Chimney Relining in Boerne, TX
The liner is the part of the chimney that actually carries smoke and heat. When it cracks, or the old clay tiles start gapping apart, the whole system stops being safe to use. Relining fits a new stainless steel liner down the existing flue without tearing the chimney apart. It's one of the bigger jobs we do, which is why we never spring it on anyone: you get camera footage of the damage, a written quote, and time to decide. Caught early, liner trouble is a much smaller bill — that's the point of the yearly look. Serving Boerne (3 ZIP codes, 20k residents) and surrounding neighborhoods with same-week scheduling.
Chimney Relining in Boerne
Relining replaces a flue liner that has already failed — cracked or spalled clay tiles, open joints, gaps that a camera scan has confirmed — with a new full-length liner sized to your appliance. It is a teardown-and-replace decision: the channel exists but is no longer safe, and the reline restores a sealed, code-compliant flue. UL-1777 listed stainless is the modern replacement standard, transferable-warranty, code-compliant for wood, gas, or oil.
Local dossier · Boerne, TX
Hill Country nights get cold in a way San Antonio proper never quite manages. Boerne sits several hundred feet higher, and that elevation buys real burn weather — people here light fireplaces in November and keep them going into March, a longer season than almost anywhere else we serve. More burning means more creosote, plain and simple, so sweep schedules in Boerne run closer to truly annual than they do down I-10. The weather swings cut both ways. Forty-degree overnight drops make limestone and mortar expand and contract constantly, and the older stone homes near downtown have joints that have flexed through decades of it. Meanwhile the new subdivisions filling in around town run builder-grade prefab units that hit their first real repairs somewhere around year ten. Our plan follows the local calendar — inspection in early fall before the Hill Country's first cold snap, a sweep when the buildup calls for one, and a spring look if you've burned hard all winter. We'll be honest about which you need: a family burning most nights needs different service than a couple lighting weekend fires, and the plan flexes for that instead of billing everyone like they run a wood stove. Boerne burns more than most of Texas. The schedule should respect that, and so should the invoice.
Cave Without a Name
Common signs in Boerne homes
- Pieces of cracked flue tile or mortar collecting in the firebox
- A camera scan showing cracked, spalled, or gapped tile liner
- A recent chimney fire — heat-checked tile usually requires relining
- Creosote returning unusually fast, signaling a breached liner
Chimney Relining in Boerne (Kendall County) — what's local
Boerne sits in Kendall County (county seat: Boerne). Affluent Hill Country county — historic Boerne masonry plus large custom-home fireplaces and rural spark-arrestor work. For chimney relining that means our Boerne crew sizes up the local housing stock before quoting — and follows Kendall County permit requirements for any work that needs an inspection sign-off.
Climate & code file · Greater San Antonio
San Antonio is not one chimney market — it is a dozen of them stacked inside one city, and PCS Services services them with a single, unvarying standard. A century-old masonry stack on a King William Victorian, a 1970s ranch firebox off Loop 410, and a builder-grade prefab in a 2015 Stone Oak subdivision are three completely different systems, and what makes the metro specific is the combination of light annual burn and long idle seasons — most homes light a handful of fires across a short, mild winter, then sit unused for nine months.
The rare hard freeze on porous stone
A Feb-2021-class freeze is the limestone killer: water already sitting inside porous stone expands and pops the face. The best defense is keeping water out of the masonry before the cold arrives — seal the breathable stone with a vapor-permeable siloxane repellent, never a film-forming coating that traps moisture inside and accelerates spalling at the next freeze.
Limestone & lime mortar — the one that matters most
If your Boerne chimney is older Hill-Country masonry, do not let a generalist repoint it with hard gray Portland. Soft limestone was laid in a breathable, high-lime mix that flexes with the stone; modern Portland is harder than the stone around it, so it transfers stress into the limestone and drives the cracking into the face — turning a repointing job into a stone-replacement job. We read the existing mortar, match its composition and color, and repoint so the repair moves with the wall through the heat-and-freeze cycle. That's the question budget crews don't even know to ask.
Cedar (Ashe juniper)
Cedar needles and the heavy December–February pollen pack into spark screens and crown washes — a clogged cap is a draft problem and a fire-screen failure at once. We clear and inspect the cap on every sweep. On wood-burners we also flag cedar's hot, fast, resin-heavy burn: it glazes a flue far quicker than seasoned oak, so a cedar-burning Boerne home needs a tighter sweep interval, not the generic annual default.
Long dormancy
A Boerne flue may sit unused for ten months, then get lit hard for six weeks — long enough for animals to nest, debris to collect, and a hairline crown crack to go unnoticed. A fall sweep-and-scan before the short burning season means your first cold-front fire is on a verified, clean, code-ready flue.
Code note · Greater San Antonio
South-Texas / Hill-Country code reality: porous historic stone is sealed only with a vapor-permeable siloxane repellent (never a film-forming coating), and a Feb-2021-class freeze event is the regional benchmark for the cracked-tile and open-joint damage a Level 2 scan exists to catch.
Built to code · Chimney Relining in Boerne
Chimney Relining is held to published national standards no matter the city. Our Boerne crew builds to these and documents the work; the locally-adopted code edition and permit requirements are confirmed with Kendall County's authority on every job.
- UL-1777 listed liner — The replacement liner must be a UL-1777 listed chimney liner — tested and certified for the application — not improvised pipe. We document the listing for your permit, insurer, or post-fire claim.
- Alloy matched to fuel — Stainless alloy is selected to the fuel: 316Ti for wood, coal, oil, or high-sulfur fuels; 304 where the fuel allows. The wrong alloy corrodes as early as the liner being replaced.
- Sized per NFPA 211 / appliance listing — The new liner is sized to the actual flue dimension, the appliance outlet, and the chimney height per the NFPA 211 venting tables and the appliance listing — replacing a cracked liner with a mis-sized one fails to vent safely.
- Common venting (NFPA 54) — Where the relined flue serves two appliances on one stack, the replacement is common-vented to the NFPA 54 (National Fuel Gas Code) sizing tables so neither appliance spills combustion products.
- Clearance to combustibles — The replacement liner is insulated where required to maintain clearance to combustibles — 2 in for an interior masonry chimney, 1 in for an exterior chimney per the IRC; factory-built chimney per its own listing.
Scoped from a graded inspection
At PCS Services, a chimney relining is never guesswork. We scope every job from a graded, photographed inspection first — the NFPA 211 level the evidence calls for — so the work is matched to what your flue and masonry actually need, with the report to prove it. The documented inspection is the record the chimney relining is built on.
Chimney inspection in BoerneEvery chimney relining in Boerne
Deliverables
- Scoped written estimate before work
- Materials matched to the existing build
- Photo documentation of completed work
- Workmanship warranty per quote
How a job runs
Level 2 scope
Video-grade the failure mode and confirm the existing liner is past repair.
Spec the replacement
Size the new liner to BTU + flue length; pick alloy and method (rigid / flexible / cast-in-place).
Remove & reline
Pull or abandon the failed liner, run the new one full-length, seal the top plate, insulate where required.
Test & sign-off
Smoke/pressure test, draft reading, and UL-1777 / insurance documentation.
4+ neighborhoods in Boerne
Same-week service across every neighborhood in Boerne. Don't see yours? Call (XXX) XXX-XXXX — if it's in Boerne, we cover it.
The Boerne advantage.
Our Boerne crew lives in the metro they serve, across Kendall County. They know which Boerne neighborhoods — Hill Country Village, Esperanza, Cordillera Ranch and more — have crumbling crowns, and which newer builds skipped the cap. Local code knowledge, local referrals, local accountability for every chimney relining.
More services in Boerne
Chimney Relining in nearby Kendall cities
We cover chimney relining across Kendall County — same crew, same warranty. Nearby Boerne cities we also serve:
Chimney Relining in Boerne — FAQ
How do I know my existing liner has actually failed and needs replacing?
Relining is for a liner that's already gone bad. The tell-tales are flue-tile pieces collecting in the firebox, cracked, spalled, or gapped tiles on a camera scan, creosote that returns unusually fast, and white staining. A Level 2 video scope grades the failure so we replace a liner that's genuinely compromised — not a sound one.
Isn't relining the same as flue installation?
No — that's the key distinction. Relining replaces a liner that already exists but has failed (cracked tile, breached joints, post-fire damage). Flue installation fits a liner where none ever existed — new construction, an added appliance, or an unlined masonry stack getting its first liner. If you have a failed liner, you need a reline; if you have no liner at all, that's a flue installation.
What kind of replacement liner will you install?
For most wood and gas applications, a UL 1777 listed stainless liner sized to the specific appliance is the standard replacement. Where the masonry around the failed liner is also weak, a cast-in-place poured liner both lines and re-stiffens the chimney; where the flue is crooked, a flexible liner is the replacement material. Fuel type, flue geometry, and the masonry's condition decide it.
What happens if I keep using a chimney with a failed liner?
A cracked or missing liner exposes surrounding masonry and wood framing to direct heat and combustion gases, raising fire and carbon-monoxide risk. Under NFPA 211 a chimney with an unsafe liner isn't considered safe to operate until it's relined, which is why a failed scan is a stop-burning finding, not a someday repair.
How long does a reline take, and is removing the old liner extra work?
A straightforward stainless reline is often done in a day. Pulling out badly collapsed clay tile, or relining a flue that needs other repairs first, takes longer — and how hard the failed liner is to remove is one of the things that moves the price. The technician confirms the timeline after scanning the flue.
How often should a Boerne chimney be swept?
More often than the Texas average, honestly. Boerne's longer, colder burn season means real creosote accumulation — a family burning several nights a week needs an annual sweep, no shortcuts. Lighter users can sometimes stretch to eighteen months, and the annual inspection tells us which camp you're in. We measure buildup; we don't guess.
When does burn season start in the Hill Country?
Early November, most years — a few weeks ahead of San Antonio. First fires follow the first cold snap, and the scheduling rush follows the first fires. We recommend Boerne plan visits in September or early October, so the chimney's cleared and checked before that first 38-degree night, not after it.
Do temperature swings really damage chimneys out here?
They do, slowly. Hill Country days can swing forty degrees, and masonry expands and contracts with every cycle. Over years that opens hairline cracks in crowns and mortar joints — small entry points for water. A plan visit tracks those year over year, so we repair when a crack starts moving, not after a wet winter finds it.
Do you serve all of Boerne?
Yes — our crews cover Boerne's 3 ZIP codes across Kendall County, including Hill Country Village, Esperanza, Cordillera Ranch, plus the surrounding communities.
How soon can you schedule chimney relining in Boerne?
We offer same-week scheduling across Boerne, booked by a real person in under two minutes, 7 AM to midnight every day.
How much does chimney relining cost in Boerne, TX?
Chimney Relining in Boerne starts from $249, but the honest number depends on what the tech finds on site — we won't quote work blind. A trained technician inspects the actual condition, then hands you an itemized written quote tied to the findings. No teaser pricing, no surprises. Call (XXX) XXX-XXXX for a free, no-pressure Boerne quote.
Do you offer emergency or same-day chimney relining in Boerne?
Yes — we run same-week and emergency chimney relining across Boerne, scheduled by a real person 7 AM to midnight every day. For an active chimney hazard, call (XXX) XXX-XXXX and we prioritize Boerne dispatch so a craftsman is on it fast.
Is there a licensed chimney relining company near me in Boerne?
Our Boerne crew lives in and works the metro across Kendall County, including Hill Country Village, Esperanza, Cordillera Ranch — a licensed, insured, local chimney relining team genuinely near you, holding the same standard on every job, not dispatched cold from another city. Call (XXX) XXX-XXXX.
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