Chimney Inspection Services in Connecticut

You’re probably just being a responsible homeowner — getting your chimney looked at before winter, before a sale, or because it’s been a while. Good instinct. Most of the chimney problems we find in Connecticut homes weren’t dramatic; they were quiet, slow, and easy to miss from the living room.

We’re GMT Chimney Sweep Services. We’ll come out, take an honest look, and tell you exactly what we find — including “you’re good for another year,” when that’s the answer. First inspection is on us.

Why a Chimney Inspection Actually Matters

Here’s the part most homeowners don’t think about. A chimney is one of the few things in your house that’s working hard, getting hot, and venting toxic gas — and you almost never see what’s going on inside it. From the living room, it looks fine. From the inside of the flue, it might be a different story.

Most of the chimney problems we run into in Connecticut homes weren’t dramatic. They were quiet. A little creosote here, a hairline crack there, a chimney cap that finally gave up after one too many storms. Nobody noticed because nobody looked.

That’s what a real chimney inspection is for.

What a proper chimney inspection actually catches

  • Creosote buildup. That sticky black layer on the inside of the flue. It’s the single biggest cause of chimney fires in Connecticut, and you can’t see it from below. A flue inspection — usually with a camera — is the only honest way to know how bad it is.
  • Cracked flue tiles or a worn-out liner. These let heat and gases reach the parts of your house they shouldn’t. A camera inspection catches this; a quick visual check often misses it.
  • Carbon monoxide risk. A blocked or damaged flue can push CO back into your living space. You won’t see it or smell it. That’s exactly why people miss it.
  • Water damage you can’t see yet. A failing crown, bad flashing, or a missing cap lets water into the chimney. Connecticut’s freeze-thaw winters do the rest. Caught early, it’s cheap to fix. Caught late, it’s a rebuild.
  • Animal nests, debris, blockages. Birds, squirrels, leaves. More common than you’d think, and easy to spot during a chimney safety inspection.
  • Insurance and real estate paperwork. Selling a house, buying one, renewing a policy — more and more often, somebody wants to see a recent chimney inspection report. We can give you one the same day.

The National Fire Protection Association recommends a chimney inspection every year, even if you barely use your fireplace. That’s the standard, and it’s the one we hold ourselves to.

Here's How We Do Chimney Inspections in Connecticut

GMT is a Connecticut chimney company, run by people who live here. Same winters, same wood stoves, same old houses you do. We do chimney inspections the way we’d want one done at our own house — carefully, honestly, and without the upselling that gives this industry a bad name.

When we come out for a chimney inspection, a chimney sweep and inspection, or a chimney inspection and repair walkthrough, we tell you what we find. If something needs work, we’ll show you. If it doesn’t, we’ll tell you that too. Plenty of times the answer is “you’re good for another year.” That’s a complete answer in our book.

Every Chimney Inspection Service We Offer

Most Connecticut homeowners searching “chimney inspection near me” don’t actually know which kind they need — and that’s fine, that’s our job. Here’s what we do, and when each one makes sense.

Level 1 Chimney Inspection (Annual Safety Check)

This is the standard yearly inspection — the one most people need. A trained technician visually inspects every readily accessible part of the chimney and fireplace: the firebox, smoke chamber, damper, flue, exterior masonry, cap, and crown. We’re looking for soundness, blockages, creosote, and anything out of place.

A level one chimney inspection is the right call if your chimney is in regular use, nothing’s changed, and you just want eyes on it before another season.

Level 2 Chimney Inspection (Comprehensive Camera Inspection)

Required by NFPA 211 anytime something has changed — you bought the house, the appliance changed, there’s been a chimney fire, or there was a major weather event. Also the standard for real estate transactions.

A Level 2 includes everything in a Level 1, plus a full chimney camera inspection of the flue interior, plus a check of accessible attics and crawlspaces. This is the comprehensive chimney inspection that catches what a visual check can’t — a cracked tile six feet up, a gap in a mortar joint, a liner that’s quietly failing.

Level 3 Chimney Inspection (Invasive)

Reserved for serious situations — confirmed structural damage, a major chimney fire, or a planned rebuild. A Level 3 may involve removing parts of the chimney or surrounding structure to reach concealed areas. We don’t recommend these casually. If we ever suggest one, it’s because we’ve seen something during a Level 2 that genuinely warrants it.

Fireplace and Chimney Inspection

The classic open-hearth setup. We check the firebox, the smoke chamber, the damper, the full flue, and the masonry on the way up. If you’ve been searching “fireplace and chimney inspection near me,” this is the one.

Chimney Brick Cleaner — Masonry Surface Cleaning

If your chimney brick is stained, sooted, or just looking rough, we can clean the surface and give the masonry a once-over while we’re up there. Often we’ll spot small issues — a hairline crack, a missing bit of mortar — before they turn into expensive ones.

Chimney Flue Inspection

A focused look at the flue itself — the part that does the real work. Usually done with a camera so we can show you exactly what’s up there.

Chimney Camera Inspection

Sometimes you just need to see it for yourself. A high-resolution camera, top to bottom, with footage we’ll save for you. Especially useful before buying a home, after a chimney fire, or when something feels off but a visual check came back clean.

Gas Chimney Inspection

Gas appliances produce different combustion byproducts than wood — and acidic exhaust quietly eats unprotected liners. A gas chimney inspection checks for liner corrosion, proper venting, blockages, and CO safety. If you’ve switched from wood to gas, this isn’t optional. Get it done.

Chimney Cap Inspection

The cap is the cheapest part of your chimney and the one that prevents the most damage. We check that yours is intact, properly sized, and actually doing its job — keeping water, animals, and debris out.

Chimney Inspection and Cleaning

Most of the time, an inspection turns up enough creosote that a cleaning is the next logical step. We can do both in one visit — a full chimney cleaning and inspection — which saves you a service call and gets your system winter-ready in a single afternoon.

Chimney Inspection and Repair

If we find something during the inspection that needs fixing — a cracked crown, a damaged cap, a worn-out liner — we’ll explain what we saw, show you photos, and give you a written estimate. No pressure, no scare tactics. You decide what makes sense.

Real Estate Chimney Inspection

Buying or selling a home in Connecticut? We provide documented chimney inspection reports formatted for realtors, lenders, and home inspectors. Same-day turnaround when the closing clock is ticking.

Insurance and Safety Inspections

Some Connecticut insurance carriers want a recent chimney safety inspection on file — for renewals, claims, or after a fire. We deliver reports in the format your carrier needs.

What a GMT Inspection Actually Looks Like

Six steps, every visit. Nothing fancy — just done right.

  1. We talk first. Before we touch anything, we ask what you’ve been noticing — drafts, smells, smoke, anything. Often the symptom tells us where to look.
  2. We inspect from the inside. Firebox, smoke chamber, damper, the visible part of the flue. We check what’s there and what shouldn’t be.
  3. We go up top. Cap, crown, flashing, exterior masonry. Connecticut weather is hard on chimneys; this is where most of the slow damage shows up.
  4. We run the camera if it’s called for. A Level 2 always includes a chimney camera inspection of the flue interior. Sometimes a Level 1 turns up something that warrants going deeper — if it does, we’ll tell you before we charge you.
  5. We test the draft. A clean, sound chimney should pull smoke cleanly out of the house. We make sure yours does.
  6. We walk you through everything. Photos if it helps. A written report if you want one. A clear answer about what (if anything) needs to happen next, and what it’ll cost.

What a Chimney Inspection Costs in Connecticut

Honest answer: most chimney inspection companies in CT charge somewhere between $150 and $300 for a Level 1, and $300 to $600 for a comprehensive Level 2 with a camera. A Level 3 is more — usually $1,000 and up — because of the invasive work involved.

Our first inspection is free for qualifying Connecticut homeowners. That’s a real Level 1 chimney safety inspection — not a sales call dressed up as one. If you need a Level 2 or a follow-up camera inspection, we’ll quote you transparently before any work starts.

You’ll know the chimney inspection price before we begin. No “well, while we were up there…” surprises.

“I think the chimney cleaning industry is 75% scammers… So I decided to go with GMT because they are reputable. They are very professional and do excellent work.” — Truxtun G., verified Google review
Schedule your free chimney inspection.

Looking for Chimney Inspection Near Me? We're All Over Connecticut.

We serve homeowners across the state — Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, Stamford, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, New Britain, West Hartford, Greenwich, Fairfield, Manchester, Meriden, Bristol, Milford, and pretty much everywhere in between.

If you’ve been searching “chimney inspection services near me,” or “fireplace chimney inspection near me” and you’re somewhere in Connecticut, give us a call. Odds are we’re in your area this week.

What Our Connecticut Neighbors Are Saying

Pull 4–6 of the strongest verified Google reviews already on the homepage into card format — star rating, reviewer name, date. Reviews specifically mentioning the inspection experience should be prioritized.

Why Connecticut Homeowners Keep Calling Us Back

You’re letting somebody into your house and onto your roof. We get that, and we don’t take it lightly.

Free first inspection.

No catch. We’d rather earn your trust than your $150.

Certified and fully insured.

Every technician is trained, background-checked, and covered.

200+ verified five-star Google reviews.

Real Connecticut homeowners, real names. Read them.

Honest answers.

If your chimney’s fine, we’ll say so. If it isn’t, we’ll show you why.

Camera inspections included where they're needed.

We don’t charge extra to actually look.

Same-day reports for real estate.

Closings don’t wait, and neither do we.

Same-week appointments most of the year.

You shouldn’t have to wait three weeks to feel safe in your own home.

We live here.

Connecticut neighbors, Connecticut winters. If we mess up, we hear about it at the grocery store.

Questions Connecticut Homeowners Ask About Chimney Inspections

How often should I have my chimney inspected?

Once a year. The NFPA recommends an annual chimney inspection for any home with a chimney — even if you barely use your fireplace. Animals, weather, and time damage chimneys whether they’re in use or not.

Is a free chimney inspection actually free?

Yes. Our free chimney inspection is a genuine Level 1 visual safety inspection — not a hook for an upsell. If we find something that needs further investigation or repair, we’ll quote you transparently. The inspection itself is on us.

How long does a chimney inspection take?

A Level 1 takes about 30 to 45 minutes. A Level 2 with a camera runs 60 to 90 minutes depending on how complicated the system is.

What's the difference between a chimney sweep and a chimney inspection?

A sweep cleans. An inspection looks for problems. They go together — and most of the time we do both in the same visit. The inspection tells us what’s there; the cleaning takes care of it.

Do I need a Level 1 or a Level 2?

If your chimney’s in regular use, nothing’s changed, and you just want a yearly check, Level 1 is right. If you’re buying or selling a home, switched fuel types, had a chimney fire, or had a major storm event, you need a Level 2. If you’re not sure, call us — we’ll help you figure it out before you spend a dollar.

Do you do gas fireplace chimney inspections?

Yes. Gas chimney inspection is one of our specialties. Gas exhaust is acidic and damages liners differently than wood smoke does — we know what to look for.

Can you do the inspection and repair in the same visit?

Sometimes. Small things — a damaged cap, a worn damper, minor flashing work — we can often handle right then. Bigger masonry repairs or liner replacements we’ll schedule separately, with a written quote so you have time to think about it.

Can you provide an inspection report for real estate or insurance?

Yes. We deliver written chimney inspection reports formatted for real estate transactions, lenders, and insurance carriers. Same-day turnaround when the timing is tight.

Are you licensed and insured?

Fully. GMT Chimney Sweep Services is a certified, licensed, and insured Connecticut chimney company. Happy to send proof if you want to see it.

Ready When You Are

A chimney inspection is one of those things that’s easy to put off until the first cold night, and then suddenly everyone’s calling at once. If it’s been a year — or you genuinely can’t remember the last time someone actually looked — let’s just get it on the calendar before the rush.

Worst case, we tell you everything’s fine and you go light a fire with peace of mind. Either way, you’ll know.

Call (860) 891-2757 and you’ll get a real person on the phone. Or fill out the form below and we’ll get back to you the same day.

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