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Fireplace and Stove Resources in New Hampshire

Find heat that lasts through a New Hampshire winter.

Wood, gas, pellet, and electric fireplace resources for every county and city in New Hampshire—from Seacoast colonials to North Country woodlots. Get matched with a trusted local dealer who knows what actually works in your town.

Start With Your Zip Code
Tell us a little about your project. We'll show you what works—and who can help.
Free Project Guide & Parts List Included · No Account Needed
We share your details only with your matched dealer · Privacy
51
Local Dealers Listed
4
Fuels Covered
100%
Free for Homeowners
20+
Years in the Fireplace Industry
Which One Is Your Home?

Every Project Starts From One of These Five Situations

About New Hampshire

One small state, two very different heating climates.

New Hampshire splits between IECC zone 5A in the southern tier and zone 6A across the White Mountains and North Country. Winter heating needs run at a level close enough to the Massachusetts line to track with Boston's suburbs in Nashua and Manchester, and climb well beyond that in Coos County towns like Berlin and Pittsburg—a climate closer to Burlington, Vermont than to Portsmouth. Wood heat is still the default up north, where homeowners burn sugar maple, yellow birch, and red oak off their own woodlots, and a catalytic stove that holds an overnight burn matters when January lows drop below zero. Pellet stoves fill the gap in towns without gas service, often stocked with bags from New England Wood Pellet, milled right in Jaffrey, alongside Lignetics and Maine Woods Pellet Co. Closer to the coast and along the Route 3 corridor, gas inserts dominate new construction in Nashua, Salem, and Derry, where natural gas lines and thermostat-controlled heat have largely replaced hauling wood.

This page is a starting point, not a catalog. Find My Fireplace doesn't sell or ship fireplaces—we match New Hampshire homeowners with a trusted local dealer who knows what's actually installable in your town, can pull the permit with your local fire department or building inspector, and sizes the venting correctly for your chimney or through-wall run. Enter your zip and fuel above, or browse by county or city below to reach dealers, typical installed costs, and recommended products for your part of the state.

Parents and kids reading beside wood fireplace
Recommended for New Hampshire

Top units for homes like yours.

Curated models that fit New Hampshire homes—sized for the local climate, with local dealers to help you with your project.

Enter your zip code to unlock

See the exact models, prices, and dealers available near you—free, in about a minute.

Browse by county

Local guidance, county by county.

Every guide below is built for its own community—same honest process, local numbers.

How It Works

Three steps. No salesperson until you're ready.

1

Tell us about your project

Your zip code, your situation, and the fuel you're leaning toward—or let the answers point you to one.

2

See what's actually available

The brands dealers within 100 miles genuinely carry—real options, never a catalog mirage.

3

Get your dealer & Project Guide

A trusted local dealer, plus the free Project Guide & Parts List that names every component of the job.

Start With Your Zip Code
Tell us a little about your project. We'll show you what works—and who can help.
Free Project Guide & Parts List Included · No Account Needed
We share your details only with your matched dealer · Privacy

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I budget for a fireplace?

For an average home—covering the fireplace, the vent pipe, and basic installation—a budget between $3,900 and $5,500 gives you a lot of options across wood, gas, and pellet. By the time you add finish work, gas line, and electrical, the average complete installation lands between $5,000 and $12,000 all-in. In a remodel or new build, a good rule is to put about 2.5% of the total project cost toward the fireplace.

Can I install a fireplace myself?

If you're putting a fire in your house on purpose, it's best to work with an expert. Unless you're genuinely experienced in framing, gas line, vent pipe, and the national code on clearances to combustibles, have a professional do it—and ideally the same company that sells you the fireplace, so warranty, service, and liability all live under one roof.

What is an in-home preview and do I need one?

It's a visit where a hearth professional measures your space, confirms the model you picked actually works in your home, and walks the specs—framing, gas line, venting, finish work—before anything is ordered. Some details you just can't know until you see the house. Never make a down payment without one; it's the single most-skipped step that burns buyers.

Does a fireplace add value to my home?

On average, a fireplace adds back to the home about the same amount you spent installing it. Add the monthly savings from heating the rooms you actually use instead of the whole house—often hundreds of dollars a year—and the value case is strong before you even count what a fire does for how your family uses the room.

Talk to a real shop

Every Hearth Dealer in New Hampshire

Preferred dealers are established local hearth shops from our partner network—real showrooms with real people to help you with your project. Every dealer listed is authorized by the manufacturers it represents and carries brands sold in this state.

Preferred Dealers
Belknap County 5 Dealers
Carroll County 4 Dealers
Cheshire County 6 Dealers
Coos County 1 Dealer
Grafton County 3 Dealers

Hearth Works Warehouse

77 Londonderry Turnpike Rt 28 By Pass, Hooksett
Ready to Start?

Find your fireplace in New Hampshire.

Enter your zip code and fuel at the top of the page and we'll match you with a trusted local dealer and send a free Project Guide & Parts List—the exact parts, vent kit, and recommended dealer for your project. Or pick your county above to start browsing.

Find Your Fireplace →