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  2. Burn Wise

Best Wood-Burning Practices

Properly installed, correctly used wood-burning appliances should generate very little smoke. If you regularly see or smell smoke, you may have a problem. Reduce smoke inside and outside your home using the steps. 

On this page:
 
  • Building a Fire
  • Safe Practices
  • What Not to Burn

Building a Fire

Dry Seasoned Wood
Wet Wood is a Waste
Burn only dry, split, well-seasoned wood. Properly seasoned wood is darker, weighs less, and sounds hollow when hit against another piece of wood. Find out more with the Wet Wood is a Waste brochure (pdf) (2.1 MB) and video.
  • An efficient, hot fire requires good firewood, using the right wood in the right amount, and good fire building technique. 
  • Season wood for at least six months. Be sure to store wood outdoors, off the ground, with only the top covered -- covering the sides traps in moisture.
  • Wood burns best at a moisture content of less than 20 percent. Test wood with a wood moisture meter before you burn it.
  • Start fires with newspaper, dry kindling, or all natural fire starters, or install a natural gas or propane log lighter in your open fireplace.

See best-practices videos for more on building a fire, building a wood storage shed, seasoning wood, testing wood with a moisture meter and proper stove operation.

Buy and burn locally cut firewood to decrease the risk of transporting invasive forest pests to your property. 

Learn more from the Don’t Move Firewood campaign.

Safe Wood-Burning Practices

Build Firewood Storage
example woodshed

Learn about simple and inexpensive ways to store firewood or build a firewood storage shed through how-to steps and short videos.

When using your wood burning appliance, follow these guidelines for safe operation:

  • Keep flammable items, like curtains, furniture, newspapers, and books, away from your appliance.
  • Only use newspaper, dry kindling and all-natural or organic fire starters. Never start a fire with gasoline, kerosene, or charcoal starter.
  • Do not burn wet or green (unseasoned) wood.
  • Many wax and sawdust logs are made for open hearth fireplaces only. Check your wood stove or fireplace insert operating instructions before using artificial logs.  
  • If you use manufactured logs, choose those made from 100 percent compressed sawdust.
  • Build hot fires. For most appliances, a smoldering fire is not safe or efficient.
  • Keep the doors of your wood-burning appliance closed unless loading or stoking the live fire. Harmful chemicals, like carbon monoxide, can be released into your home.
  • Regularly remove ashes into a covered, metal container. Store the container outdoors on a nonflammable surface.
  • Keep a fire extinguisher handy. 
  • Check your local air quality forecast before you burn.

What Not to Burn

Upgrade your Wood-burning Appliance

Upgrade your old wood burning device to a cleaner, more efficient appliance (gas, heat pump, EPA-certified stove). Consider efficiency, emissions, and the size of the space you'll be heating. Learn more about choosing wood-burning appliances.

Label indicating a wood burning appliance is EPA certified

These materials can release toxic or harmful chemicals when burned, and may damage your appliance:

  • Household trash, including cardboard, plastics, foam and the colored ink on magazines, boxes, and wrappers
  • Coated, painted, and pressure-treated wood
  • Ocean driftwood, plywood, particle board, or any wood with glue on or in it
  • Wet, rotted, diseased, or moldy wood
  • Plastic, asbestos, rubber, manure and animal remains

Burn Wise

  • What You Can Do
  • Wood Smoke Resources in Your State
  • Program Participation
  • Wood Smoke and Your Health
  • Consumers
  • Air Agencies
  • Businesses
  • Education and Outreach
Contact Us about the Burn Wise Program
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on March 11, 2025
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