What's In This Article
What a Chase Cover Is (And Who Has One)
If your home was built roughly between the 1990s and the 2010s, there's a good chance your "chimney" isn't masonry at all. It's a chase: a wood-framed box, clad in siding, containing a metal factory-built fireplace and its flue pipe.
That box has to be closed at the top. The lid is called a chase cover — a sheet-metal pan, folded down over the edges of the chase, with a hole in it for the flue pipe to pass through.
The chase cover is the only thing standing between rain and the entire wood structure underneath. It is a single sheet of metal doing the job of a roof. When it fails, everything below it gets wet.
A crown is the concrete slab on top of a masonry chimney. A chase cover is the metal lid on top of a framed chase. Different structure, different failure mode, different fix. People mix these up constantly, including some contractors.
Why Galvanized Covers Always Rust — The Metallurgy
Galvanized steel is ordinary steel with a thin coating of zinc. The zinc is sacrificial: it corrodes preferentially so the steel underneath doesn't. That works well — until the zinc is gone.
On a chase cover, the zinc has a hard life. It gets UV all day, it gets acidic flue condensate around the pipe collar, and — critically — most galvanized covers are flat, so water sits on them instead of running off. Standing water eats the zinc at the low spots first.
Once the zinc gives out, the steel underneath starts rusting immediately. The rust bleeds over the folded edge and runs down your siding. That's the streaking you can see from the driveway. By the time you can see it, the cover has already been failing for a while.
Realistic service life of a galvanized chase cover in Missouri: 10 to 15 years. Some make 20. None make 40.
3 Signs Your Chase Cover Is Failing Right Now
- Rust streaks on the siding below the chimney. The cover is already rusting. Not "might rust." Is rusting.
- Standing water or a visible dish in the cover. If it's flat or sagging, water is pooling. Pooled water accelerates everything.
- A gap, or old caulk, where the flue pipe passes through. That collar joint is the number one entry point. Caulk is not a permanent seal there; a proper collar and cross-break is.
Once water gets past the cover, it runs down inside the chase — behind the siding, where you can't see it. It soaks the sheathing, rots the framing, and destroys the house wrap. We have opened up chases where the sheathing was simply gone. That repair is not $500. It's $10,000 and up. Read the O'Fallon case study if you want to see what that actually looks like.
Swansea, IL: Galvanized Out, Custom Stainless In


We measured the chase, fabricated the cover to fit, and set it with proper overhanging edges and a cross-break — a shallow ridge pressed into the pan so that water has somewhere to go. A flat cover collects; a cross-broken cover drains. That single design detail is a large part of why one cover lasts 15 years and another lasts indefinitely.
The 30-Year Cost Comparison
Galvanized vs. Stainless — Real Numbers
Read that carefully. Over 30 years the two options cost roughly the same in materials — because you buy galvanized two or three times. The difference isn't really the money spent on covers. The difference is the risk you carry in the years when the galvanized one has failed and you haven't noticed yet.
Stainless steel doesn't rust. There's no sacrificial coating to run out. You install it once, correctly, and it stops being a thing you think about.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does chase cover replacement cost in St. Louis?
A custom stainless steel chase cover typically runs $800–$2,000 installed, depending on the size of the chase and the roof access. Galvanized costs less upfront ($200–$400) but needs replacing every 10–15 years. Free written estimate either way.
How do I know if my chase cover is bad?
Look for rust streaks running down the siding under the chimney, water pooling on top of the cover, a sagging or dished pan, or a gap where the flue pipe passes through. Any of those means it's failing now.
Is a chase cover the same as a chimney crown?
No. A crown is the poured concrete slab on top of a masonry chimney. A chase cover is the metal lid on a wood-framed, siding-clad chase — the kind found on homes built roughly 1990–2010 with factory-built fireplaces.
Can I just caulk my chase cover instead of replacing it?
Caulk buys time on a small collar gap; it does not fix a rusting pan. Once the steel itself is rusting through, sealant is being applied over a surface that's actively disintegrating underneath it.
How long does a stainless steel chase cover last?
Stainless has no sacrificial zinc layer to lose, so with proper fabrication and a cross-break to shed water, it should last the life of the home. It's a one-time purchase.
Free Chase Cover Inspection — Greater St. Louis & Metro East
If your prefab chimney is 15 years old or more, get the cover looked at before the rust reaches your framing. We'll photograph it and show you exactly what we see.



