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Repair

Chimney Crown Repair: What It Is and Why It Matters

Horizon Chimney Sweep  ·  March 2025
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The chimney crown is the concrete or mortar cap that covers the top of the chimney, surrounding the flue opening. It's designed to shed water away from the chimney structure — and it's one of the most commonly damaged and most commonly neglected components of a chimney system.

What the Crown Does

The crown serves two functions: it keeps water from entering the space between the flue liner and the chimney structure (the "chase"), and it directs rainwater away from the chimney's masonry. A properly built crown slopes outward and overhangs the chimney slightly, so water runs off rather than pooling.

Why Crowns Fail

Most chimney crowns are built from a simple mortar mix — the same material used for the chimney's mortar joints. This is a problem because mortar is not designed to be a standalone structural element exposed to weather. It cracks under freeze-thaw cycling, UV exposure, and the thermal expansion and contraction that comes from being directly above a heat source.

A well-built crown uses a stronger concrete mix and is reinforced. But many crowns — especially on older homes — were built with basic mortar and are prone to cracking.

Signs of Crown Damage

Repair Options

Minor cracks can be sealed with a flexible crown sealant — see our chimney repair service — products like CrownCoat are designed specifically for this purpose and create a waterproof, flexible membrane over the existing crown. This is appropriate for cracks that haven't compromised the crown's structural integrity.

More significant damage — large cracks, missing sections, or a crown that has separated from the flue — requires removal and replacement. A new crown should be built from a proper concrete mix, sloped correctly, and sealed after curing.

Don't Ignore It

A cracked crown is not a cosmetic issue. Water entering through a damaged crown can saturate the masonry, freeze in winter, and cause significant structural damage over time. What starts as a $200–$400 crown repair can become a $2,000+ rebuild if left unaddressed.

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