Fast, Reliable Chimney Cap & Crown Across Sammamish
Chimney cap replacement in Sammamish typically runs $340–$680 for standard prefab units and $520–$1,150 for custom stainless caps, with most jobs completed same-day once we’re on-site. Crown coating for masonry chimneys in the 98074 and 98075 zip codes usually falls between $280–$450, and we carry the materials to handle both on a single visit. Call (866) 541-8697 for a free estimate—James Wilson or a member of our Chimney Cap & Crown team will be the one at your door, not a subcontractor.

We’ve been driving out to Sammamish since before the 520 expansion made it faster, and we’ve watched this plateau community transform from fir forest to one of King County’s most concentrated pockets of 1990s-era prefab fireplaces. That matters. The homes off SE 8th Street, Inglewood Hill Road, and the East Lake Sammamish corridor weren’t built with masonry chimneys—they were built with factory-built metal chase systems that are now hitting or exceeding their 20-to-25-year design lifespan. The persistent fog and moisture that sits on the Sammamish Plateau, sometimes two hundred feet above the Bellevue lowlands, doesn’t care about design lifespan. It rusts through galvanized chase covers, delaminates firestop spacers, and cracks refractory panels while everything still looks fine from the living room sofa.
When we get a call from a Sammamish homeowner, we know what we’re likely walking into. We’ve seen it before. Seventeen years of chimney-only work means we don’t waste time figuring out whether you’ve got a Heatilator BCDV or a Heat & Glo 6000—we know the chase dimensions, the cap specs, and whether your original galvanized cover has two years left or two weeks.
Why Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington Is Sammamish’s Preferred Chimney Cap & Crown Company
Our reputation in Sammamish wasn’t built on marketing. It was built on showing up, diagnosing correctly, and not upselling a full chase rebuild when a properly fitted custom cap will solve the problem. The 1,006 verified reviews that average 4.8 stars reflect sustained, repeated trust—not a lucky streak from a handful of jobs. Many of those reviews come from repeat customers in Klahanie, Trossachs, and the neighborhoods along West Lake Sammamish Parkway who called us once for a cap issue and now schedule annual sweeps because they know who answers the phone.
Response time to Sammamish is typically same-day or next-day during peak season, and we don’t charge a premium for the plateau drive. James Wilson serves as lead technician on jobs, which means the person quoting your cap replacement is the same person who’s crawled inside hundreds of prefab chases and knows the difference between cosmetic surface rust and structural failure that’ll cost you four figures down the road. That’s not a management structure—it’s accountability.
We also understand the local housing stock in a way that matters for your wallet. Sammamish’s planned-development tract homes and custom builds from the 1990s through the 2010s share fireplace models across entire subdivisions. When we replace a cap on one Heatilator unit in a neighborhood, we’re often back the next month for the identical failure next door. That pattern recognition saves you money because we’re not guessing at parts or ordering wrong specs.
Our Chimney Cap & Crown Services in Sammamish
Cap Installation
New cap installations in Sammamish are almost always for prefab chase systems that never had a proper cover, or for homeowners upgrading from the thin original equipment to something that’ll survive the plateau’s wet winters. We measure your chase precisely—factory-built units vary by manufacturer and year—and install either a standard galvanized replacement or a heavy-gauge stainless or copper cap depending on your timeline and budget. For homes in the 98074 zip code near Pine Lake or Beaver Lake, where tree debris is also a factor, we often recommend models with integrated mesh screening to keep leaves and needles from compounding moisture problems.
Cap Replacement
This is our most frequent call in Sammamish, and for good reason. The galvanized chase covers installed by 1990s tract builders were never meant to last thirty years. We’ve replaced caps on identical homes in the same week because the original units all hit failure at once—rust-through at the seams, pooling water inside the chase, delaminated firestop spacers that you can’t see from the ground. In a home off Inglewood Hill Road, we found a Heatilator prefab chase with a rusted-through galvanized cap—the previous owner had caulked the seams, hiding pooling water that had delaminated the firestop spacers. We replaced the cap with a heavy-gauge Copperfield custom unit and sealed the entire chase top, avoiding a full chase replacement that would have cost four times as much. That’s the difference between a technician who recognizes the pattern and one who just sells you what you ask for.
Crown Repair
True masonry crowns are rare in Sammamish’s prefab-heavy housing stock, but they do exist on custom builds from the 2000s and on some fireplace additions. When we find crown cracks or spalling—often from freeze-thaw cycles accelerated by the plateau’s temperature swings between foggy mornings and clear afternoons—we repair with CrownCoat or similar professional-grade compounds rather than cheap mortar patches that’ll fail in eighteen months. We don’t do cosmetic fixes. If the crown damage has reached the flue tile or compromised the chimney’s structural integrity, we’ll tell you straight and quote the real fix.
Crown Coating
For Sammamish masonry crowns that are structurally sound but showing early hairline cracking or surface porosity, crown coating is preventive medicine that pays for itself. We use flexible, waterproof coatings designed to expand and contract with temperature swings—critical on the Sammamish Plateau where fog can drop surface temperatures twenty degrees below nearby Bellevue in the same hour. A typical crown coating runs $280–$450 and adds years of life before a full rebuild becomes necessary. We recommend it for any masonry crown over fifteen years old that hasn’t been previously sealed.
Custom Cap Fabrication
Standard replacement caps don’t always fit the odd chase dimensions of 1990s prefab systems, especially on homes where builders modified stock plans or where previous owners installed aftermarket components. We fabricate and install custom stainless caps measured to your exact chase specs, with proper drainage channels that the original one-piece caps lacked. For Sammamish homeowners planning to stay in their homes long-term, a custom cap is often the smartest money spent on chimney protection—it’s the difference between replacing a $600 cap now or a $3,000+ chase rebuild in five years when corrosion has compromised the housing.

Multi-Flue Cap Systems
Some larger Sammamish homes, particularly custom builds in the Plateau area and near Lake Sammamish, have multiple flues sharing a single chase or chimney structure. We install multi-flue caps that protect all terminals with a single properly sloped cover, eliminating the gaps and seams where water enters. These systems require precise measurement and proper clearance to all flue pipes—measurement we verify in person, not from satellite photos.
What happens when you call
- 1
A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
- 2
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 Sammamish
We install and repair using Copperfield, Olympia Chimney, and Famco components—brands we’ve specified for years because they hold up to the Sammamish climate. Copperfield’s heavy-gauge stainless chase covers are our go-to for custom prefab replacements; we’ve tracked their performance through enough wet winters to know they’ll outlast the original galvanized equipment by decades. Olympia Chimney supplies multi-flue and standard cap systems that fit the common prefab dimensions we see in 1990s tract homes. For repairs requiring specialty flashing or termination components, Famco’s catalog covers the less common chase configurations without the delay of custom fabrication. We stock the most frequently needed sizes and can typically source same-week delivery for anything unusual, which means you’re not waiting two weeks for a cap while water continues degrading your chase interior.
Common Chimney Cap & Crown Problems We See in Sammamish Homes
- Moisture trapped by persistent plateau fog rusts through galvanized chase covers before symptoms appear inside. The Sammamish Plateau’s elevation traps fog and low clouds that don’t clear until midday in fall and winter. That sustained moisture intrusion attacks galvanized steel from the underside first, meaning your cap can look intact from the ground while the interior surface is already perforated. We’ve pulled off caps that appeared fine from twenty feet away but had rust holes you could poke a finger through.
- Visual checks from the ground miss advanced corrosion. Homeowners in neighborhoods like Trossachs and Klahanie often tell us their cap “looked okay last time they checked.” Prefab chase corrosion starts at the interior seams and the firestop spacer contact points—areas invisible without a ladder and a flashlight. By the time you see staining on your ceiling or smell mustiness around the fireplace, the damage has typically spread to the chase housing itself.
- Identical 20-year-old Heat & Glo units show synchronized failures—cracked refractory panels and seam-weld rust—requiring group retrofits rather than spot repairs. In the subdivisions off SE 8th Street and Inglewood Hill Road, homes built by the same handful of 1990s tract builders used identical prefab fireplace models. We’re now seeing a wave of same-age, same-brand units all failing simultaneously. If your neighbor’s cap just got replaced and you’ve got the same house plan, yours is likely in the same condition regardless of appearances.
- Original one-piece caps on 1990s prefab systems lack drainage channels, allowing water to pool around the flue pipe and corrode the firestop spacer, creating a hidden fire hazard. Those flat original caps were designed to shed water quickly in theory. In practice, pine needles, moss, and the slow drip of plateau fog create standing water that finds every seam. The firestop spacer—meant to prevent chimney fires from reaching the chase walls—corrodes and delaminates, compromising a critical safety component you can’t inspect without disassembly.
Pricing for Chimney Cap & Crown in Sammamish, WA
Here’s what we’ve actually charged for cap and crown work in Sammamish over the past two years. These are real ranges, not teaser rates that balloon once we’re on-site:
| Service | Typical Range in Sammamish |
|---|---|
| Standard prefab cap replacement (galvanized) | $340–$520 |
| Stainless steel cap replacement | $480–$750 |
| Custom stainless or copper cap (fabricated) | $520–$1,150 |
| Multi-flue cap system | $680–$1,400 |
| Crown coating (preventive) | $280–$450 |
| Crown repair (crack filling, minor rebuild) | $450–$850 |
What moves you within these ranges? Chase height and roof access affect labor time. Custom caps require precise field measurement and fabrication. If we discover firestop spacer damage or chase housing corrosion during cap replacement, we’ll show you before doing anything beyond the quoted scope. We don’t believe in “while we’re here” surprises. Call (866) 541-8697 for an exact quote—estimates are free, and James Wilson or a senior technician will be the one assessing your chase in person.
We Also Serve Cities Near Sammamish
Our service area covers the full City of Sammamish including the Union Hill-Novelty Hill area to the north, West Lake Sammamish along the shoreline communities, and the Klahanie planned community to the south. Same response standards, same technician-led service model, same familiarity with the prefab-heavy housing stock that defines this entire plateau region.
Serving Sammamish, WA — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Sammamish 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 Sammamish
Prefab chase corrosion starts on the interior surface of galvanized caps, hidden from ground view, and the Sammamish Plateau’s persistent fog accelerates this rust-through before any interior symptoms appear. The original caps installed in 1990s tract homes were also flat designs without drainage channels, so water pools and attacks seams from underneath. Call (866) 541-8697 for a free inspection—estimates are free, and we’ll show you exactly what your cap looks like from above.
Yes, if your cap is original galvanized equipment, it’s at or beyond its design lifespan and likely corroding internally regardless of exterior appearance. In Sammamish subdivisions with identical Heatilator units, we’re seeing synchronized failures across homes built the same year—the same seam-weld rust, the same firestop spacer delamination. A preventive stainless replacement now typically costs one-third to one-half what a full chase rebuild runs after corrosion compromises the housing.
For most Sammamish prefab systems with standard chase dimensions, a quality stainless replacement cap from our stocked inventory is sufficient and more economical. Custom caps become the better value when your chase has non-standard dimensions, modified construction, or when you’re planning long-term ownership and want the drainage channels and heavier gauge that prevent the exact failure mode your original cap suffered. James Wilson will measure your chase and recommend based on what he finds, not what costs more.
If your masonry crown is over fifteen years old and has never been sealed, crown coating is preventive maintenance that we recommend regardless of visible cracking, because surface porosity allows moisture intrusion that freeze-thaw cycles will eventually crack open. On the Sammamish Plateau, where temperature swings between foggy mornings and clear afternoons are sharper than in nearby lowland communities, that cycle happens more frequently and aggressively. Coating a sound crown now runs $280–$450; rebuilding a failed crown later typically starts at $1,200.
You generally can’t without removing the cap or inspecting from a ladder, which is why we don’t recommend homeowner self-diagnosis for this component. Warning signs that suggest internal corrosion include musty odors around the fireplace, rust stains on the chase exterior below the cap, or any visible sagging or separation at the cap perimeter. If your home is in a 1990s Sammamish subdivision with original equipment, the statistical probability of internal corrosion is high enough that a professional inspection is warranted regardless of visible symptoms. Call (866) 541-8697 to schedule—estimates are free.
Ready to protect your Sammamish home’s chimney from the plateau’s punishing moisture? Call (866) 541-8697 today for a free estimate. James Wilson or a senior technician from our Chimney Cap & Crown team will inspect your chase, explain what we’re seeing in plain language, and quote only the work your system actually needs. No subcontractor at your door. No pressure to upgrade beyond what’s justified. Just seventeen years of chimney-specific expertise applied to the exact prefab systems that dominate Sammamish’s neighborhoods.
Written by James Wilson, Owner at Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington, serving Sammamish and the Seattle area since 2007.