MINNEAPOLIS · TIER 1 CHIMNEY INSPECTION

Every Accessible Surface Checked and Written Up in One Visit

NFPA 211 Level 1 scope applied to Minneapolis and Twin Cities Metro homes — visual, thorough, documented.
THE NFPA 211 STANDARD

What NFPA 211 Level 1 Actually Covers — and What It Doesn't

A Level 1 inspection is a visual assessment of every surface a trained eye can reach without tools.
That’s the precise definition under NFPA 211 — the national standard for chimney inspection and maintenance. Level 1 covers the accessible areas of the chimney: the firebox interior, the visible flue opening at the throat and crown, the exterior masonry from grade to cap, and every mortar joint and surface examinable without moving furniture, removing panels, or inserting equipment.
For a Minneapolis homeowner with an unchanged system — same appliance, same fuel, no events since the last service — a Level 1 is exactly what NFPA 211 recommends as the annual standard. It confirms the chimney is in working condition and catches developing issues before they become expensive ones.
SCOPE AT A GLANCE

What's Included — and What Belongs to a Tier 2

Included in Tier 1

Visual, no tools or demolition required.

Firebox interior

Visible flue opening at throat and crown

Exterior masonry from grade to cap

Every accessible mortar joint and surface

Cap seating and damper function

Belongs to a Tier 2

Requires camera or concealed-area access.

Interior of the flue liner beyond the visible opening

Areas behind walls

Attic and crawlspace zones

Camera scan of the liner interior

Level 1
NFPA 211 Annual Standard
50+
Freeze-Thaw Crossings a Year
6 Months
Minneapolis Heating Season
Same Visit
Written Summary Delivered
WHY ANNUAL MATTERS HERE

Why Minneapolis Homes Need Annual Inspections More Than Most

Minneapolis puts chimney masonry through more stress per year than most U.S. markets.
The lime mortar joints in homes built before 1950 were designed to erode slowly — that’s intentional. Lime mortar is softer than the surrounding brick, so the joint wears first, protecting the masonry units. But that softness means the joints are actively receding every season. A crown that looked intact three years ago may now carry hairline fractures; mortar that sat flush in 2021 may be recessed enough today to let water track toward the liner. The full mechanics are covered at our freeze-thaw resource page.
The damage doesn’t announce itself dramatically. It accumulates quietly between inspections. A heating season runs roughly October through April — six months of thermal cycling, creosote potential, and expansion-and-contraction stress on every joint. Annual inspection isn’t conservative here; it’s the minimum that makes sense for this climate, across Minneapolis and the Twin Cities Metro.
Many of the homes ChimTech inspects most are pre-1960 — craftsman bungalows in Longfellow, foursquares in Nokomis, Tudor revivals in Kenwood — still carrying original clay tile liners and lime mortar joints. For a deeper look at those systems, see chimneys in Minneapolis older homes.
TOP-DOWN SEQUENCE

Surfaces ChimTech Checks During a Tier 1 Inspection

Every Tier 1 starts at the top and works down — crown, cap, exterior masonry, then firebox.
Portrait of Brian Levi, founder of ChimTech
Brian Levi
Founder, ChimTech

The Crown

The concrete cap sealing the flue liner to the chimney edge. Checked for thermal-expansion cracks at the flue collar, edge integrity, and whether pre-1950 crowns poured flush — without a drip edge — are sending water down the stack face.

The Cap

The metal cover over the flue opening. Mesh, mounting hardware, and seating — a cap shifted after winter wind events can leave a gap wide enough for driven rain.

Exterior Mortar Joints

Probed along the full height of the stack. In South Minneapolis bungalows and Northeast craftsman homes, joints that look fine from the ground often probe soft — water has already been entering at that line.

The Firebox Interior

Refractory back panel, firebox floor, damper frame and plate, and the visible liner opening at the throat. Offset joints, visible cracking, or debris at the throat all get flagged.

Every observation goes into a written condition summary before I leave the property. Nothing stays verbal.
READING THE RESULT

What a Pass Finding Looks Like — and What a Flag Means

A clean Tier 1 finding means every accessible surface is intact and the system is suitable for use.
PASS

A Pass Finding

Every accessible surface is intact, no active water entry is evident, and the system is suitable for continued use. No repairs recommended. The written summary confirms what was checked and found — a dated record of the chimney's condition.

FLAG

A Flagged Finding

Names the specific surface and condition — a crown crack wider than a hairline, a mortar joint recessed beyond three-quarters of an inch, a damper that no longer seats flush — and states what service addresses it. A flag isn't automatically an emergency: the summary separates watch-and-document items from repairs to schedule before the next heating season.

DOCUMENTATION

How ChimTech Documents Every Tier 1 Inspection Finding

Every Tier 1 produces a written summary tied to the surfaces examined that day — not a driveway recap.
1

Accessible Areas Checked

Each surface examined is listed by location.

2

Condition Noted

Intact, minor wear, flagged, or requires repair.

3

Specific Findings

Each deficiency described by component, location, and nature.

4

Recommended Service

Where a finding warrants action, the relevant service is named.

5

Date of Inspection

A timestamped baseline for future reference.

That record belongs to the homeowner. Unlike a verbal walkthrough, the documented summary supports continuity across inspection years, gives an insurance carrier a dated maintenance record when requested, and becomes part of the property file when the home sells. It’s completed on-site and handed over before the crew loads out — and if a repair is booked, the same summary travels with the job file.
THE VISIT

Walk Through a ChimTech Tier 1 Inspection Visit

A Tier 1 runs from rooftop assessment to written summary — completed in a single appointment.
01

Arrival & Exterior Assessment

A full exterior read from grade: the crew identifies the configuration — single or multi-flue, masonry or prefab chase, roofline access — and notes stack height and pitch before ascending. From the roof, the crown, cap seating, and upper masonry are assessed directly, and mortar joints probed top to bottom. Anything soft, recessed, or cracked is logged by location.

02

Interior Examination

Inside, the firebox, damper assembly, smoke shelf access point, and visible liner opening at the throat are checked in sequence under adequate light. Observations are recorded as the inspection proceeds — not reconstructed at the end. Same components, same order, same documentation standard, every job.

03

Written Summary Delivered On-Site

Before the crew leaves, the written condition summary is completed and handed to the homeowner. If a finding warrants follow-up, the summary names the service and explains the connection between the finding and the repair. You leave knowing exactly what was found, where it is, and what comes next.

WHERE WE INSPECT

Minneapolis Zip Codes & Neighborhoods Where We Schedule Tier 1 Inspections

Tier 1 inspections cover Minneapolis zips 55401–55419, with regular appointments across the city.
ChimTech books inspection appointments directly from Minneapolis — same office that handles every other service, no routing layer, no contract technicians brought in by territory. The technician who conducts your Tier 1 is the same person who returns if a repair follows: the mortar findings, crown condition, and damper note are already in the file when the crew arrives. For neighborhoods like Nokomis (55417), Longfellow (55406), or Northeast (55418), morning and afternoon windows are available on a standard weekday schedule. If your address is within Minneapolis or the surrounding Twin Cities Metro, you’re in the service area.
LongfellowNokomisNortheastLinden HillsKenwoodUptownSouth Minneapolis

Get Your Tier 1 Inspection on the Calendar Before Heating Season Opens

A written condition summary of your chimney’s accessible surfaces — that’s what a Tier 1 delivers. Have your property address and last known service date ready; the crew handles the rest. Prefer email? Reach us at office@chimtech.org.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Tier 1 Inspection

Yes. ChimTech uses “Tier 1” to align with the NFPA 211 Level 1 standard. It’s a visual assessment of every accessible chimney surface — crown, cap, exterior masonry, firebox, damper, and visible liner opening — conducted without cameras, demolition, or appliance disconnection. The scope is defined by NFPA 211 and applies uniformly to every Minneapolis home we inspect at this tier.

Once per year is the NFPA 211 recommendation for any chimney in regular use, and the minimum that makes sense for Minneapolis specifically. The freeze-thaw cycle — averaging more than 50 threshold crossings a year — creates ongoing stress on mortar joints, crowns, and liner surfaces. Annual inspection catches that progression before it becomes a repair. If the system has been idle more than a season, inspect before resuming use regardless of the annual schedule.

No. The Tier 1 scope covers the visible liner opening at the throat — the top of the flue tile as seen from the firebox. It doesn’t include a camera assessment of the liner interior, which requires a Tier 2. If the Tier 1 finds debris accumulation, offset joints at the throat, or a crown condition that suggests liner exposure, the written summary flags those findings and identifies the Tier 2 as the appropriate next step.

A written condition summary completed on-site and handed to the homeowner before the crew leaves. It lists every surface checked, the condition of each, any specific findings by component and location, and the recommended service where a finding warrants action. You receive this record whether everything is clean or a flag is noted.

Yes — and that’s one of the most common reasons Minneapolis homeowners schedule one in September or early October. The inspection confirms accessible surfaces are intact, the cap is seated, the damper is functional, and no visible debris or deterioration presents a use-limiting condition. If it passes, the summary confirms it’s suitable for continued use; if something warrants attention first, the summary names it and explains why.

Not automatically. Some Tier 1 flags are surface conditions — a joint that needs repointing, a crown crack that needs sealing — that point directly to a repair rather than a deeper inspection tier. A Tier 2 is appropriate when the finding suggests a liner condition, a concealed area, or a system change that requires camera confirmation. The summary specifies whether the next step is a repair, a Tier 2, or a watch-and-document item — you’re not left to interpret it alone.