It’s the first cold night of the year. You light the fire for the first time since August. For a minute, everything’s fine — then smoke starts drifting back into the room instead of going up the flue, and the whole house smells like a campfire.
If that’s happened to you, you’re not alone, and it’s not really about the fire you just lit. It’s about everything that built up in the chimney over the last eight or nine months while it sat there, unused, doing nothing.
Perth doesn’t get talked about as a “fireplace city” the way Melbourne or Hobart do — and fair enough, our winters are mild by comparison. But plenty of Perth homes still have working fireplaces, particularly in the established suburbs and up in the hills where the temperature actually drops enough at night to make a fire worth lighting. And every one of those fireplaces has a chimney that’s been quietly accumulating soot, creosote, and — more often than people expect — a bird’s nest, since roughly April.
We had a job last winter in Kalamunda where a homeowner couldn’t figure out why their first fire of the season filled the lounge room with smoke. Turned out a family of birds had built a nest about a metre down the flue over autumn — completely sealed it off. Five minutes with the right tools and the problem was gone. The fire that had been “smoking badly for years,” in the homeowner’s words, worked perfectly once the actual blockage was removed.
What Actually Builds Up Inside a Chimney?
Is It Just Soot, or Is There Something More Dangerous?
There’s a difference between soot and creosote, and it matters more than most people realise.
Soot is the fine black powder you’d expect — a byproduct of wood not burning completely. It’s messy, it’s part of why your chimney needs cleaning at all, but on its own it’s relatively low-risk.
Creosote is the one that matters. It’s a sticky, tar-like residue that forms on the inside of the flue when wood burns — especially wood that wasn’t properly seasoned, or fires that smoulder at low temperatures rather than burning hot and clean. Creosote is highly flammable. Even a relatively thin layer, under the right conditions, can ignite. And once it does, you’ve got a chimney fire — which can spread to the roof structure faster than most people expect.
The amount of creosote that builds up over a season depends heavily on how the fireplace is used. A few short, low-temperature fires using wood that wasn’t properly dried produce noticeably more creosote than fewer, hotter fires with well-seasoned wood. Either way, by the end of a Perth winter, there’s almost always something in there worth checking.
A simple way to check, if you’re comfortable doing so: once the fireplace is completely cool, shine a torch up into the flue and scrape gently at the inner wall with a poker or similar tool. A flaky black coating is mostly soot. A thick, shiny, almost glossy black layer that doesn’t easily flake off is creosote — and that’s the one that needs proper attention, not just a quick brush.
Why Does This Actually Matter? (Beyond “It’s Dirty”)
What Are the Real Risks of an Unswept Chimney?
Three things, roughly in order of how often they actually happen.
Reduced draft and smoke coming back into the room. This is the one everyone notices first — like the scenario at the start of this article. A partially blocked flue doesn’t pull smoke up and out the way it should, so it backs up into your living room instead. Annoying, smelly, and a sign something’s restricting airflow.
Carbon monoxide. This one’s less visible and more serious. If smoke and combustion gases aren’t venting properly because the flue is blocked, those gases — including carbon monoxide, which is colourless and odourless — can end up inside the home instead of outside it. This is the genuinely dangerous outcome, and it’s exactly why an annual check matters even if the fireplace “seems fine.”
Chimney fires. The one most people picture when they think “why clean a chimney.” Creosote buildup igniting inside the flue is rare, but it does happen — and when it does, it’s fast and can cause serious damage to the chimney structure and potentially the roof.
There’s also a fourth thing that’s more about comfort than safety: a chimney with restricted airflow makes your fireplace burn less efficiently. You’ll use more wood, get less heat, and the fire will be harder to get going and keep going. If your fireplace has felt “worse” than it used to over the years, this is often why.
When Should You Actually Get This Done?
What’s the Right Timing for Chimney Cleaning in Perth?
The honest answer: before the season starts, not during it.
Perth’s pattern is fairly predictable — fireplaces sit unused from roughly September through to May, then get fired up again as the weather cools from June onward. That gap is exactly when problems develop unnoticed. Birds nest in unused flues during spring and summer. Whatever creosote was left from last winter just sits there. Nothing announces itself until you light the first fire and either get smoke in the room or — if you’re unlucky — something worse.
April or May — before the first fire of the season — is the ideal window. It’s a quiet time for most chimney services, appointments are easy to get, and you go into winter knowing the chimney is clear.
If you’re past that window and already using the fireplace, that’s fine too — but if you’ve noticed any of the warning signs below, don’t wait for next year’s pre-season slot.
The warning signs worth acting on now, regardless of season:
A smoky smell in the room when the fire is going, even with the flue open. Visible soot or debris falling into the firebox. A fire that’s noticeably harder to get going than it used to be, or that burns weaker than it should. Any scratching, rustling, or bird sounds coming from the chimney — particularly in spring, when nesting activity is highest. And simply: if it’s been more than a year since the last clean, or you’ve never had it done, that’s reason enough on its own.
🏅 Experience — Spring is when we get the most “there’s a bird stuck in my chimney” calls — which makes sense, because that’s nesting season. The frustrating part is that those nests often sit there undiscovered for months, right through until the homeowner lights their first fire of winter and discovers the problem the hard way. A spring check would’ve caught it months earlier, with no smoke involved at all.
What Actually Happens During a Chimney Clean?
What Should I Expect From a Professional Chimney Sweep?
It’s a more thorough process than most people picture — closer to a proper inspection than just “someone with a big brush.”
The flue itself gets swept — mechanically removing soot and creosote buildup from the inner walls of the chimney, using brushes sized correctly for your specific flue. This is the core of the job, but it’s not the whole job.
The firebox and damper get cleaned — the area where the fire actually sits, and the mechanism that controls airflow when the fireplace isn’t in use. Soot and debris accumulate here too, and a damper that’s gummed up with creosote doesn’t seal or open properly.
There’s a check for blockages and nests — which, as covered above, is more common than most homeowners assume. This includes a look for cracks or structural issues in the flue itself, since a chimney isn’t just a clean-or-dirty question — its physical condition matters too.
Airflow and draft get assessed — confirming that, once everything’s clear, smoke and gases are actually venting the way they’re supposed to. This is really the point of the whole exercise: not just “is it clean” but “does it work properly now.”
A standard residential chimney sweep in Perth typically takes somewhere around an hour, depending on the chimney’s condition and how long it’s been since the last clean. Homes that have gone several years without a sweep, or that have had birds nesting, tend to take a bit longer.
If we get up there and find the chimney’s in decent shape — maybe a light coating of soot and not much else — we’ll tell you that. We’re not going to manufacture a bigger job than what’s actually there. Equally, if we find something that genuinely needs attention — a crack, significant creosote buildup, a blockage — we’ll show you what we found and explain why it matters, rather than just listing it on an invoice.
How Often Does This Actually Need Doing?
What’s a Reasonable Chimney Cleaning Schedule for a Perth Home?
For most Perth households with a wood-burning fireplace that gets regular winter use, once a year — before the season starts — is the standard recommendation, and for good reason. A year is roughly the amount of time it takes for a meaningful amount of soot and creosote to accumulate, and it’s also roughly the amount of time a chimney sits empty and exposed to nesting birds between uses.
Households that use their fireplace heavily — most nights through a Perth winter, particularly in the hills where it gets genuinely cold — might find an annual clean is the bare minimum rather than generous. On the other end, a fireplace that only gets lit occasionally on the coldest nights of the year might reasonably stretch to every two years, though an annual check is still worth doing even if a full sweep isn’t always needed.
The honest test isn’t really a calendar — it’s whether anyone’s actually looked at the chimney since the last time it was used. If the answer’s “not since last winter, at least,” that’s your answer too.
The Bottom Line
A chimney that’s “always been a bit smoky” or “takes forever to get going” usually isn’t a fireplace problem — it’s a chimney problem, and it’s usually one that’s been quietly building for longer than anyone realised. The fix is often surprisingly simple once someone actually looks.
April or May, before the season starts, is the easiest time to deal with it. But if you’re already past that and the fireplace isn’t behaving the way it used to, that’s reason enough to get it checked now rather than waiting for next year.
Air Cool Care provides professional chimney sweeping and cleaning across Perth — from the established inner suburbs through to Kalamunda, Mundaring, and the hills, where fireplace use tends to be heaviest. If your fireplace isn’t performing the way it used to, get in touch and we’ll have a look before the cold really sets in.