan | $250 – $350 |
What moves you within these ranges? Height of chimney, accessibility (steep roof pitches near Sunken Meadow State Parkway corridors add labor), whether we need to repair or replace the crown, and whether hidden water damage requires additional masonry work. We provide upfront, itemized quotes before any work begins — call (888) 975-6389 for a free estimate.
Commack’s oil-to-gas conversion wave has created consistent demand, which helps us maintain efficient material stocking and competitive pricing compared to companies that treat liner work as occasional specialty work. We’re not guessing at your job — we’ve done dozens like it within a few miles of your home.
We Also Serve Cities Near Commack
Our service radius from Bridgeport covers East Northport, Elwood, Kings Park, and Smithtown regularly — often on the same day we work in Commack. If you’re in one of these neighboring communities and facing the same oil-to-gas conversion timeline, the same pricing and expertise apply. We know the Smithtown Building Department permit process and the Suffolk County fuel-conversion requirements that affect work across this entire corridor.
Serving Commack, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Commack 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 Commack
Your original 8×8 terra-cotta flue was engineered for 400–500°F oil exhaust; gas exhaust runs 250–350°F and contains more moisture. The oversized flue slows exhaust velocity, allowing condensation that mixes with trace combustion chemicals to form sulfuric acid. That acid attacks mortar joints, stains exterior brick, and can corrode your new boiler’s heat exchanger. A properly sized stainless steel liner — typically 5–6 inches for residential gas — maintains correct draft velocity and contains condensation within the liner itself. Call (888) 975-6389 and we’ll measure your flue and appliance output to specify the exact diameter you need — estimates are free.
Clay tile cracks aren’t visible from the fireplace opening or cleanout door in most cases. We use a video-scanning camera during inspection to document flue condition throughout the full height — hairline cracks, spalled tile faces, and missing mortar between tile joints all show clearly on monitor. In Commack’s 50–70-year-old chimneys, we find cracked tiles in roughly 60% of inspections; the freeze-thaw cycling here is relentless. If you’re scheduling a sweep before heating season, request the video scan add-on — it’s the only way to know for certain.
Yes, if the damage is limited to the crown and upper 2–4 feet of masonry. We remove the failed crown, rebuild the top course of brick if spalled, pour a new reinforced concrete crown with proper overhang and drip edge, and install a stainless rain cap. For Commack Cape Cods with sound lower chimney structure and localized crown failure, this runs $4,500–$6,800 versus $8,500+ for full rebuild. Gary assesses the transition from sound to compromised masonry during inspection — we don’t recommend partial rebuild when hidden damage extends below the roofline. Call (888) 975-6389 for an honest evaluation.
We primarily install DuraFlex and Olympia Chimney stainless steel liners for Commack conversions — both carry UL 1777 listing and are specified by the Chimney Safety Institute of America. For flues requiring resurfacing rather than full replacement, we use HeatShield cerfractory sealant. These aren’t retail-store brands; they’re what chimney professionals specify because they’ve been tested in exactly the conditions your 11725 chimney presents. We stock standard diameters and carry custom sizes for unusual appliance configurations.
Suffolk County and the Town of Smithtown require that gas appliances vent through a chimney “in good repair and suitable for the intended use” per fuel-gas code provisions. In practical terms, an unlined or oversized oil-era flue is not suitable for gas venting — inspectors will flag it. Most Commack homeowners find that their HVAC contractor won’t complete the gas conversion until a chimney professional certifies the flue as properly lined and sized. We provide the documentation your installer needs. Call (888) 975-6389 to schedule the inspection and liner installation as part of your conversion timeline — estimates are free.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Bridgeport, serving Commack and Suffolk County since 2010.