Heat That Holds Up on Wyoming's High Plains.
Wood, gas, pellet, and electric fireplace resources for every county and city in Wyoming—built for wind-driven cold from the Cheyenne prairie to Jackson Hole's mountain valleys. Find the right unit and connect with a trusted local dealer.
Every Project Starts From One of These Five Situations
Least populated, most exposed to wind and cold.
Wyoming is the least populated state in the country, and its heating needs are shaped as much by wind and elevation as by temperature alone. Winter heating loads run from roughly what you'd see in Cheyenne up to notably higher levels in Jackson, with the Wind River Range, the Bighorns, and the Yellowstone high country pushing well into IECC zone 7. Natural gas service is reliable in Cheyenne, Casper, Laramie, and Sheridan, but outside those corridors many ranch and rural homes run on propane, and a fair number rely on wood as a genuine primary or backup heat source when winter storms knock out power for days at a time.
That's the backdrop for this page. Enter your zip and fuel above to get routed to the right local resources, or browse by county or city below. Wherever you start, you'll end up matched with a trusted local dealer who knows how to size venting for sustained wind loading and sub-zero cold—not a big-box crew guessing at your climate—and you'll get a free Project Guide & Parts List built around your specific home.

Local guidance, county by county.
Every guide below is built for its own community—same honest process, local numbers.
Three steps. No salesperson until you're ready.
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.
See what's actually available
The brands dealers within 100 miles genuinely carry—real options, never a catalog mirage.
Get your dealer & Project Guide
A trusted local dealer, plus the free Project Guide & Parts List that names every component of the job.
Frequently Asked Questions
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.
Can a fireplace actually lower my heating bill?
Yes—by creating a comfort zone. A furnace heats every square foot of the house just to warm the one room you're in; a gas fireplace on low burns roughly a sixth of the gas a typical furnace does. Set the furnace around 55–60 degrees as a baseline, then heat the rooms your family actually uses. Families who heat this way commonly save $20–$60 a month.
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.
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.
Every Hearth Dealer in Wyoming
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.
A D Martin Lumber Company Inc
Get matched with a Wyoming hearth dealer.
Enter your zip code, fuel, and situation at the top of the page and we'll match you with a trusted local dealer and send you a free Project Guide & Parts List—the exact components, including the vent kit, sized for Wyoming wind and cold.
Find Your Fireplace →