Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Great Neck
Chimney liner installation and rebuild in Great Neck typically runs $2,800–$7,500 depending on liner type and chimney height, with most stainless steel replacements completed in one day. Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team serves the full Great Neck peninsula — from the village centers out to Kings Point — with same-week scheduling and direct arrival from our Yonkers base. We’ve worked on the exact chimney configurations you’ll find along Bayview Avenue, Middle Neck Road, and the quiet streets off Lakeville Road: multi-flue stacks in 1920s Tudors, capped oil flues converted to gas, and clay liners crumbling from decades of salt air. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate — Gary Murphy personally inspects every job before we quote.

Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Great Neck’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
We’ve rebuilt and relined chimneys in ZIPs 11023, 11024, 11026, and 11027 long enough to know which houses on Arleigh Road have the original 1930s clay stacks, which postwar splits off Hicks Lane need liner resizing after boiler upgrades, and how fast Nassau County inspectors flag oversized flues during high-value home sales. Over 1,100 homeowners have trusted us across our 11 years in business — 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars — and that depth matters when you’re choosing someone to work inside your chimney.
Gary Murphy leads every job himself. Not a dispatched crew. Not a subcontractor wearing our logo. When you call (844) 660-6590, you get the decision-maker on your roof, the same person who’ll spec your DuraFlex liner or HeatShield sealant and stand behind the work. From your first sweep to a full liner rebuild, it’s one operator, one accountability chain.
Our response time to Great Neck averages same-week, with emergency calls for CO backdraft or visible chimney damage prioritized within 24–48 hours. We know the parking constraints near the Great Neck Plaza shops, the tight driveway clearances on the older village streets, and how to stage materials without blocking traffic on narrow peninsula roads.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Great Neck
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
Stainless steel liners are what most Great Neck homes need — especially the Gold Coast-era Tudors and Colonial Revivals with original clay flue liners now 70–100 years old. The salt-laden marine air from Little Neck Bay and Manhasset Bay accelerates freeze-thaw spalling and mortar erosion, and once that clay liner cracks, you’re looking at carbon monoxide backdraft risk every time you run the boiler or light a fire. We install DuraFlex stainless steel liners sized precisely to your appliance — gas boiler, fireplace insert, or wood stove — bringing the flue into compliance with current Nassau County standards. On a Tudor Revival on Arleigh Road, we found the original clay flue liner cracked from decades of salt-air freeze-thaw cycles, causing carbon monoxide backdraft. We installed a DuraFlex stainless steel liner, sealed with HeatShield creosote remover, restoring safe draft and meeting Nassau County code.
Flexible Liner Solutions
Not every Great Neck chimney is straight. The older homes near the water — the ones with offset flues, chimney breasts that jog through multiple stories, or limited roof access — often need flexible stainless steel liners that navigate bends without tearing. We’ve run flexible liners through multi-flue stacks in the village centers where rigid pipe simply won’t fit, and we size them to the BTU output of your actual appliance, not the oversized oil-burner flue your house was built with. If your chimney has an offset or you’re in one of the tighter 1920s builds near Steamboat Road, flexible liner is likely your path.
Liner Replacement & Resizing
This is the near-universal need in Great Neck. The peninsula’s dense stock of pre-WWII homes — most converted from oil to gas heat over the past two decades — routinely have the original oversized clay flue liners still in place. A flue built for a 1950s oil burner is dangerously oversized for a modern 80,000 BTU gas boiler. The result: poor draft, condensation in the flue, and CO that doesn’t rise fast enough to exit safely. Nassau County inspectors increasingly flag this exact mismatch during home sales. We remove the old clay, resize with a properly dimensioned stainless liner, and document the work for your inspection records. It’s not a repair — it’s a safety retrofit that most Great Neck homes built before 1960 need.
Partial & Full Chimney Rebuild
When salt-air damage has progressed beyond the liner itself, we rebuild. Partial rebuilds address the crown, upper courses of brick, and flue interface — common after years of mortar joint failure on bay-exposed stacks. Full rebuilds strip the chimney to the roofline and reconstruct with proper crown slope, flashing integration, and a new stainless liner system. We’ve done full rebuilds on homes near the Manhasset Bay shore where the brick had spalled so severely the chimney was structurally compromised. 11 years, one specialty — we don’t hand off to a different contractor mid-project. From liner spec to final brick, Gary manages the scope.
What happens when you call
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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 Great Neck
We install and work with professional-grade lines including DuraFlex, HeatShield, Gelco, and Olympia Chimney — materials we stock so Great Neck customers aren’t waiting on supplier delays. DuraFlex for the liner body, HeatShield for joint sealing and resurfacing, Gelco for caps and crowns that actually shed water instead of pooling it. We choose these brands because they hold up in coastal environments, not because they’re cheapest. When you’re dealing with salt air and freeze-thaw cycles on a peninsula, material selection isn’t cosmetic — it’s structural.

Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Great Neck Homes
- Oversized clay liners from oil-to-gas conversions. The 1920s–1940s homes throughout Great Neck’s village centers were built for oil burners with large-diameter flues. When homeowners switched to gas, the flue didn’t shrink with the appliance. The result is chronic poor draft, flue gas condensation, and CO backdraft — a hazard Nassau County inspectors flag repeatedly during the area’s frequent high-value home sales.
- Salt-air accelerated mortar and brick failure. Great Neck’s peninsula geography exposes chimneys to salt-laden marine air from Little Neck Bay and Manhasset Bay, which accelerates mortar erosion and brick spalling far more than in inland Nassau towns. We’ve seen 30-year-old chimneys here in worse shape than 60-year-old stacks in North Hills or Manhasset, simply because of bay exposure.
- Multi-flue stacks with capped, unlined active flues. In the older Tudors and Colonials near the village centers, it’s common to find a multi-flue stack where one large-diameter oil-burner flue was capped when the homeowner switched to gas — but the active gas flue is still the original oversized clay liner, cracked and unlined. The capped flue acts as a moisture trap; the active one doesn’t draft properly. Both problems need addressing.
- Freeze-thaw spalling on crown and upper brick. Cold Northeast winters drive heavy fireplace use from October through March, and the peninsula’s high ambient moisture means water penetrates brick and mortar before freezing. The expansion pops off brick faces and crumbles mortar joints, starting at the crown and working down. Annual inspection catches this before rebuild territory.
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Great Neck, NY
Here’s what liner and rebuild work costs in the Great Neck market, based on jobs we’ve completed across the peninsula:
| Service | Typical Range in Great Neck |
|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner installation (single flue, standard height) | $2,800 – $4,200 |
| Flexible liner with offset navigation | $3,200 – $4,800 |
| Liner replacement with resizing (oil-to-gas retrofit) | $3,500 – $5,500 |
| Partial rebuild (crown, upper courses, new liner) | $5,500 – $7,500 |
| Full chimney rebuild to roofline with liner | $8,500 – $14,000+ |
Height drives cost: Great Neck’s taller Gold Coast homes with multi-story flue runs need more liner material and longer labor hours. Accessibility matters too — tight side yards near the village centers, steep pitches on waterfront properties, and staging constraints on narrow streets. We don’t guess. Gary inspects in person, cameras the flue, and delivers a written estimate with line-item breakdown. Estimates are free. Call (844) 660-6590 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Great Neck
Our chimney liner and rebuild work extends to Manhasset (where inland homes see slower salt damage but similar liner aging), North Hills (larger properties with taller flue runs), Great Neck Plaza (dense village housing with tight access), and Little Neck across the Queens line (comparable bay exposure, pre-war housing stock). Same owner-led service, same material specs, same direct accountability.
Serving Great Neck, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Great Neck 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 Great Neck
Great Neck’s peninsula position between Little Neck Bay and Manhasset Bay exposes chimneys to persistent salt-laden marine air that erodes mortar joints and spalls brick far faster than in inland Nassau County towns just a few miles away. Once the original clay liner cracks from this accelerated freeze-thaw damage, stainless steel is the only code-compliant replacement that resists corrosion and sizes properly to modern gas appliances. Call (844) 660-6590 for a flue inspection — estimates are free.
Annually, without exception, especially if you use your fireplace as primary or supplemental heat from October through March. The combination of heavy winter use and year-round salt-air moisture means liner deterioration progresses faster here than in non-waterfront communities. If your home is pre-1960 with original clay, schedule an inspection before the next heating season. Call (844) 660-6590 to book.
Yes, if the root cause is an oversized flue — which it usually is in Great Neck’s oil-to-gas converted Tudors. We size the new stainless liner to your actual appliance’s BTU output, restoring proper draft velocity and eliminating the CO backdraft hazard. If the chimney structure itself is compromised, we’ll tell you before quoting liner-only work. Call (844) 660-6590 for an inspection that diagnoses the real problem.
Visible brick spalling (faces popping off), mortar joints eroded to finger-depth, a cracked or sunken crown that pools water, or the chimney leaning or separating from the house. In Great Neck, these often follow years of undetected salt-air damage. If the liner is cracked and the surrounding masonry is failing, liner replacement alone wastes money — the rebuild addresses both. Call (844) 660-6590 and Gary will camera the flue and assess the exterior.
Yes — Nassau County requires permits for liner replacement and any structural chimney work, with inspections at rough-in and final. We handle permit application and scheduling as part of our project scope, and we document our work to pass inspection the first time. This matters especially in Great Neck’s active real estate market, where unpermitted chimney work kills deals. Call (844) 660-6590 to discuss your project timeline.
Ready to fix your chimney? Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate. Gary Murphy personally inspects every Great Neck job — no dispatched crews, no subcontracted labor, just 11 years of specialized chimney expertise brought directly to your roof.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Great Neck since 2013.