The flue is the working heart of a chimney — the channel that carries heat and combustion gases safely up and out, keeping them away from the structure of your home. When it is damaged, that protection fails, and a damaged flue is not a cosmetic problem but a safety one. Cracks, blockages and deteriorated liners each compromise the flue in their own way, and each has its own repair.
This guide covers the common flue problems, the repair options from a targeted fix to a full reline, the point at which a flue is unsafe to use at all, and what repairs involve and cost in Melbourne. The constant theme is that a flue fault is a reason to stop and assess, not to keep burning and hope. A camera inspection, as described in Level 2 chimney inspection, is what reveals the true extent of any flue damage.
4 faultsCracks, blockages, liner wear, failed joints
$1,500–$4,000Typical reline if the liner has failed
SafetyA breached flue means stop using it
Common Flue Problems
Most flue repairs address one of four problems, and a camera inspection identifies which you are dealing with.
Cracks. The flue endures constant stress from heating and cooling, and cracks develop from that thermal cycling, from movement in the structure, or from the intense heat of a chimney fire. A crack breaches the flue’s ability to contain heat and gases. Blockages. Heavy creosote, fallen debris, animal nests or collapsed masonry can obstruct the flue, stopping it drawing and creating both a smoke and a fire risk. Deteriorated liner. Liners age and break down over time, attacked by the acidic by-products of combustion, eventually cracking or crumbling.
Failed joints. Where a flue is made up of sections, the joints between them can open up over time, creating gaps that let gases escape. Each of these defeats the flue’s core job of safely containing the fire’s heat and exhaust, and each is a legitimate reason for repair. The role and lifespan of the liner that several of these problems affect is covered in chimney liners, types and lifespan.
Flue Repair Options
The right repair depends on the fault and its extent. The main options run from the simple to the comprehensive.
MinorBlockage removal and crack sealing
A blockage can be cleared by professional sweeping and removal. A minor, localised crack can sometimes be sealed or patched, restoring the flue’s integrity without replacing the whole liner. These are the lower-cost repairs, appropriate when the damage is contained.
MajorRelining
When the liner is cracked along its length, badly deteriorated, missing, or damaged by a chimney fire, relining is the remedy — a new correctly sized stainless steel liner run down the chimney to give a continuous, sound inner surface. The full detail is in chimney relining: when and what it costs.
StructuralJoint and masonry repair
Failed joints between flue sections and damaged surrounding masonry — crown, cap and brickwork — are repaired as part of restoring a sound flue, often alongside the flue work itself.
The distinction between a repair and a reline matters: a contained fault may be fixed in place, while widespread liner failure calls for a full reline. A camera inspection is what tells the two apart, which is why any flue repair should start with one rather than a guess.
When a Flue Is Unsafe to Use
Some flue faults mean the fireplace should not be used at all until it is repaired. The clearest case is a cracked or breached flue. The flue’s whole purpose is to contain heat and gases; a crack lets heat reach combustible timber framing, creating a fire risk, and lets carbon monoxide — an odourless, colourless, potentially fatal gas — seep into the living space. A breached flue creates both of the two most serious chimney hazards at once.
A significant blockage is the other clear case. A flue that cannot draw properly because it is obstructed will push smoke and combustion gases back into the room, and the obstruction itself — particularly a creosote or nest blockage — is a fire hazard. Using a blocked flue is both immediately unpleasant and genuinely dangerous.
Stop Using a Damaged FlueIf an inspection finds the flue is cracked, breached or significantly blocked, stop using the fireplace until it has been repaired and confirmed safe. The risks — a structural fire from heat reaching framing, or carbon monoxide entering the home — are exactly the outcomes the flue exists to prevent. A damaged flue is not a problem to defer to next season; it is a reason to put the fireplace out of use until it is fixed.
Repair Costs and Process
Flue repair costs vary widely with the type and extent of the problem. A minor repair — clearing a blockage or sealing a small, localised defect — sits at the lower end. A full reline with a stainless steel liner typically runs around $1,500 to $4,000, depending on the chimney’s height, access and the liner required, and crown, cap or masonry repairs that often accompany flue work add to the total. Because the right repair depends entirely on what the camera inspection reveals, an accurate price needs an on-site assessment — flue repair sits within the broader picture of common chimney repairs and costs.
The process is logical: a camera inspection first establishes the fault and its extent, the appropriate repair is recommended and quoted, the work is carried out by qualified professionals, and a follow-up confirms the flue is sound and safe to use again. The order matters — diagnosis before repair — because a flue that looks like it needs a simple seal may, on inspection, turn out to need relining, or vice versa.
Melbourne TipBook flue repairs for late summer or autumn, February to April. Getting the work done before the heating season means the fireplace is sound and ready for the first cold Melbourne nights, and installers are far less stretched than in the winter rush — rather than discovering a flue fault in June and being without a fire while you wait for a repair slot.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most common chimney flue problems?
The most common flue problems are cracks, blockages, deteriorated liners and failed joints. Cracks develop from the stress of repeated heating and cooling, movement in the structure, or the intense heat of a chimney fire, and they let heat and gases reach the surrounding building. Blockages come from heavy creosote, debris, animal nests or collapsed masonry, and they stop the flue drawing and create a fire risk. Liners deteriorate with age and acidic flue gases, eventually cracking or breaking down. Joints between flue sections can open up over time. Any of these compromises the flue’s core job of safely containing heat and combustion gases, which is why a damaged flue should be inspected and repaired rather than ignored.
How is a cracked chimney flue repaired?
How a cracked flue is repaired depends on the extent and location of the damage. Minor, localised cracking can sometimes be repaired by sealing or patching the affected area, restoring the flue’s integrity without replacing the whole liner. More extensive cracking, a liner that has deteriorated along its length, or damage from a chimney fire usually calls for relining – running a new correctly sized stainless steel liner down the chimney to give the flue a continuous, sound inner surface. A camera inspection is what determines which approach is appropriate, because it shows the full extent of the cracking. The right repair is the one that restores a safe, intact flue, whether that is a targeted repair or a full reline.
Can I still use my fireplace with a cracked flue?
No – a cracked or breached flue should not be used until it is repaired. The flue’s essential job is to contain the heat and combustion gases of the fire and keep them away from the structure of your home. A crack defeats that: it can let heat reach combustible timber framing, creating a fire risk, and it can let carbon monoxide seep into the living space, which is potentially fatal. These are the two most serious chimney hazards, and a cracked flue creates both. If an inspection finds the flue is cracked or breached, stop using the fireplace until it has been repaired or relined and confirmed safe. It is not a problem to leave until next season.
How much does chimney flue repair cost in Melbourne?
The cost of flue repair in Melbourne varies widely with the type and extent of the problem. A minor, localised repair such as removing a blockage or sealing a small defect is at the lower end, while a full reline with a stainless steel liner typically runs around $1,500 to $4,000 depending on the chimney’s height, access and the liner required. Crown, cap and masonry repairs that often accompany flue work add to the total. Because the right repair depends entirely on what a camera inspection reveals, an accurate price requires an on-site assessment. The key point is that flue repair is a safety issue – the cost of doing it properly is small against the risk of using a damaged flue.
What is the difference between flue repair and relining?
Flue repair is the broad term for fixing any flue problem, while relining is one specific repair method. Repair can mean clearing a blockage, sealing or patching a localised crack, or fixing a failed joint – addressing a particular fault without necessarily replacing the entire liner. Relining means installing a complete new liner, usually flexible stainless steel, down the full length of the chimney to give the flue an entirely new inner surface, and it is the remedy when the existing liner is cracked along its length, badly deteriorated, missing, or damaged by a chimney fire. In practice a camera inspection determines which is needed: a minor, contained fault may be repaired, while widespread liner failure calls for relining.
Damaged Flue? Start With a Camera Inspection
We diagnose flue faults and quote the right repair — from blockage removal to full relining. Melbourne-wide.