“Creosote” covers three very different substances, the way “water” covers steam and ice. The staging system matters because each stage responds to different tools, and because the jump from stage 2 to stage 3 is where a maintenance item becomes a fire hazard.
Stage 1: soot (the easy years)
Looks like: matte black dust, like the inside of a barbecue. Behavior: brushes off completely with standard sweeping. Meaning: your burning habits are good and your schedule is working, this is what we want to find at every annual sweep. Still flammable, still needs removing, but entirely routine.
Stage 2: tar flakes (the warning years)
Looks like: crunchy, shiny-black flakes, like burnt granola stuck to the walls. Behavior: too dense for basic brushing; rotary tools with heavier heads clear it with effort. Meaning: deposition has outpaced cleaning, from wet wood, slow burns, or skipped years. Stage 2 is the fork in the road: clean it now and adjust habits, or meet stage 3.
Stage 3: glaze (the hazard)
Looks like: a smooth, shiny, tar-like coating, sometimes dripping or bubbled, like poured glass. Behavior: brushes skate over it; it’s chemically bonded to the liner. Removal is a specialist job, chemical treatment that breaks the bond, then mechanical extraction. Meaning: your flue is coated in concentrated fuel. Stage 3 is what serious chimney fires burn, and finding it means no more fires until it’s out, more in our glaze deep-dive.
The practical takeaway
You can’t see your own flue walls well enough to stage them, but a tech with a light and camera stages them in minutes during any inspection. Stage 1: routine sweep, carry on. Stage 2: thorough cleaning plus a conversation about wood and burn habits. Stage 3: call us before the next fire, not after.