Quick Answer

A wood heater in Melbourne costs $2,500–$7,500 installed, including the unit, flue system, and installation. Freestanding slow-combustion heaters start from around $2,500 all-in for a basic setup; large high-efficiency heaters with long flue runs and custom surrounds can reach $8,000+. EPA-approved slow-combustion heaters are required in most Melbourne councils.

A wood heater offers the lowest running cost of any home heating option in Melbourne — and for families with access to cheap firewood in the SE suburbs, the economics are compelling. This guide covers purchase costs, installation costs, EPA requirements, firewood costs, and the ongoing maintenance that keeps a wood heater safe and efficient for 20+ years.

A slow-combustion wood heater on a slate hearth tile — the glass viewing window and tight door seal are key quality indicators that separate genuine s
A slow-combustion wood heater on a slate hearth tile — the glass viewing window and tight door seal are key quality indicators that separate genuine slow-combustion heaters from older open-firebox designs.

Complete Wood Heater Cost Breakdown

Unit Costs by Type

Type Unit Cost Heat Output Best For
Small slow-combustion (6–8kW) $900–$2,000 Up to 100m² Small rooms, cottages, 2-bed homes
Medium slow-combustion (10–14kW) $1,500–$3,500 Up to 200m² 3–4 bed homes, open-plan living
Large slow-combustion (16–22kW) $3,000–$6,000 Up to 350m² Large homes, high ceilings, drafty houses
Insert (fits existing fireplace) $1,200–$3,500 Varies Converting open fireplaces for efficiency
Cast iron premium brands $3,000–$7,000 Varies Long service life, Nectre, Jindara, Cheminees Philippe
Pro tip: For a typical 3-bed brick veneer in Berwick, Narre Warren, or Pakenham, a 10–14kW slow-combustion heater will heat most of the home if you leave internal doors open. Oversizing wastes firewood and chokes the flue.

Installation Costs

Component Cost Notes
Professional installation (labour) $600–$1,500 Heater placement, connection to flue, commissioning
Single-wall flue kit (basic) $400–$900 For lower-ceiling homes with short flue runs
Double-wall insulated flue kit $800–$2,500 Recommended for efficient draft; longer runs, multi-storey
Ceiling and roof penetration kit $200–$500 Includes fire collar, flashing, rain cap
Slate or tile hearth pad $200–$600 Required minimum 300mm clearance around unit
Custom brick/rendered surround $500–$2,500 Optional — many heaters are freestanding without surround
Installing a double-wall stainless steel flue through a ceiling bracket — double-wall insulated flue maintains higher flue temperatures, which improve
Installing a double-wall stainless steel flue through a ceiling bracket — double-wall insulated flue maintains higher flue temperatures, which improves draft and reduces creosote build-up over time.

Total Installed Costs

Scenario Total Cost Notes
Basic small heater, short flue $2,500–$4,000 Budget freestanding unit, single-wall flue, slate pad
Mid-range heater, standard install $4,000–$6,500 10–14kW unit, double-wall flue, tiled hearth
Premium heater, long flue run $6,500–$10,000 Cast iron unit, multi-storey flue, custom surround
Insert into existing fireplace $3,000–$6,000 Unit + flue liner for existing masonry chimney

Firewood Running Costs

Wood Type Cost per Tonne Heat Value Notes
Red Gum $350–$500 High Best burning wood in SE Vic — burns long and hot
Box (Yellow/Grey) $300–$450 High Excellent alternative to Red Gum, similar heat output
Ironbark $400–$550 Very high Premium hardwood, very dense, burns extremely slowly
Hardwood mixed $250–$380 Medium-high Good budget choice — quality varies by supplier
Pine/softwood $150–$250 Low Not recommended — low heat, high creosote, fast burn

A typical Melbourne household burns 3–5 tonnes of firewood per winter (May–September). At $350/tonne for Red Gum, that’s $1,050–$1,750 per year — far lower than gas or electric heating. Buy firewood seasoned (moisture content below 20%): green wood produces 30–50% less heat and triple the creosote deposits.

Pro tip: Order firewood in March–April before winter demand peaks. Prices in the Dandenong Ranges and Mornington Peninsula areas can rise 20–30% in June–July as supplies tighten.

EPA Requirements in Melbourne

All new wood heaters sold in Victoria must be EPA-approved slow-combustion heaters meeting emission limits under the Environment Protection (Air Quality) Policy. Open fireplaces and old pot-belly stoves are not EPA-approved and are banned for new installations in most Melbourne councils. When buying, confirm the heater has current EPA approval certification — reputable brands like Nectre, Jindara, Pyrox, and Lopi all carry approval.

Safety warning: During declared air quality alert days in Melbourne (usually during winter inversions), you may be asked to voluntarily stop using your wood heater. Check EPA Victoria’s AirWatch website for alerts in your area.
Loading split Red Gum hardwood into a slow-combustion wood heater — dry seasoned hardwood with under 20% moisture content produces up to 50% more heat
Loading split Red Gum hardwood into a slow-combustion wood heater — dry seasoned hardwood with under 20% moisture content produces up to 50% more heat than green wood and far less creosote.

Maintenance Costs

Maintenance Task Frequency Cost DIY or Pro
Flue/chimney sweep Annually $150–$300 Pro recommended
Door gasket replacement Every 2–3 years $30–$80 DIY DIY — rope gasket from hardware store
Glass ceramic replacement As needed $80–$200 fitted DIY possible — measure carefully
Baffle plate replacement Every 5–10 years $100–$300 fitted DIY or pro
Firebricks replacement Every 5–15 years $150–$400 fitted DIY or pro
Checking the door gasket seal — a worn or compressed gasket allows air leaks that bypass the air control, making the heater burn uncontrollably fast a
Checking the door gasket seal — a worn or compressed gasket allows air leaks that bypass the air control, making the heater burn uncontrollably fast and wasting firewood.

Top 10 Tips and Gotchas

  1. Never burn unseasoned (green) wood — moisture content above 25% produces creosote that coats your flue and can cause chimney fires.
  2. Size correctly — an oversized heater forced to burn low produces more pollution and creosote than a correctly sized unit burning at optimal temperature.
  3. Annual flue sweep — creosote builds up every season. A chimney fire in a residential street causes significant damage and smoke hazard.
  4. Install a CO detector — even well-maintained wood heaters can back-draft CO into the room if the flue is blocked by a bird’s nest or debris.
  5. Hearth clearances — maintain minimum 300mm clearance from combustibles on all sides. Check your heater’s installation manual for exact specs.
  6. Get EPA certification — when buying second-hand, verify the model has current EPA approval. Older models may be banned from new installation.
  7. Double-wall flue for efficiency — insulated double-wall flue maintains higher flue temperatures, improving draft and reducing creosote over single-wall flue.
  8. Council check — some inner Melbourne councils have restrictions on wood heater installations. Check with your local council before purchasing.
  9. Dry wood storage — store firewood under cover for at least 12 months. SE Melbourne’s wet winters mean wood left outdoors stays damp and performs poorly.
  10. Smoke check — watch for visible smoke from your chimney during normal operation. Excessive smoke means the wood is wet, the fire is too small, or the air control is too restricted.

Local Melbourne Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

What size wood heater do I need for a Melbourne home?

For a 3-bed brick veneer in the SE suburbs, a 10–14kW heater is the right range. Measure your main living area in m² and check the heater’s rated coverage. In cold, drafty homes or high-ceiling Victorian-era properties, size up by 20%.

How often do I need to clean the flue?

At minimum annually — ideally at the end of winter before storage season. If you burn more than 4 tonnes per year or ever burn unseasoned wood, sweep twice yearly. Creosote build-up is the primary cause of chimney fires.

Can I install a wood heater in an apartment in Melbourne?

No. Wood heaters require a Class 1 building (standalone house or townhouse with its own chimney flue system). Apartments and units (Class 2 buildings) cannot install wood heaters under Victorian regulations.

What wood burns longest in Melbourne?

Red Gum is the premium choice — dense, high-heat, slow-burning. Box (Yellow Box, Grey Box) is an excellent and often cheaper alternative. Both are readily available from firewood suppliers in Pakenham, Officer, and Cranbourne areas.

How long does a wood heater last?

Quality cast iron wood heaters from brands like Nectre and Jindara last 20–30 years with proper maintenance. The main wear items are door gaskets (2–3 years), firebricks (10–15 years), and baffles (8–12 years) — all replaceable.

Final Thoughts

For Melbourne homeowners with space for firewood storage, a wood heater delivers the lowest running cost of any heating option — and the kind of radiant, enveloping warmth that no ducted system or split system can replicate. The $2,500–$7,500 installation cost typically pays back in fuel savings within 3–5 years.

  • Buy EPA-approved slow-combustion only — old pot-belly stoves are a false economy
  • Size correctly: a correctly sized unit burns cleaner and more efficiently than an oversized unit choked down low
  • Budget for annual flue sweeping — it’s the most important maintenance task
  • Order seasoned Red Gum or Box in autumn to avoid winter price spikes
An annual chimney sweep is the single most important wood heater maintenance task — creosote build-up in an uncleaned flue is the primary cause of hou
An annual chimney sweep is the single most important wood heater maintenance task — creosote build-up in an uncleaned flue is the primary cause of house fires from wood heating.