How much does a chimney sweep cost in Maryland in 2026? Honest breakdown of standard sweep, Level 2 inspection, glazed creosote removal, and what drives the final number.
If you have started gathering quotes for a chimney sweep, inspection, or repair in Maryland, you have probably noticed prices that vary wildly. One company quotes $89 for a sweep. Another wants $450 for what sounds like the same service. The truth is that not all chimney work is the same, and pricing depends on the type of service, the condition of your flue, and whether the technician on your roof is a CSIA-trained sweep or a seasonal handyman.
At Eagle Chimney Service, we have been cleaning, inspecting, and rebuilding Maryland chimneys for years, and we believe in straight pricing. This guide breaks down the real 2026 cost of every common chimney service across Maryland — and shows you the red flags that separate an honest quote from a bait-and-switch.
2026 Chimney Service Prices in Maryland
These ranges reflect what licensed, insured, CSIA-trained chimney companies actually charge in Maryland and the DC metro area in 2026. Prices include the labor, tarps and drop cloths, vacuum containment, and a written service report.
| Service | 2026 Maryland Price Range |
|---|---|
| Standard chimney sweep (single flue) | $189 - $300 |
| CSIA Level 2 inspection (video scan) | $325 - $450 |
| Crown sealant (waterproof coating) | $375 - $650 |
| Full crown rebuild (cast in place) | $1,200 - $2,400 |
| Stainless chimney cap (single flue, installed) | $225 - $550 |
| Masonry tuckpointing (per sq ft) | $14 - $22 |
| Full stainless flue reline | $1,800 - $4,500 |
| Smoke chamber parging | $650 - $1,400 |
Any quote below $150 for a "chimney sweep" in Maryland in 2026 is almost always a door-knock teaser. It exists to get a technician on your roof so they can sell a much larger repair — often one your chimney does not actually need. Legitimate sweeps cost more because the work is more involved than a broom and a vacuum.
What a Real Chimney Sweep Actually Includes
A proper CSIA-aligned chimney sweep is not a 15-minute brush job. When we perform a chimney cleaning at a Maryland home, the visit includes:
- Drop cloths and HEPA negative-pressure containment of the firebox and surrounding floor
- Mechanical rod-and-brush sweep of the entire flue from cap to smoke chamber
- Shop-vac extraction of creosote, soot, and debris
- Visual inspection of the firebox, damper, smoke shelf, and cap
- Written CSIA Level 1 inspection report with photos of any defects
- Recommendation list with priority (safety, code, deferred)
That whole process takes 60 to 90 minutes for an average single-story Maryland home. A "sweep" that wraps in 20 minutes either skipped the inspection or never reached the smoke shelf.
What Drives the Price Up or Down
Story Height and Roof Access
A two-story colonial in Columbia or a three-story Federal in Annapolis takes longer to access safely than a single-story rambler in Salisbury. Steep slate roofs, cathedral entry, and chimneys with no roof side access all add 15 to 30 percent to a sweep price.
Number of Flues
Many older Maryland brick stacks contain two or three separate flues — one for the fireplace, one for the furnace, and sometimes a third for a hot water heater. Each flue is swept and inspected separately, and each adds roughly $80 to $130 to the visit.
Creosote Stage
The CSIA classifies creosote in three stages. Stage 1 is light, dusty soot — removable with a standard brush. Stage 2 is a hard, shiny glaze that needs mechanical scraping or rotary chains. Stage 3 is a thick, tar-like crust that is essentially fuel coating the inside of your chimney. A Stage 3 cleanup can cost $475 to $900 because it requires chemical treatment, rotary heads, and sometimes a Level 2 video inspection afterward.
Access Difficulty
Tight crawlspaces, wood-burning inserts that must be pulled out to reach the flue, and chimneys that share an interior chase with finished drywall all push prices toward the upper end of the range.
Why CSIA-Trained Sweeps Cost More (And Why That Is the Point)
The Chimney Safety Institute of America runs a national certification program that requires written exams, hands-on evaluations, and annual continuing education. A CSIA Certified Sweep has been trained to identify the difference between cosmetic spalling and a structural crack, knows the NFPA 211 clearance and clearance- to-combustible rules by heart, and carries liability insurance that covers a homeowner if something goes wrong.
A handyman with a $30 brush set and a pickup truck does not. When you pay $250 for a real sweep instead of $89 for a teaser, you are paying for training, insurance, and a sweep who will tell you the truth about what your chimney actually needs.
Red-Flag Quotes to Walk Away From
- "$59 chimney sweep" coupon offers. Almost always a lead-in. Expect a $1,200 "emergency" repair quote before the technician leaves.
- No written inspection report. A real sweep documents what they found, with photos.
- "Cash only" pricing. Unlicensed, uninsured, and almost certainly not paying workers' comp.
- Pressure to repair immediately. Genuine safety issues should be explained calmly with photos — not used as a high-pressure close.
- No CSIA, NFI, or state HVAC license. Maryland does not require a state chimney license, which is exactly why national certification matters here.
Cost of Inspections Explained
Maryland follows the NFPA 211 standard, which calls for an annual chimney inspection. There are three levels:
- Level 1 ($0 - $125, often bundled with a sweep): Visual inspection of accessible areas. The annual baseline.
- Level 2 ($325 - $450): Required after a chimney fire, before a home sale, after a flue change, or after any earthquake or storm event. Includes a video scan of the entire flue interior.
- Level 3 ($800 - $1,800+): Invasive inspection requiring partial removal of masonry or chase walls. Only when a Level 2 finds hidden damage.
If you are buying or selling a Maryland home with a fireplace, a Level 2 inspection is the document the buyer's agent will want — and it is the only one that genuinely protects both parties. Schedule it with a certified inspection service before closing.
Schedule Your Maryland Chimney Service
Eagle Chimney Service — CSIA-Trained, Licensed, Insured, NFPA 211 Compliant
Call (855) 424-6217Frequently Asked Questions
How often should I schedule a chimney sweep in Maryland?
The NFPA 211 standard requires annual inspection of every chimney, and the CSIA recommends a sweep whenever creosote buildup exceeds one-eighth of an inch. For a Maryland family that burns one to two cords of wood per season, that is almost always once a year. Gas fireplaces also need annual inspection — the byproducts are different, but acidic condensation and animal nests are just as dangerous.
Is a $99 chimney sweep ever legitimate?
Rarely. A real sweep costs the company $90 to $130 in labor, fuel, insurance, and overhead before they earn a dollar. A $99 quote means the visit either skips most of the work or is designed to sell you a much larger repair. Pay for a real sweep from a CSIA-trained Maryland company and you will spend less in the long run.
Will my homeowner's insurance pay for chimney work?
Routine sweeping and maintenance are not covered — that is owner upkeep. But if a chimney fire, lightning strike, or windstorm damages your flue or crown, your Maryland homeowner's policy usually covers the repair. Save every inspection report and sweep receipt; insurers want to see proof of annual maintenance before they pay a damage claim.
How long does a chimney sweep take?
A single-flue masonry chimney with light Stage 1 creosote takes 60 to 90 minutes. Multi-flue chimneys or Stage 2 glaze can push the visit to 2 to 3 hours. Expect the technician to spend roughly half the time cleaning and the other half inspecting and writing your report.
Related Services & Resources
- Chimney Repair in Maryland — Same-day service, all brands
- Annual Sweep Service — Stainless & copper caps
- View Our Pricing — Transparent, upfront costs
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