Converting a Wood Fireplace to Direct Vent Gas – Is It Right for Your KC Home?
Honestly, most Kansas City homeowners pay somewhere between $2,800 and $7,500 for a proper wood-to-direct-vent-gas conversion-and the gap between those numbers comes down to venting complexity, gas line routing, and finish work, not just how realistic the flames look. Think of it like engine tuning: some jobs are a basic tune-up, and some are a full exhaust-and-fuel-system rebuild, and you don’t know which one you’re looking at until someone gets eyes on your actual fireplace.
What a Wood-to-Direct-Vent-Gas Conversion Really Costs in Kansas City
Honestly, if you’ve been looking at prices online and seeing flat-rate numbers with no mention of chimney condition, gas line location, or vent path-those numbers are either guesses or bait. Anyone quoting you a single price for a conversion without standing in front of your fireplace is either planning to cut corners or fill in the gaps once they’ve already started tearing things apart. Real costs follow the venting and safety details, period.
If you were sitting in your car right now, I’d tell you it’s like this: the low end of a conversion is a basic tune-standard horsepower (flame appearance), decent MPG (gas efficiency), and clean-enough emissions (indoor air quality) for a fireplace that already has good bones and easy gas access. The high end is like upgrading your exhaust, fuel injection, and onboard computer all at once-better performance, better emissions, better everything, but the parts and labor to get there reflect that. A properly sealed direct vent insert is that well-tuned engine with a real exhaust system. Everything else is running without one.
One January morning, about 7:30 a.m., I was standing in a Brookside living room where you could literally see your breath. The old masonry fireplace was pulling so much conditioned air out of the house that the furnace couldn’t keep up. The homeowner wanted direct vent gas “just for looks,” but when I showed him my manometer reading-the house was running at negative pressure every time the furnace cycled-he finally understood why a sealed system wasn’t optional, it was the fix. That job landed toward the higher end of the range, and he told me six weeks later it was worth every dollar because the living room actually felt like part of the house for the first time.
Direct Vent vs. Log Set vs. Vent-Free: Which “Engine Tune” Fits Your KC Home?
If You Were Sitting in Your Car Right Now, I’d Explain It Like This
If you were sitting in your car right now, I’d tell you it’s like this: a gas log set dropped into an open wood fireplace is appearance horsepower only-it looks like fire, but the combustion still happens in your living room air, and the exhaust still floats up through your chimney whether the damper’s doing its job or not. A vent-free unit is like removing the exhaust pipe entirely-theoretically “zero fuel waste” because all that heat stays in the room, but you’re also keeping every combustion byproduct in the room too. CO, water vapor, nitrogen dioxide-all of it. A sealed direct vent insert is the properly tuned engine with a real exhaust system: combustion air comes in from outside through one pipe, exhaust leaves through another, and your room air never touches the combustion process. Better efficiency, better air quality, better safety-all three dials moved in the right direction at the same time.
- Draws conditioned room air for combustion-your furnace fights the fireplace all night
- Drafty when not in use; cold air pours down an open damper
- Heat output mostly goes up the chimney-efficiency around 10-15%
- Smoke, creosote, and ash are ongoing maintenance realities
- Easier to operate than wood, but still an open firebox-same draft issues
- Gas exhaust mixes with room air through the chimney; damper stop required
- Efficiency similar to wood setup-most heat lost up the flue
- Better looks, same structural weaknesses as an open wood setup
- 100% of BTUs stay in the room-high apparent efficiency
- No exhaust path-combustion byproducts, moisture, and CO remain in living space
- Restricted or banned in some KC area jurisdictions; not recommended in tight homes or near bedrooms
- CO alarm required; still raises air quality concerns with continuous use
- Sealed glass front-combustion air from outside, exhaust to outside
- Room air never enters the combustion process; no CO introduced to living space
- Efficiency typically 70-85%; actually adds heat to the room rather than losing it up the flue
- Code-friendly in virtually all KC jurisdictions; cleaner, safer, and more comfortable
If your fireplace were a car, would you be okay parking it in your living room and running the engine with the garage door shut?
| Parameter | Wood-Burning Fireplace | Gas Log Set (Open) | Vent-Free Gas | Direct Vent Gas Insert |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🔥 Flame Appearance (Horsepower) |
Unmatched-real, crackling wood fire | Realistic; visible flames, some embers | Good to very good depending on unit | Very good to excellent; high-end units are convincing |
| ⛽ Efficiency (MPG) |
10-20%-most heat lost up flue | Similar to wood; open damper, open losses | Near 99%-all BTUs in the room | 70-85%-real heat delivered to living space |
| 💨 Indoor Air Quality (Emissions) |
Smoke, particulates, creosote risk | Lower than wood, but exhaust still near room air | CO, moisture, NOx all stay indoors-real concern | Room air fully isolated from combustion-safest option |
| 💵 Upfront Cost | Low (existing setup) or high (new build) | Lower-$800-$1,500 installed in existing firebox | Mid-range-$1,200-$2,500 installed | Higher-$2,800-$7,500 depending on complexity |
| 🏠 Ongoing Comfort | Drafty, cold air intrusion when not in use | Convenient, but same draft and heat-loss issues | Warm, but humid and potentially stuffy | Warm, draft-free, clean air-best all-around comfort |
How Kansas City’s Climate and Code Change the Equation
KC’s soup-thick summer humidity does something interesting-it makes the air quality problem with vent-free units even worse in tight builds, because you’re already fighting moisture in August, and a vent-free unit adds more of it directly to your indoor air. Flip that to winter, and the older leaky Craftsmans and brick two-stories in Brookside and Waldo have enough natural air infiltration that a modest vent-free unit might not immediately set off CO alarms. But the newer builds out in Olathe and Overland Park are sealed tight enough that the same unit could turn dangerous faster than most people realize-local inspectors know this, and vent-free restrictions in certain KC-area jurisdictions reflect it. A couple years back, on one of those 98-degree August days where the humidity literally felt like soup, I got called to a house in Olathe where someone had “converted” their wood fireplace to gas with a DIY log set-no venting changes, no damper stop, nothing. I was sweating through my shirt explaining that every time they lit it, they were basically idling a car in their living room. We ripped that out, installed a proper direct vent insert, and the homeowner later told me the air in the house literally “felt lighter” after we did it. That’s not placebo-that’s what sealed combustion actually does to your indoor environment.
How a Direct Vent Conversion Actually Works, Step by Step
Picture Your Fireplace Like a Glass-Fronted Fridge Door in Reverse
Picture your fireplace like a big glass-fronted fridge door in reverse-instead of cold air staying in and warm air staying out, a direct vent insert seals the firebox so cold outdoor air can’t pour into your living room and your heated air can’t flee up a drafty chimney. The insert pulls combustion air through the outer ring of a coaxial vent pipe from outside, burns it inside a sealed firebox, then sends exhaust back out through the inner pipe-all without touching the air you’re breathing. Your room is completely isolated from that whole process. One insider tip worth knowing early: plan your electrical outlet and gas stub-out location at the same time you’re choosing your insert model. Getting those two details sorted together means one coordinated rough-in visit instead of opening walls twice because the gas line ended up three feet from where the outlet needs to be. I sketch this out on whatever’s handy-cardboard, scrap wood, the back of a pizza box-so homeowners can see the path before anyone picks up a tool.
From First Walkthrough to Final Test-Fire
The process usually starts with me walking the room and asking questions that might seem oddly specific-how old is the house, where’s your gas meter, do you have a basement or crawl space, what’s on the other side of that exterior wall? Then I’m measuring the firebox opening and depth, checking the condition of the damper and smoke shelf, and running a pressure check if the house feels tight or has a history of back-drafting. From there it’s sizing the insert to the firebox, mapping the vent route to the closest practical termination point, and confirming gas line capacity before anything gets ordered. On installation day we do the tear-out and firebox prep first, run the vent pipe, make the gas connection, set the insert, fit the trim surround, and then run a full combustion test and CO check before I hand over the remote and walk the homeowner through operation and the basics of what to watch for. No mystery, no surprises-same process whether it’s a simple Overland Park build or a tricky old Brookside chimney with an offset flue.
| # | What Happens | What You’ll Notice as a Homeowner |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Initial Walkthrough & Questions Site visit, room measurement, questions about usage and history |
Luis walks the room, asks about drafts, smells, and how often the fireplace actually gets used |
| 2 | Chimney & Firebox Inspection Damper condition, flue integrity, firebox dimensions, draft testing |
You get a clear explanation of what’s working and what needs addressing before the insert goes in |
| 3 | Gas Supply & Electrical Assessment Verify line capacity, locate closest practical outlet point, note any upgrade needs |
No surprise “by the way, your gas line needs upgrading” conversations after the project starts |
| 4 | Sizing & Model Selection Match BTU output and firebox dimensions to your specific opening and heat needs |
You choose an insert that actually fits-no “close enough” gaps or oversized units stuffed in |
| 5 | Vent Route & Termination Planning Map the coaxial vent path from firebox to exterior; plan wall or roof cap location |
Luis sketches the route so you know exactly what’s happening inside your walls before any work starts |
| 6 | Installation Day: Tear-Out & Prep Remove existing components, prep firebox surfaces, open wall for vent path if needed |
The old wood-burning setup comes out; firebox gets prepped for a clean, sealed fit |
| 7 | Running Gas Line & Vent Pipe Gas stub-out and coaxial vent pipe installation through planned route |
Two systems go in together-no second trip from a separate gas trade if planned ahead |
| 8 | Sealing, Trim & Finish Work Set and seal the insert, install face trim and surround, patch any wall openings |
The fireplace starts looking like a fireplace again-clean lines, no visible gaps |
| 9 | Combustion Testing & Homeowner Walkthrough Full combustion test, CO check, pressure verification, then operation demo and handoff |
You leave knowing it’s safe, how to operate it, and what to watch for in the first season |
Safety, CO, and Why Luis Pushes Direct Vent for KC Families
Here’s the Blunt Version on Vent-Free and DIY Conversions
Here’s the blunt version: dropping a vent-free unit into an old wood firebox and calling it a “gas conversion” is like removing your car’s catalytic converter and exhaust pipe because it’s easier to install. You haven’t solved the emissions problem-you’ve moved it inside the vehicle. Vent-free units produce water vapor, CO, and nitrogen dioxide as normal byproducts of combustion. In a well-ventilated, loosely built older home running the unit for an hour, that might not reach dangerous levels. But in a sealed-up newer build, run overnight in a bedroom, near a nursery, or in a home with anyone who has respiratory issues-you’re tuning that engine for maximum indoor air pollution. Kansas City’s code environment has been tightening on vent-free installs for exactly this reason, and local inspectors are not treating vent-free and direct vent as equivalent options anymore. DIY log set installs with a closed damper are just as problematic-you’re trapping exhaust with no real exit path, and without a damper stop or CO monitoring, you may not know it until the alarm goes off at midnight.
Real Late-Night Calls That Changed How I Talk About Conversions
The only time I’ve had a midnight call about a conversion was from a young couple in Waldo. Newborn in the house, a vent-free unit a handyman had put into their old wood-burning firebox a few months earlier, and CO alarms starting to chirp on and off. It was 11:45 p.m., snow blowing sideways outside, and when I got there I found a sealed-up house-no make-up air, no fresh air intake, no CO detector near the fireplace itself-and a baby’s crib sitting ten feet from the unit. That night is the reason that every time someone asks me about converting to gas now, I lead with sealed direct vent systems and carbon monoxide before we ever discuss flame style or BTU ratings. Flame appearance is a finish detail. CO safety is the foundation. Get the foundation right first.
Is a Direct Vent Gas Conversion Right for Your Specific KC Fireplace?
When a homeowner in KC asks me this, I usually ask them right back: how often do you actually use the fireplace right now, and what do you hate most about it-the smoke, the cold drafts when it’s not lit, the mess, or the fact that it never really heats the room? What matters most to you: the look of real flames, or actually warming the space, or just lowering your gas bill, or finally breathing clean air? Those answers tell me more about the right direction than the fireplace itself does. The “right” conversion is the one that matches your priorities-your engine tune-to the realities of your existing chimney, your house’s pressure dynamics, and your budget. And the only way to know what that looks like for your specific setup is to have someone walk the room with you, measure the firebox, and give you a plan that’s based on what’s actually there-not a number pulled from a web search. That’s exactly what I do at ChimneyKS, and I’d rather spend 45 minutes sketching it out at your place than have you make a $4,000 decision based on guesswork.
Most straightforward conversions go from site visit to lit insert in 1-2 weeks-a couple of days for planning and ordering, one installation day if the vent route cooperates. More complex projects with masonry prep or custom vent runs can stretch to 2-3 weeks. I try to give a realistic timeline on the first visit rather than promise something that falls apart when a part’s backordered.
That depends on the insert model. Some direct vent units have a standing pilot that operates without power, giving you heat and flame during outages. Units with electronic ignition only will need power to start. Worth discussing during model selection-especially in KC where ice storms knock out power for days at a time.
Not always, and this surprises a lot of people. Direct vent inserts use a coaxial pipe system that often terminates through a sidewall or through a co-axial cap at the top of the chimney. The old masonry flue may get decommissioned entirely, or the vent may route through an exterior wall instead. The chimney’s structural condition still matters, though-it’s holding up whatever termination system we use.
Often they don’t have to change at all. Direct vent inserts come with face trim that covers the gap between the insert and the firebox opening, and most existing mantels have enough clearance. That said, some older brick surrounds sit too close to where the new face trim lands, and some homeowners use the conversion as a chance to update the whole hearth area. Either way, it’s a conversation to have early so you’re not surprised by the look on installation day.
Dramatically less. No creosote, no ash, no chimney sweeping season. You’ll want an annual inspection before each heating season to check the vent termination, burner condition, and gas connections-and the glass front needs periodic cleaning with a rated cleaner when you notice buildup. If the flame pattern ever changes or you see sooting on the inside of the glass, call before running it again-that’s the insert telling you something shifted in the combustion setup.
Converting a wood fireplace to a sealed direct vent gas system is one of the few home projects that can make a KC living room feel warmer, safer, and cleaner all at the same time-and unlike most renovations, you’ll notice the difference the very first night you use it. Call ChimneyKS and let Luis walk your specific fireplace, sketch out the plan on whatever’s handy, and give you a real-world estimate based on what’s actually in front of him-not a number pulled out of a pricing guide written for a house he’s never seen.