Log Burner Installation: Part J Air Supply, Hearth Dimensions and HETAS Registration

Quick Answer: Log burner installation in England must comply with Approved Document J (Combustion Appliances). All installations must be notified to Building Control — either through a HETAS-registered installer (self-certification) or by submitting a Building Notice. The hearth must be non-combustible, minimum 840mm × 840mm, the flue minimum 150mm diameter for output up to 20kW, and adequate air supply must be provided.

Summary

A log burner (solid fuel stove) is one of the most popular home improvement projects in the UK, but it is also one of the most heavily regulated. Approved Document J covers all combustion appliances: gas, oil and solid fuel. For solid fuel stoves, HETAS (Heating Equipment Testing and Approvals Scheme) is the relevant competent person scheme.

Installing a log burner without notifying Building Control is a criminal offence under the Building Act 1984. The consequences go beyond legal penalties — household insurance can be invalidated and the installation will need retrospective approval when selling the property, often requiring costly remediation.

The most common installation failures involve inadequate air supply, incorrect flue sizing, hearths that are too small or made from combustible materials, and flue terminals in prohibited positions. All of these are covered by Approved Document J and HETAS guidance.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Parameter Requirement
Minimum flue diameter (up to 20kW) 150mm
Minimum flue height from appliance outlet 4.5m
Hearth minimum size 840mm × 840mm
Hearth front projection minimum 300mm beyond door opening
Hearth non-combustible depth 125mm (250mm over combustible base)
Air vent sizing 550 mm² free area per kW above 5kW
CO alarm requirement Mandatory in England from Oct 2022
Smoke Control Area — permitted appliances DEFRA-exempt only
HETAS competent person scope Solid fuel and biomass appliances
Flue liner grade for solid fuel 904L stainless (316 for gas only)
External twin-wall clearance to combustibles 50mm minimum (manufacturer-specific)

Detailed Guidance

Air Supply Requirements

Approved Document J requires all combustion appliances to have adequate air. The calculation method:

Hearth Construction

The hearth serves two purposes: containing fallen embers and providing thermal insulation between the hot base of the stove and any combustible floor.

Standard hearth (over non-combustible base):

Hearth over combustible floor (timber joists/boards):

Pre-fabricated hearths: Proprietary hearth systems are available from manufacturers — these come with declared performance and are typically 125mm or 75mm with a certified thermal break. Always check the certificate covers your appliance output.

Flue and Liner Requirements

New flue installation (twin-wall):

Lining an existing chimney:

Flue gas test: After commissioning, a spillage test (Antistatic smoke pellet) checks that combustion products are properly drawn up the flue and not spilling into the room.

HETAS Registration and Building Control

If HETAS registered:

  1. Installer carries out work
  2. Issues a BS 8303/HETAS commissioning certificate
  3. Notifies HETAS within 30 days
  4. HETAS notifies Building Control on installer's behalf
  5. Building Control issues a completion certificate to homeowner

If NOT HETAS registered:

  1. Building Notice must be submitted to Local Authority Building Control before work starts
  2. LABC inspects work at stages: hearth, flue route, final commissioning
  3. Full Plans application is an alternative

Retrospective regularisation: If a log burner was installed without any notification, a regularisation certificate can be applied for. This requires an inspection by Building Control and may require flue gas testing and visual access to all flue joints. Without a certificate, house sale can be problematic.

Smoke Control Areas

In a Smoke Control Area (London, most city centres, many residential areas), you cannot burn wood, coal or solid fuel in a standard stove. You have two options:

  1. Use a DEFRA-exempt appliance — these pass a certified burn test and can legally be used in SCAs with permitted fuels
  2. Use gas or electric

Check whether your property is in a SCA at smokecontrol.defra.gov.uk. Local councils can also confirm. Burning non-permitted fuel carries a fixed penalty notice of £175–£1,000.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a log burner need planning permission?

Usually not for internal installations. However, if the flue exits through a side or front wall and is visible from a highway, permitted development rights may not apply and planning may be needed. In conservation areas and on listed buildings, consent is almost always required for new flue penetrations.

Can I install a log burner myself without being HETAS registered?

Yes — but you must submit a Building Notice to your Local Authority Building Control before starting work. LABC will charge an inspection fee and will visit at stages. Many LA Building Control teams are less familiar with HETAS standards than a registered installer, so this route can be slower and more uncertain. A HETAS registered installer is strongly recommended.

What fuel is best for a new log burner?

Ready to Burn certified logs (≤20% moisture) produce fewer PM2.5 emissions and less creosote than wet/unseasoned wood. Anthracite and dry manufactured fuels work in stoves rated for solid mineral fuel. Multi-fuel stoves can burn both wood and solid mineral fuel; wood-only stoves (with a flat grate) should not be used for coal.

How often does the flue need sweeping?

The National Association of Chimney Sweeps (NACS) recommends sweeping at least once a year for wood-burning stoves, and twice a year for coal or multi-fuel use. Insurers may require annual sweeping certificates.

What size log burner do I need?

As a rough guide: 1kW per 14m³ room volume for a well-insulated room; 1kW per 10m³ for a poorly insulated one. Most domestic living rooms suit a 5–8kW stove. Oversized stoves are a common problem — a stove that's too large can't be run at low output without smouldering and creosote formation.

Regulations & Standards