ePrivacy and GPDR Cookie Consent by Cookie Consent Is it time to extinguish home fireplaces?

Is it time to extinguish fireplaces in the home? Is cosy living really worth the cost?

9 min read
Oct '25 • by Molly-Sue Moore

Quick summary

If you want to cut costs and reduce environmental harm, it’s best to extinguish fireplaces now, especially open wood fires or gas fires, which can cause pollution and health risks. Replacing them with electric fires or improving home insulation can take a few weeks and cost around £1000 to £3000 for a typical home, but ongoing savings and health benefits make it worth considering.

Depending on who you ask, wood and gas fireplaces and wood-burning stoves are either the pinnacle of what it means to be cosy or a smoky hassle that threatens you with monotonous maintenance and a nasty cough. Two things can be true at the same time and we’re weighing up our penchant for fireside nostalgia with the true practicalities of having a fireplace today.

Pros of fireplaces:

Cosiness

At the risk of sounding very 2017, a fireplace can help increase the hygge of your home. According to Meik Wiking, CEO of the Happiness Institute in Copenhagen and author of The Little Book of Hygge: The Danish Way to Live Well, a fireplace is the headquarters of Hygge in the home. Our very own Science of a Happy Home Report found that those who find relaxation in their homes are most likely to be satisfied with them. Considering Wiking’s findings that fireplaces encourage feelings of tranquility, there are strong implications that lighting up a fire at home could have a positive impact on your wellbeing (and would explain why there are so many YouTube videos of fires just burning!).

Cosy reading

Warmth and light

Open wood fireplaces are great at creating a localised glow of light and a comfortable ring of warmth that can heat the home through if it’s well-insulated. Wood burning stoves are an even more efficient option. But, because the heat doesn’t travel hugely far with either open fires or wood burning stoves, if you’re decided on keeping your wood fire days alight, we’d recommend limiting your usage to when as many people in your household benefit from the perks of it as possible or in smaller homes where you benefit from the heat more.

Home fireplace

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