Chimney Listings

The National Chimney Authority listings index covers chimney service professionals operating across the United States, organized by geography, service category, and qualification type. Entries span the full range of the chimney services sector — from inspection and sweeping to liner installation, masonry repair, and prefabricated system replacement. The directory exists to map the professional landscape of this trades sector, not to endorse individual contractors, and readers should understand the structural basis of each entry before relying on it for service decisions. For a full account of what this resource is designed to do, see the Chimney Directory Purpose and Scope page.


Geographic distribution

Chimney service professionals are distributed unevenly across the United States, with the highest concentrations in states where wood-burning and solid-fuel heating systems remain prevalent — primarily the Northeast, upper Midwest, and Pacific Northwest. States including Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Michigan, and Minnesota account for a disproportionate share of chimney service activity relative to population, driven by housing stock age and heating climate. The Southeast and Southwest carry lower base density of chimney professionals, though demand concentrations appear in mountain communities and rural areas where open fireplaces and wood stoves are standard.

The listings in this directory are organized by state, then by metropolitan area or county, using standard US Census Bureau geographic boundaries. Rural listings are indexed by county rather than city. Professionals who operate across multiple counties or across state lines are listed in each relevant geographic node, not consolidated under a single primary entry. This reflects actual service-area coverage rather than business registration location, which can differ significantly in this trades sector.


How to read an entry

Each listing entry follows a standardized structure. The fields present in a complete entry are:

  1. Business name — the registered trade name under which the professional or company operates
  2. Primary service category — drawn from a fixed taxonomy: inspection, sweeping, liner systems, masonry, prefabricated/factory-built systems, or multi-category
  3. Geographic service area — listed as named counties or metro areas, not radius estimates
  4. Credential notation — indicates whether the professional holds a Chimney Safety Institute of America (CSIA) Certified Chimney Sweep credential, a National Fireplace Institute (NFI) certification, or a state-issued contractor license where applicable
  5. Inspection level notation — where relevant, entries note alignment with the 3-level inspection framework defined by the National Fire Protection Association's NFPA 211, the governing standard for chimney inspection classification in the United States
  6. Listing verification date — the most recent date at which the entry data was confirmed against source records

Not all entries carry a full credential notation. Incomplete entries reflect cases where credential data could not be confirmed at time of indexing, not a determination that the professional lacks credentials. The distinction between confirmed and unconfirmed status is addressed in the Verification Status section below.


What listings include and exclude

Listings include sole proprietors, small firms, and regional chimney service companies that operate within the United States and whose primary or significant secondary trade involves chimney-related services as defined by NFPA 211 and applicable state contractor licensing categories.

The directory excludes:

The How to Use This Chimney Resource page provides additional guidance on navigating service categories and understanding which entry type corresponds to a given service need.

Listings do not constitute a warranty, referral, or recommendation. The directory captures sector structure — not performance history, complaint records, insurance status, or bond levels. Permitting requirements for chimney work vary by jurisdiction; in most states, structural masonry repair and liner replacement trigger a building permit requirement enforced by the local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ). Whether a listed professional pulls permits as standard practice is not captured in directory entries.


Verification status

Entries in this directory carry one of 3 verification states:

The CSIA maintains a publicly searchable certified sweep registry at csia.org, which serves as the primary credential confirmation source for sweep-category entries. NFI certification status is verifiable through the National Fireplace Institute's public lookup tool. State contractor license status is checked against individual state licensing board databases, which are publicly accessible but vary significantly in update frequency — some states update in near real-time while others operate on 30- to 90-day publishing cycles.

Verification status is a snapshot, not a continuous monitor. A credential confirmed at the time of last review may have lapsed, been suspended, or been upgraded since that date. Readers requiring current credential confirmation for a specific professional should query the relevant registry directly. The Chimney Listings page is updated on a rolling basis as new verifications are completed or existing records are flagged for review.

Explore This Site

Regulations & Safety Regulatory References
Topics (45)
Tools & Calculators Board Footage Calculator