Project Inputs
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Style | Fuel | Finish | Size (ft) | Pad (sqft) | Utilities |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compact Lounge | Kit | Electric | Stucco | 4×3×1.5 | 16 | Electrical |
| Entertainer’s Corner | Prefabricated | Gas | Brick | 6×4×2 | 30 | Gas line, lighting |
| Signature Feature | Custom Masonry | Wood Burning | Stone Veneer | 8×5×2.5 | 60 | Chimney, lighting, seating wall |
Formula Used
The estimator builds a total by combining equipment, finish materials, site items, and labor. Facing area is approximated using the front plus both sides.
- Facing Area (sqft) = (Width × Height) + 2 × (Depth × Height)
- Materials Subtotal = Firebox + Finish + Hearth + Venting + Utilities + Add-ons + Fees
- Labor Cost = Estimated Hours × Labor Rate
- Subtotal = (Materials Subtotal + Labor Cost) × Seasonal Multiplier
- Contingency = Subtotal × (Contingency % ÷ 100)
- Tax = (Subtotal + Contingency) × (Tax % ÷ 100)
- Total = Subtotal + Contingency + Tax
Edit the built-in rates in the file if your market differs.
How to Use This Calculator
- Choose currency, build style, fuel, and finish.
- Enter fireplace dimensions and pad area accurately.
- Set vent height and gas line length if required.
- Toggle add-ons like lighting and seating walls.
- Adjust labor, fees, contingency, and tax for your area.
- Click Estimate Cost to see the breakdown.
- Download CSV or PDF to share with contractors.
Professional Cost Guide
1. Purpose and scope
This estimator turns design selections into a repeatable budget. It combines equipment, finish quantities, utility allowances, and a labor-hours model. Use it early to compare options, then refine once you have site measurements and contractor feedback.
2. Typical cost bands
Small electric or kit builds often start near the low thousands, while custom masonry features can climb into five figures. Size matters because facing area increases with width, height, and depth. A larger hearth or patio extension adds material and base work quickly. As a quick rule, every extra square foot of facing can add finish cost and time.
3. Fuel and venting choices
Wood-burning builds usually need the most venting work, plus spark control and weather protection. Gas and propane often require trenching, a shutoff, and a pressure test. Electric units avoid venting, but still benefit from a protected circuit and weather-rated components.
4. Finish and hearth materials
Finishes can shift costs dramatically. Stone and tile are typically labor-heavy, while stucco and simple concrete finishes can be faster. The calculator prices facing by estimated square footage and applies finish-based time factors. Hearth materials also vary by sub-base needs and jointing.
5. Utilities and add-ons
Utilities are frequent scope items. Gas line length is priced per foot, and electrical is added as a practical allowance. Accent lighting improves usability and aesthetics, and seating walls increase both materials and install time. Demolition and site preparation are common on retrofit projects. Include drainage gravel and base thickness if your pad sits on fill or clay soils often.
6. Labor and access impacts
Labor is modeled from a base complexity, then adjusted for size, hearth area, finish difficulty, and access. Tight access, long carry paths, or limited staging space can raise hours substantially. Align the labor rate with your market and consider peak-season multipliers during busy months.
7. Permits, safety, and durability
Permits may be required for gas work, electrical, or foundations. Choose outdoor-rated materials, manage drainage away from the base, and plan for thermal movement in hardscape joints. For wood systems, follow clearance rules, use proper liners, and keep combustible landscaping back.
8. Budgeting and next steps
After estimating, review the breakdown line by line and confirm assumptions. Add contingency for unknown soil conditions, hidden utilities, or design changes. Request itemized quotes using the same inputs so comparisons stay fair. Finalize drawings, schedule inspections, and build with confidence.
FAQs
What does the estimator include?
It includes equipment, finishes, hearth or pad, venting, utilities, common add-ons, fees, and estimated labor hours. Then it applies seasonal pricing, contingency, and tax to produce a total budget.
How accurate are the default rates?
Defaults are planning averages. Update finish rates, labor rate, and fees to match local bids. If your contractor quotes by line item, align each allowance to improve accuracy.
Why does depth affect cost?
Depth increases side facing area and usually increases structural mass. That raises finish quantities and labor handling time, even when width and height stay the same.
When should I add a gas line length?
Add it for gas or propane options when you expect trenching or piping from a supply point. Measure the likely route, not the straight-line distance, and include setbacks around hardscape.
Do I need a permit?
Many areas require permits for gas piping, electrical work, and some foundations. Verify with your local authority and include inspection costs if your municipality charges separately.
What contingency percentage is reasonable?
For a simple kit on a known base, 5–10% may work. For custom masonry, unknown soils, or utility trenching, 10–20% is safer, especially with design changes.
How do I use the download buttons?
After calculating, use CSV for spreadsheets and quoting templates. Use PDF for a one-page shareable summary with inputs, breakdown, and totals to send to installers or clients.