Fast, Reliable Chimney Cap & Crown Across Greenburgh
Chimney cap and crown repair in Greenburgh typically runs $280–$1,850 depending on whether you’re sealing surface cracks or replacing a full crown and installing a multi-flue cap system. Most Greenburgh appointments are scheduled within 48 hours, and Gary Murphy personally assesses every chimney before recommending repair or replacement. If you’re seeing water stains on the ceiling near your fireplace, smelling smoke when the boiler runs, or finding brick fragments in your yard after a freeze, your crown or cap is likely compromised. Call us at (844) 660-6590 for a free, no-obligation estimate.

We’ve worked on chimneys from the Hudson-facing streets of Irvington to the inland split-levels of Hartsdale and Edgemont. Greenburgh’s housing stock is unlike anywhere else in Westchester — layered with late-Victorian homes, 1920s Tudors, post-war colonials, and mid-century splits, most with original multi-flue masonry chimneys now 60 to 100 years old. Our Chimney Cap & Crown team knows the specific failure patterns these chimneys develop, and we don’t dispatch crews — Gary Murphy leads every job himself.
Why Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers Is Greenburgh’s Preferred Chimney Cap & Crown Company
Over 1,100 homeowners have trusted us with their chimneys, and our 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars reflect the kind of consistent, hands-on work that builds reputation across Westchester County. Greenburgh customers specifically mention the difference it makes when the owner — not a subcontractor — is the one on the ladder inspecting their flue.
We’re typically on-site in Greenburgh within one to two business days, sometimes same-day for active water intrusion. That matters here in a way it doesn’t in newer suburbs. Greenburgh’s river-valley villages like Irvington and Dobbs Ferry sit in a microclimate where Hudson moisture and 30-plus annual freeze-thaw cycles destroy chimney crowns faster than inland towns. You want someone who recognizes spalling brick and crown hairline cracks before they become structural failures, not a generalist learning on your chimney.
11 years, one specialty. Gary leads every job himself. From your first sweep to a full liner rebuild, you’re working with the same person start to finish.
Our Chimney Cap & Crown Services in Greenburgh
Multi-Flue Cap Installation
Greenburgh’s older housing stock generates more multi-flue cap work than almost anywhere we serve. In the Tudors of Irvington and the colonials of Dobbs Ferry, it’s routine to find a three-flue chimney where one flue serves a gas boiler, one serves a working fireplace, and the third — originally the oil-burner or coal-furnace flue — was abandoned uncapped decades ago. That abandoned flue is almost always packed with nesting debris, old creosote, and the source of the mysterious smoke smell the homeowner can’t trace. We replaced a cracked crown and installed a custom multi-flue DuraFlex cap on a three-flue chimney in the Tudors of Irvington. The homeowner’s unexplained smoke smell traced to an abandoned oil-burner flue packed with nesting debris and old creosote; we sealed that flue and capped all three with a Copperfield stainless multi-flue cover. Multi-flue caps in Greenburgh typically run $450–$890 installed, depending on flue count and whether chase repairs are needed.
Crown Repair
Crown repair is our most frequent call in Greenburgh, and for specific reasons. Greenburgh sits in the Hudson River valley corridor, where river moisture and Westchester County’s freeze-thaw cycles spall brick faces and blow out mortar joints in exposed chimney stacks faster than in towns farther inland. Northeast wind events funnel up the valley and drive rain directly into deteriorated crowns, meaning water intrusion complaints spike noticeably after nor’easters even on chimneys that appear sound from the ground. We use HeatShield crown coating for surface cracks and partial deterioration, or pour new concrete crowns when the structural integrity is gone. Crown repair in Greenburgh generally costs $280–$650 for coating and sealing, $780–$1,350 for full crown replacement.
Custom Cap Fabrication
Some Greenburgh chimneys — particularly the ornate late-Victorian stacks in the river villages and non-standard flue configurations in Edgemont’s custom builds — need more than an off-the-shelf cap. We measure, fabricate, and install custom caps in copper, stainless steel, and galvanized steel through our relationships with Gelco and Olympia Chimney. A custom copper cap for an Edgemont colonial typically runs $680–$1,850 depending on chase dimensions and finish details. The material choice matters: copper develops a protective patina that handles Greenburgh’s wet freeze-thaw cycling better than painted steel over decades.
Cap Replacement
Standard single-flue cap replacement is straightforward until it isn’t. In Hartsdale’s 1940s–60s split-levels and colonials, we frequently find that the original cap was never properly sized, or that a big-box store replacement has blown off in a valley wind event. We stock Gelco and Famco caps in common sizes for fast turnaround, but we always verify flue dimensions and draft requirements before installing. Single-flue cap replacement in Greenburgh runs $180–$340 installed.
Crown Coating
For crowns with surface cracking but solid structural base, we apply HeatShield crown sealant — a specialized refractory coating that fills hairline cracks and restores waterproofing without full replacement. This is often the right call for Greenburgh chimneys where the crown is 10–15 years old and showing early weathering but hasn’t yet spalled or separated from the brick. Crown coating runs $280–$450 and carries a 10-year warranty when applied to structurally sound substrates.

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 Greenburgh
We don’t use whatever’s cheapest. For cap and crown work in Greenburgh, we source through Gelco and Olympia Chimney for standard and custom caps, and we apply HeatShield products for crown coating and repair. These are industry-standard professional lines, not hardware-store inventory. Because we stock common Gelco and Famco cap sizes locally, most Greenburgh replacements don’t involve a two-week order delay. When a nor’easter’s blown your cap into the neighbor’s yard and water’s coming down the flue, that local parts availability matters.
Common Chimney Cap & Crown Problems We See in Greenburgh Homes
- Freeze-thaw destruction of exposed brick and mortar. Greenburgh’s 30-plus annual freeze-thaw cycles — worse in the Hudson corridor than inland Westchester — force water into microscopic crown cracks, expand it overnight, and progressively shatter the concrete. We see this accelerate dramatically on chimneys above the roofline with no overhang protection.
- Nor’easter-driven rain intrusion through deteriorated crowns. Northeast wind events funnel up the Hudson valley and drive rain horizontally into chimney crowns that looked fine from the ground. Homeowners in Dobbs Ferry and Irvington call us after every major storm with water stains they can’t explain — the crown had micro-cracks invisible from below.
- Abandoned uncapped flues from coal and oil conversions. In Greenburgh’s pre-1950 housing, the original fuel-burner flue was often left open inside the chase when the home converted to gas. That flue becomes a debris trap, a nest site, and a channel for smoke and CO migration between flues. The smell is usually what finally prompts the call.
- Mismatched flue sizing from appliance conversions. Pre-1950 masonry chimneys originally built for coal or oil were never properly relined after gas conversions in the 1970s and 80s, leaving oversized unlined flues where low-temperature gas exhaust condenses. This corrosive condensation attacks the crown from inside and out, a pattern rare in newer inland suburbs with properly sized liner systems.
Pricing for Chimney Cap & Crown in Greenburgh, NY
| Service | Typical Range in Greenburgh |
|---|---|
| Single-flue cap replacement | $180–$340 |
| Multi-flue cap installation | $450–$890 |
| Custom cap (copper/stainless) | $680–$1,850 |
| Crown coating / sealing | $280–$450 |
| Partial crown repair | $450–$780 |
| Full crown replacement | $780–$1,350 |
| Crown + multi-flue cap package | $1,150–$1,850 |
What moves you within these ranges? Flue count and chase dimensions are the biggest factors — a three-flue chimney in an Irvington Tudor takes more material and labor than a single flue on a Hartsdale split-level. Accessibility matters too: steep roofs, tight setbacks between homes, and chimney height above the roofline all add time. The condition of the existing crown determines whether coating is viable or full replacement is necessary — we don’t know until we’re on the roof with a camera.
Every estimate is free. Call (844) 660-6590 and Gary will walk you through what he’s seeing, what your options are, and what each costs before any work begins.
We Also Serve Cities Near Greenburgh
We regularly work in Irvington, Dobbs Ferry, Hartsdale, and Hastings-on-Hudson — the same river-valley conditions, the same vintage housing stock, the same chimney failure patterns. If you’re in a neighboring village and your chimney’s showing water damage, smoke smells, or missing caps, the same response times and pricing apply. Mention your village when you call and we’ll confirm scheduling.
Serving Greenburgh, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Greenburgh 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 Cap & Crown in Greenburgh
Yes, almost certainly — and for reasons beyond just keeping rain out. In Greenburgh’s pre-1950 housing, that third flue was likely abandoned uncapped when the home converted from oil to gas, and it’s almost always harboring nesting debris and old creosote that’s causing the smoke smell you can’t trace. A multi-flue cap seals all flues simultaneously, prevents animal entry, and stops cross-flue contamination. We replaced a cracked crown and installed a custom multi-flue DuraFlex cap on a three-flue chimney in the Tudors of Irvington. The homeowner’s unexplained smoke smell traced to an abandoned oil-burner flue packed with nesting debris and old creosote; we sealed that flue and capped all three with a Copperfield stainless multi-flue cover. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free assessment — we’ll camera-inspect each flue and show you what’s actually in there.
Horizontal wind-driven rain from northeast storms funnels up the Hudson valley and forces water directly into crown cracks and deteriorated mortar joints that appeared sound from the ground. Dobbs Ferry’s river-facing position makes this worse than inland locations — your chimney gets the full force of storms that hit at an angle, not just rain falling vertically. The crown likely has hairline cracks or slight separation from the brick that only becomes a leak under pressure. Crown coating can seal early-stage damage; full replacement is needed if the concrete is spalling or separated. Call (844) 660-6590 and we’ll determine which category you’re in — estimates are free.
Five years is too soon for a properly installed concrete crown to fail, so either the original mix was wrong, the pour was too thin, or — very common in Greenburgh — the flue gases are condensing inside an oversized unlined flue and attacking the crown from beneath. In Greenburgh’s river-valley villages, pre-1950 masonry chimneys originally built for coal or oil were never relined after gas conversions, leaving oversized unlined flues that condense corrosive gas exhaust and accelerate tile deterioration—a pattern rare in newer inland suburbs. That internal condensation seeps into the crown base and destroys it from both sides. We evaluate whether the crown itself was defective or whether you need liner work to protect the new crown. Call (844) 660-6590 for a root-cause inspection.
For an Edgemont colonial with a visible chimney above the roofline, yes — copper develops a protective patina that outlasts galvanized steel by decades, and it handles Greenburgh’s wet freeze-thaw cycling without the rust-through that ruins painted caps in 7–10 years. The upfront cost runs $680–$1,850 versus $180–$340 for standard galvanized, but spread over 30+ years versus two replacements, the math shifts. Aesthetically, copper also suits the traditional architecture common in Edgemont’s established neighborhoods. We fabricate through Olympia Chimney to your chase dimensions. Call (844) 660-6590 to compare options for your specific flue configuration.
Yes — an uncapped flue is an open hole in your roof that admits rain, snow, squirrels, raccoons, and nesting birds. In Hartsdale’s 1940s–60s splits, we frequently find that the “minor” water damage in the firebox actually traces to years of uncontrolled rain entry that has rusted the damper, degraded the smoke shelf, and saturated the surrounding framing. A basic single-flue cap at $180–$340 prevents thousands in downstream damage. Even if you never use your fireplace, the flue serves as part of your home’s ventilation system and needs protection. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate — we’ll confirm your flue size and have a Gelco or Famco cap installed within days.
Ready to protect your chimney? Call Gary Murphy at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers: (844) 660-6590. Free estimates, honest pricing, and the owner on every job.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Greenburgh and Westchester County since 2013.