A certified, permitted, well-maintained wood stove is a genuine selling point — buyers who heat with wood specifically seek out homes with stoves. But an uncertified, unpermitted, or poorly maintained stove can derail a sale, require costly repairs or removal, or trigger disclosure obligations that reduce your negotiating position. Here's what to address before listing.

States That Require Decommissioning at Sale

Two states have explicit laws requiring non-EPA-certified wood stoves to be removed or permanently decommissioned before a home sale can close:

Several Colorado jurisdictions (Telluride, Crested Butte, and some Front Range municipalities) have local ordinances with similar requirements. Check with a local real estate attorney if you're selling in Colorado mountain communities.

Disclosure Obligations in Other States

Even where decommissioning is not required by law, most states require sellers to disclose known material defects — which can include an unpermitted solid fuel appliance, a non-certified stove, or known chimney problems. Your state's standard disclosure form may have a specific question about wood-burning appliances. Misrepresenting or failing to disclose known issues creates legal liability.

Best practice: be proactive. Gather documentation of the stove's EPA certification, the original building permit, and the most recent chimney inspection/cleaning. Presenting this information upfront builds buyer confidence and prevents negotiation problems downstream.

What the Buyer's Inspector Will Check

Buyers' home inspectors and chimney inspectors will typically examine:

A Level 2 chimney inspection (with video scan) is increasingly requested by buyers, especially for older installations. Consider having one done before listing — it gives you the opportunity to address problems on your timeline rather than under contract pressure.

What Appraisers Look For

Residential appraisers treat wood stoves as personal property or fixtures depending on how they're attached. A properly installed, permitted, EPA-certified wood stove is generally treated as a fixture and adds value. An uncertified or unpermitted stove may be noted as a non-conforming feature and could reduce appraised value or trigger a "subject to" condition requiring resolution before loan funding. FHA and VA loans have specific requirements for solid fuel appliances — they must be EPA certified and properly permitted for the loan to close.

Preparing Your Stove for Sale

Disclaimer: For informational purposes only. Real estate disclosure requirements vary by state. Consult a real estate attorney in your state for guidance specific to your transaction.