Hearth Resources Across Saskatchewan

Find your fireplace built for Saskatchewan's eight-month winters.

From wind-driven prairie cold in the south to boreal forest near Lac La Ronge, Saskatchewan homes heat hard and heat long. Tell us your postal code and fuel, and we'll match you with a trusted local dealer plus a free Project Guide & Parts List sized for your home.

Start With Your Postal 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
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50
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 Saskatchewan's Hearth Landscape

Long winters, wide open prairie, and gas at the center of it all.

Saskatchewan runs three landscapes at once: open prairie in the south where wind turns an ordinary cold snap into something closer to Winnipeg's bone-deep chill, rolling parkland through the centre, and boreal forest reaching north past Prince Albert National Park toward Lac La Ronge. Nearly everywhere in the province, the heating season stretches close to eight months. Affordable natural gas through SaskEnergy's distribution network carries most homes through that stretch, which is why gas fireplaces and furnaces are the default from Regina to Saskatoon. Wood still earns its keep where the mains end—on farms around the Qu'Appelle Valley and Cypress Hills, and at lake cabins in the north where hauling propane or running a gas line simply isn't practical.

This page is a starting point, not a storefront—Find My Fireplace doesn't sell or ship hearth equipment. We match Saskatchewan homeowners with a trusted local dealer who knows what SaskEnergy actually serves in your area, what a farm property needs for backup wood heat, and how to size venting for a prairie wind that doesn't let up. You'll also get a free planning packet for the project. Browse by region or city below, or jump straight to your fuel.

Recommended for Saskatchewan

Top units for homes like yours.

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

Enter your postal 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 postal 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 Postal 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 many BTUs do I need in a fireplace?

Wrong question—and the industry's favorite way to confuse you. More BTUs isn't better if the fireplace cooks you out of the room you spent thousands to enjoy. Think in terms you can verify: how many square feet the unit heats, whether it's primary or backup heat, and whether you want it running overnight. Those three answers size a fireplace correctly every time.

Will we actually use a fireplace once we have one?

In my own home, the room with the fireplace has never been the same—it became the social hub. Game nights, holidays, date nights after the kids are down: the fire is where the house gathers. There's a reason people in this industry joke that we're really in the romance and entertainment business. You won't wonder whether you'll use it; you'll wonder how the room worked before.

What's the best fireplace for power outages?

Wood wins outright—no electricity, no moving parts, just fuel and a match, and a radiant stove keeps heating with the grid down for weeks. Gas is a close second: battery-backup ignition runs the fireplace fine without power (the blower stops, but radiant heat keeps coming). Pellet is the one to check carefully—most models need electricity for the auger and fans, so ask about battery backup.

I know I want a fireplace—where do I actually start?

Do two things today: snap a photo of the wall or fireplace you want to transform, and take a tape measure to the space—width, height, depth. Those two artifacts answer most of a hearth professional's first questions. Then settle fuel (wood, gas, pellet, or electric) and set a realistic budget: $3,900–$5,500 covers fireplace, vent, and basic install for most homes.

Talk to a real shop

Every Hearth Dealer in Saskatchewan

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.

E & L Building Contractors

9808 Thatcher Avenue, North Battleford

Main Plumbing & Heating Ltd.

Po Box 1658 113 Mcloed Ave E, Melfort

Metro Mechanical

214 Saskatchewan Dr E, Melfort

Weber Do It Center

Po Box 5006 175 York Rd W, Yorkton
Other 5 Dealers
Get Matched, Not Guessing

Get your free Project Guide for your Saskatchewan home.

Enter your postal code and fuel above and we'll match you with a trusted local Saskatchewan dealer—someone who knows the SaskEnergy service map, sizes venting for prairie wind, and handles the paperwork properly. You'll also get a free Project Guide & Parts List spelling out exactly what your installation needs, vent kit included.

Find Your Fireplace →