Fast, Reliable Chimney Cap & Crown Across White House
Chimney cap and crown repair in White House, TN typically runs $180–$650 depending on whether you’re dealing with a rusted prefab chase cover or a cracked masonry crown, and most jobs are completed in a single visit. If you’re seeing water stains on your fireplace ceiling or hearing dripping during a hard rain, the crown or cap is the first place we check.

We’ve been driving up I-65 to White House for 14 years, and we know the difference between a 1920s farmhouse chimney on Main Street and a 2005 prefab unit in Hunters Point. Richard handles it personally — same technician, same truck, same day when the schedule allows. Call (833) 753-1759 for a free estimate.
Why Landmark Chimney Cleaning Service Tennessee Is White House’s Preferred Chimney Cap & Crown Company
White House sits at the northern edge of our regular service radius, and we’ve built a reputation here by showing up when we say we will. 364 homeowners have rated us 4.9 stars, and a growing share of those reviews come from White House subdivisions where neighbors recommend us house to house.
Richard Anderson works as both owner and lead technician — you get the boss on the job, not a rotating crew of subcontractors. That matters in White House, where the dominant housing stock of 2000s-era prefabricated fireplaces requires specific expertise that general handyman operations simply don’t have. We carry Chimney Cap & Crown parts for the common factory-built models we see repeated across your neighborhoods, which means faster turnaround and no waiting on special orders.
Our response time to White House is typically same-day or next-day during the busy season, and we schedule with an eye toward Robertson County’s weather patterns — that cold air funneling down from Kentucky can turn a small crown crack into a major leak overnight.
Our Chimney Cap & Crown Services in White House
Cap Installation
New cap installations in White House fall into two categories: replacing a failed factory cap on a prefab chase, or fitting a proper cap on an uncapped masonry flue. For the subdivision homes built 2003–2008, we often install multi-flue Gelco or Famco caps in powder-coated aluminum — the same materials the pros spec — because the original galvanized steel couldn’t handle the freeze-thaw cycles that hit northern Robertson County harder than Nashville proper.
Cap Replacement
Cap replacement is our most common White House call. Last winter we replaced a rusted-through chase cover on a prefab unit off Highway 76 in the Hunters Point subdivision. The original galvanized cap had corroded from years of freeze-thaw, and three neighbors had the same model — we quoted them a multi-flue Copperfield cap in powder-coated aluminum. When one unit fails on your street, we check the others. It’s not upselling; it’s pattern recognition from 14 years, one specialty.
Crown Repair
Crown repair in White House depends entirely on your chimney type. The older masonry chimneys in the original town core — the ones along Highway 31W and the historic streets near the old railroad depot — suffer mortar joint spalling and crown cracking from those Kentucky cold fronts. We grind out the damaged concrete, re-form the crown with proper slope and overhang, and seal with HeatShield crown coating where appropriate. For 2000s-era prefab units, “crown repair” often means replacing the factory cement crown or the entire chase top assembly.
Crown Coating
Crown coating buys time on a masonry crown that’s cracked but structurally sound. In White House’s climate — more freeze-thaw than Nashville, less severe than Kentucky — a properly applied coating can extend a crown’s life 5–7 years. We use professional-grade materials, not the box-store brush-on products that peel in two seasons. It’s a smart middle option for historic farmhouses where the crown is weathered but the flue liner is still intact.
Multi-Flue Cap
Multi-flue caps cover two or more flues with a single structure, and they’re essential for White House homes with multiple fireplaces or a fireplace-plus-furnace vent configuration. We size and fabricate these on-site for proper clearance and draft performance. For the prefab subdivisions, we often spec multi-flue designs even on single-flue chases because they shed water better and stand up to the wind that rips across the open fields north of town.

Custom Cap
Custom caps solve the problems that off-the-shelf sizes can’t. Oversized flues, unusual chase dimensions, or historic masonry profiles — we’ve fabricated custom solutions for White House farmhouses where standard caps would look wrong and function worse. Richard measures, sketches, and sources from Olympia Chimney or Famco to get the fit exact.
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 White House
We use the same materials the pros spec: HeatShield for crown coatings and refractory repairs, Gelco and Famco for caps and chase covers, Olympia Chimney for custom and multi-flue configurations. These aren’t rebranded consumer lines — they’re the professional-grade products that certified chimney technicians nationwide trust. We stock the common sizes for White House’s dominant prefab models, which means most cap replacements don’t require a two-week special order. When your chase cover is leaking into the firebox, that speed matters.
Common Chimney Cap & Crown Problems We See in White House Homes
- Rusted prefab chase covers in 2000s subdivisions. Pre-2008 prefab chase covers rust out faster in White House’s freeze-thaw cycles, especially on subdivision models from builders who used thin galvanized steel. We’ve replaced dozens off Saundersville Road and in the Stonegate area — same manufacturer, same failure pattern.
- Spalling mortar crowns on historic masonry. Mortar crowns on the older masonry chimneys in the original town core spall and crack from cold air funneling down from Kentucky, allowing water into clay flue liners. These need full crown rebuilds, not just caulk.
- Hairline cracks in factory cement crowns. Factory-installed cement crowns on zero-clearance fireplaces in 2000s-era homes develop hairline cracks near the flue opening, letting moisture eat the refractory panels below. Caught early, coating works; caught late, you’re looking at panel replacement too.
- Missing or improperly fitted caps. Some White House homes — especially the rapid-build phases of 2004–2007 — left the flue uncapped or used a universal size that blew off in the first strong wind. An unprotected flue is an open pipe for rain, squirrels, and drafts.
Pricing for Chimney Cap & Crown in White House, TN
Here’s what we typically see in the White House market:
| Service | Typical Range in White House |
|---|---|
| Standard cap replacement (prefab chase cover) | $180 – $340 |
| Multi-flue cap installation | $320 – $550 |
| Custom cap (fabricated to fit) | $450 – $650 |
| Crown coating (masonry chimney) | $280 – $420 |
| Crown repair / rebuild (masonry) | $380 – $620 |
What moves the needle: accessibility (steep roof, height), whether the flue liner is damaged underneath, and material choice. Powder-coated aluminum costs more than galvanized steel but lasts years longer in White House’s climate — we quote both and let you decide. Every estimate is free, and we don’t start work until you approve the exact price. Call (833) 753-1759 to schedule.
We Also Serve Cities Near White House
Our service radius covers the full northern Nashville exurb corridor. We regularly handle cap and crown work in Greenbrier along Highway 41, Millersville and its mix of historic and newer construction, Goodlettsville with its older masonry stock, and Hendersonville lakeside homes where wind-driven rain tests every crown. Same technician, same standards, same call: (833) 753-1759.
Serving White House, TN — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the White House 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 Cap & Crown in White House
Yes — it’s one of the most common calls we get in White House. The prefab fireplaces installed during the 2003–2008 building boom used galvanized steel chase covers that simply don’t survive our freeze-thaw cycles. Call (833) 753-1759 for a free estimate — we’ll check your refractory panels while we’re up there.
Absolutely. Original town-core masonry chimneys need traditional crown rebuilds with proper concrete formulation and slope, while subdivision prefab units need chase cover or factory crown replacement. The skill set overlaps, but the materials and approach differ. Richard evaluates both types regularly.
Probably, and sooner than you think. White House’s explosive exurban growth since the early 2000s created neighborhoods where entire streets share the same prefabricated fireplace models from that era, so when one unit’s factory-installed crown or chase cover fails, the same failure pattern repeats house to house. We offer neighborhood inspections — call (833) 753-1759 to get on the schedule.
Crown coating is a flexible, waterproof sealant applied over a cracked but structurally sound masonry crown. In White House’s climate — more freeze-thaw than Nashville, with cold air funneling down from Kentucky — it prevents water infiltration that would otherwise expand and destroy the crown through winter. It’s cost-effective maintenance, not a permanent fix.
Not strictly necessary, but often the better choice in White House. Multi-flue caps provide superior rain and wind protection, and they’re built heavier — less likely to blow off in the open-field gusts that hit northern Robertson County. For a single-flue prefab chase, we typically quote both standard and multi-flue options so you can compare.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner at Landmark Chimney Cleaning Service Tennessee, serving White House since 2010.