Fast, Reliable Chimney Liner & Rebuild Across Raleigh Hills
Chimney liner replacement in Raleigh Hills typically runs $2,800–$5,500 for stainless steel relining, while partial rebuilds on 1960s-era masonry chimneys range from $4,200–$8,500 depending on how far the moisture damage has traveled below the roofline. Most liner and rebuild jobs in the 97225 area are completed in two to three days once materials are staged. Call (866) 541-8697 for a free estimate — we’ll inspect your flue, crown, and brickwork and give you an exact quote before any work begins.

We’ve been climbing Raleigh Hills roofs since the late 2000s, and there’s a pattern we see again and again: the 1950s-to-1970s ranch and split-level homes that dominate this neighborhood are hitting a critical age where original clay tile flue liners and mortar joints simply give out after five decades of Pacific Northwest wet cycling. The western slope position under that dense Douglas fir canopy — with 38 to 45 inches of orographic rainfall annually — creates conditions we don’t see in drier east-side suburbs. That’s why our Chimney Liner & Rebuild team carries DuraFlex stainless liners, Gelco crown coatings, and Famco dampers specifically sized for these vintage masonry systems. When you’re smelling downdraft on a still winter morning or finding brick fragments in your firebox, you need someone who understands Raleigh Hills chimneys, not a generalist with a brush and a vacuum.
Why Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington Is Raleigh Hills’s Preferred Chimney Liner & Rebuild Company
Our reputation in Raleigh Hills was built one 1960s chimney at a time. James Wilson, our owner and lead technician, has personally diagnosed liner failures on homes from SW Scholls Ferry Road to the neighborhoods bordering the Raleigh Hills Veterinary Clinic — and homeowners here have left us enough verified reviews to push our total past 1,006 at a 4.8-star average. That’s not a handful of cherry-picked testimonials; it’s sustained, repeated trust from people who’ve had us back for annual sweeps after we rebuilt their chimneys.
Response time matters when you’ve got water dripping down the flue or a liner crack venting smoke into the wall cavity. From our Seattle base, we’re typically scheduling Raleigh Hills inspections within 48 hours and completing liner replacements or partial rebuilds within a week of quote approval. We know which permits Washington County requires for chimney work on unincorporated properties, and we know the local inspectors — no delays from paperwork surprises.
What separates us from the handyman with a ladder is 17 years of chimney-only diagnostic depth. We’ve seen the exact failure pattern your chimney is showing. We know when a liner replacement will solve it, when the crown needs rebuilding too, and when the mortar joints are so far gone that a partial rebuild is the only safe path. That pattern recognition saves Raleigh Hills homeowners from paying twice for the wrong fix.
Our Chimney Liner & Rebuild Services in Raleigh Hills
Stainless Steel Liner Installation
For most Raleigh Hills homes with deteriorated clay tile liners, we install DuraFlex 316Ti stainless steel liners — the same alloy specified for marine and coastal corrosion resistance, which matters when your chimney crown is collecting 45 inches of hillside rain annually. A typical stainless liner installation in 97225 runs $2,800–$4,200 for a standard fireplace flue, including the connector, top plate, and new cap. We size the liner to the appliance — critical in these 1960s fireplaces where original clay liners were often oversized for modern inserts, causing creosote condensation and poor draft.
Flexible Liner Systems
Some Raleigh Hills chimneys have offset flues or slight bends from settling over 50-plus years. For these, we use flexible stainless liners that navigate the irregular path without breaking the flue’s integrity. Flexible installations run $3,200–$4,800 in this market, slightly more than rigid systems but essential when the chimney structure can’t be altered. We’ve installed flexible DuraFlex liners in split-level homes near SW Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway where the original construction left almost no straight vertical run.
Liner Replacement (Clay Tile to Modern Systems)
This is the core need in Raleigh Hills. Original clay tile liners crack from freeze-thaw cycling, spall from internal acid corrosion, and separate at the joints — creating gaps where combustion gases leak into the chimney cavity. We remove the damaged clay (when accessible) or abandon it in place and downsize with a properly sized stainless liner. Liner replacement jobs in Raleigh Hills typically fall between $2,800–$5,500, with the upper range including crown repair or damper replacement. On a 1960s split-level ranch home near the Raleigh Hills Veterinary Clinic on SW Scholls Ferry Road, we found a 50-year-old clay tile flue liner cracked by freeze-thaw cycling inside a spalled brick chimney. We lined it with a DuraFlex stainless steel liner and rebuilt the crown with a Gelco polymer coating before rejoining the flue to the original fireplace with a new Famco damper — restoring safe draft and ending the homeowner’s complaint of persistent downdraft smell.
Partial Chimney Rebuild
When moisture has traveled past the crown into the upper courses of brick, or when the wythe separation is advanced, a liner alone won’t suffice. Partial rebuilds address the brickwork from the roofline up — sometimes extending several feet below if spalling and open joints are extensive. In Raleigh Hills, where that heavy orographic rainfall accelerates mortar deterioration, we regularly rebuild crowns and upper chimney sections with matching brick and proper through-wall flashing. Partial rebuilds with liner replacement range $4,200–$8,500 here, depending on height and accessibility. The tall firs that give this neighborhood its character also complicate scaffold setup — we factor that into our timeline, not as a surprise add-on.

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 Raleigh Hills
We don’t use off-brand patchwork that fails in three seasons. For Raleigh Hills installations, we stock and install DuraFlex stainless steel liners, apply Gelco polymer crown coatings rated for freeze-thaw cycling, and source Famco dampers and termination caps sized for the persistent debris load these hillsides generate. When a chimney’s configuration calls for it, we’ll specify Olympia Chimney components — their wind-resistant caps perform better on exposed West Hills slopes where standard caps would clog or blow off. Having these parts on hand or available through our Portland-area supplier means we’re not waiting two weeks for a special order while your fireplace sits cold.
Common Chimney Liner & Rebuild Problems We See in Raleigh Hills Homes
- Spalled brickwork and open mortar joints from decades of freeze-thaw allow moisture into the chase, rotting the clay liner from the outside and requiring partial rebuilds rather than simple liner repair. We see this most on homes south of SW Scholls Ferry Road where the slope exposure catches the heaviest rain.
- Dense Douglas fir canopy deposits needles and cones on flue caps, blocking airflow and forcing creosote condensation in the liner. This accelerates liner degradation and increases fire risk — especially during Oregon DEQ wood-burning curtailment days when homeowners burn inefficiently during mild inversions.
- Tree-induced downdraft from tall firs adjacent to 1960s homes creates negative draft pressure that mimics a blocked flue. Many clients request liner replacements when the real fix is a taller termination or wind-resistant flue cap. We’ve learned to diagnose this before quoting work the chimney doesn’t need.
- Original clay tile liners cracked by 50-plus years of thermal cycling — these were never designed to last forever, and Raleigh Hills’s stock is now well past design life. The cracks often vent into wall cavities or between flue liners, creating hidden smoke and CO hazards that homeowners only notice as “a smoky smell upstairs.”
Pricing for Chimney Liner & Rebuild in Raleigh Hills, OR
| Service | Typical Range in Raleigh Hills | What Affects Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Stainless steel liner installation (standard fireplace) | $2,800 – $4,200 | Flue height, diameter, number of appliances connected |
| Flexible liner system (offset or bent flue) | $3,200 – $4,800 | Degree of offset, liner length, access difficulty |
| Liner replacement with crown repair | $3,500 – $5,500 | Extent of crown damage, damper replacement needed |
| Partial rebuild with liner replacement | $4,200 – $8,500 | Courses of brick to rebuild, scaffold requirements, flashing complexity |
| Full chimney rebuild (rare in Raleigh Hills) | $8,500 – $14,000 | Height, brick matching, foundation work if needed |
These ranges reflect actual Raleigh Hills jobs we’ve completed in the 97225 area. The heavy rainfall and mature tree cover here push more projects toward the upper end of partial rebuild pricing — moisture damage simply travels further in these conditions than in a drier, newer suburb. We don’t quote by phone guesswork. James Wilson inspects every chimney personally, runs a camera up the flue, and gives you a written estimate with line-item breakdown before you commit. Estimates are free. Call (866) 541-8697 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near Raleigh Hills
Our chimney liner and rebuild crews work throughout the West Hills slope, including West Haven, West Haven-Sylvan, West Slope, and Cedar Hills. These neighborhoods share the same 1950s–1970s housing stock, the same Douglas fir canopy, and the same orographic rainfall patterns that make liner replacement and partial rebuilds more common than in Portland’s drier east-side suburbs. If you’re in any of these areas and seeing spalled brick, smelling downdraft, or finding your clay tile liner has finally given out, we know your chimney type.
Serving Raleigh Hills, OR — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Raleigh Hills 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 Raleigh Hills
The combination of 38–45 inches of annual orographic rainfall on the West Hills slope and five-plus decades of freeze-thaw cycling on 1950s–1970s clay tile liners means Raleigh Hills chimneys fail structurally while east-side suburbs with newer construction and less hillside moisture exposure are still getting by with original liners. The Douglas fir canopy adds debris load and downdraft stress that accelerates degradation further. If your chimney is original to a 1960s ranch, it’s likely past design life regardless — call (866) 541-8697 and we’ll camera-inspect to confirm.
Yes. Tall firs adjacent to many Raleigh Hills homes create negative pressure zones that reverse draft, especially on still days or when wind hits the slope wrong. The symptoms — smoke backing up, cold air falling down the flue, persistent smell — mimic a blocked chimney, but sweeping won’t fix a tree-induced downdraft. We diagnose this with draft testing during our inspection and can specify a taller termination or wind-resistant cap if the flue itself is clear. Call (866) 541-8697 for an inspection — estimates are free.
We recommend stainless steel liners for any clay tile system past 50 years, which covers nearly all original Raleigh Hills chimneys. Even intact-looking clay can have hairline cracks or joint separation invisible from below. DuraFlex 316Ti stainless provides a continuous, corrosion-resistant flue that contains all combustion gases regardless of what happens to the surrounding masonry. For a 1960s chimney in otherwise good condition, expect $2,800–$4,200 for standard stainless liner installation. We’ll tell you honestly if your clay is sound enough to delay — call for a camera inspection.
Needles and cones accumulate on flue caps, block airflow, and force combustion gases to linger in the flue — increasing creosote condensation and internal acid corrosion of clay liners. In Raleigh Hills’s dense canopy, we clear caps choked with debris on roughly one in three inspections. The moisture held by that debris also accelerates crown deterioration, letting water into the chase to attack the liner from outside. Annual cap and crown inspection catches this before it requires rebuild-level intervention. Schedule yours at (866) 541-8697.
Not by itself. A partial rebuild addresses spalled brick, open mortar joints, and crown failure — the moisture damage that ruins liners and threatens structural integrity. But tree-induced downdraft is a draft-physics problem, not a masonry problem. We solve it with proper termination height, wind-resistant caps, or in persistent cases, a chimney pot or extended flue. Often a Raleigh Hills homeowner needs both: rebuild for the water damage, then draft correction for the trees. James Wilson evaluates both during inspection and quotes what you actually need. Call (866) 541-8697.
Written by James Wilson, Owner at Horizon Chimney Sweep Washington, serving chimney owners across the Pacific Northwest since 2007.