Wood Stove Hearth Pad Requirements
Size, material, thickness β exactly what the code requires and what inspectors measure. Covers IRC R1004.4, NFPA 211 Β§8.6, and common installation mistakes.
The hearth pad β the non-combustible floor protection under and around a wood stove β is one of the most-failed items in wood stove inspections. The most common mistake isn't the material; it's measuring from the wrong reference point.
Why a Hearth Pad Is Required
A wood stove radiates significant heat downward through its legs or base, and the firebox door exposes the floor to falling embers during loading. Without adequate floor protection, wood subflooring, carpet, and hardwood can char or ignite over time β often without visible external signs until a fire starts within the floor structure. The hearth pad provides thermal mass to absorb and dissipate that heat.
Hearth Pad Dimensions (IRC R1004.4)
The required hearth extension depends on the size of the firebox opening β not the stove's overall body dimensions:
| Firebox Opening Area | Front Extension | Side Extension | Rear Extension |
|---|---|---|---|
| Less than 6 sq ft (most freestanding stoves) | 16 in. | 8 in. each side | 8 in. |
| 6 sq ft or greater | 20 in. | 12 in. each side | 12 in. |
Measure from the firebox opening edge β not the stove body. If your stove's body extends 4 inches beyond the firebox door, a 16-inch front extension from the body face only puts 12 inches of protection past the opening. The inspector measures from the opening, so your pad must extend 16 inches past that point.
Approved Hearth Pad Materials
The material must be non-combustible and provide adequate thermal protection. Approved options under NFPA 211 Β§8.6:
- Listed hearth pads β factory-tested assemblies (look for UL listing). Easiest to install and always passes if correctly sized.
- Brick or stone masonry β minimum 4 inches thick on a non-combustible base (ΒΌ-in. millboard or cement board over concrete slab).
- Concrete block or paver stones β minimum 4 inches thick with proper substrate.
- Ceramic or porcelain tile β only when laid over a minimum ΒΌ-in. non-combustible board (cement board or millboard) on a combustible subfloor. Tile set directly over wood subfloor with thin-set mortar does NOT qualify.
- Soapstone, slate, granite β acceptable when minimum thickness and non-combustible substrate requirements are met.
What does NOT qualify: Decorative stone veneer (too thin), tile over wood subfloor alone, metal sheet alone without thermal mass, cork or rubber underlayments.
Hearth Pad for Elevated Stoves
If your stove sits on legs that elevate the bottom of the firebox 6 inches or more above the floor, the minimum front extension is reduced to 8 inches (from the firebox opening). This accounts for the reduced radiant heat at floor level. Check your stove's certification label β some elevated stoves specify their own hearth requirements.
Building the Hearth Pad: Practical Construction Notes
For the most common installation β listed hearth pad or tile over cement board on a wood subfloor:
- Cut ΒΌ-inch fiber cement board (HardieBacker or similar) to the correct pad dimensions
- Fasten to the subfloor with appropriate screws
- Set tiles or stone in thin-set mortar; grout joints
- Confirm total dimensions extend correct distance past firebox opening (not stove body) before the stove goes in place β it's much harder to fix after
If using a listed hearth pad product, follow the manufacturer's instructions exactly β listed systems are tested as complete assemblies and field modifications can affect their listing.
What the Inspector Measures
The inspector will bring a tape measure and verify:
- Front extension measured from firebox opening edge to pad edge: must be β₯ 16 in. (or 20 in.)
- Side extensions measured from each side of the firebox opening: must be β₯ 8 in. (or 12 in.)
- Rear extension: must be β₯ 8 in. (or 12 in.) past the stove's back connection point or firebox opening rear
- Material is visually non-combustible and not deteriorated
- No combustible material is accessible at stove perimeter (no wood trim flush with pad edge under the stove)
Yes β concrete pavers (minimum 4 inches thick) placed on a non-combustible base are acceptable. They must be level, stable, and cover the required dimensions. The edges should not create a tripping hazard, and the surface must be smooth enough not to trap embers. Standard landscape pavers are typically 1.5β2 inches thick and do not qualify alone β use thicker concrete pavers or stack them.
The manufacturer's certified clearance governs β it is the legally tested value for that specific stove. If your stove's certification lists a 12-inch front extension (common on elevated stoves), your inspector should accept that with documentation. Bring the installation manual to the inspection. However, some local jurisdictions have adopted stricter local amendments β your building department is the final authority.
No β the code doesn't regulate aesthetics. Your hearth pad can be any color, pattern, or finish you like as long as the material and dimensions are correct. This is one of the few parts of a wood stove installation where homeowners have complete creative freedom.