Rantz: Washington will quietly crackdown on wood-burning fireplaces
Jan 24, 2025, 2:55 PM | Updated: 3:10 pm

A wood-burning fireplace with an active fire inside. (MyNorthwest file photo)
(MyNorthwest file photo)
Washington fireplaces will quietly face a crackdown thanks to new legislation from Democrats in Olympia. It will lead to potentially significant restrictions or downright bans, pinning regulations to the most stringent standards set by the Joe Biden administration that President Donald Trump can’t undo.
doesn鈥檛 explicitly ban fireplaces outright. Instead, it lays the groundwork for making life much harder for homeowners who enjoy the cozy tradition of a wood-burning fire. It鈥檚 yet another example of progressives chipping away at everyday freedoms under the guise of environmentalism.
The bill sounds reasonable on the surface 鈥 updating emission standards for wood-burning devices and restricting their use during poor air quality. But buried in the details are significant implications for both current and future fireplaces, potentially leading to outright bans in the not-too-distant future.
More from Jason Rantz: WA Democrats pulled a fast one on voters as they undo parental rights initiative
How are Democrats coming for Washington fireplaces?
SB 5174 creates significant and costly new hoops for Washington homeowners to jump through, and it鈥檚 not hard to see where this is heading for fireplaces. At a minimum, it’s likely to cost homeowners significantly.
The legislation updates definitions for what constitutes a fireplace or wood-burning device and ties their use to strict new emission standards. This means any new fireplace installations must meet stringent certification requirements set by the Department of Ecology. They may even adopt stringent federal emissions standards against masonry heaters that were adopted under Biden. If Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) lowers the standards, Washington would still have to adhere to the Biden terms.
In other words, good luck installing that charming, traditional wood-burning fireplace in your new home 鈥 because it likely won鈥檛 pass muster unless it鈥檚 some kind of hyper-engineered, low-emission, eco-friendly contraption that costs twice as much as the old models. And your older masonry heaters won’t likely pass federal muster.
The legislation also allows the Department of Ecology to implement the Biden federal emission standards for new residential forced-air furnaces and new residential hydronic heaters.
But this is not the part that should worry you the most.
More from Jason Rantz:听Teachers end suspensions, boot police, but now complain about school safety
Here’s what you need to worry about
Washington homeowners should worry about the looming specter of retrofitting or replacing existing fireplaces.
While the bill doesn鈥檛 explicitly require homeowners to upgrade their fireplaces to meet new emission standards, it鈥檚 easy to see how that could change. If the Department of Ecology decides that traditional fireplaces are too polluting 鈥 something environmental activists already push 鈥 they could require retrofits, effectively forcing homeowners to shell out thousands of dollars to comply.
And if retrofitting isn鈥檛 feasible? Well, you鈥檙e out of luck. Your fireplace becomes nothing more than decorative brickwork because, under the bill, you could be targeted by the state for using the fireplace.
Washington officials had previously planned to under Biden because it allowed the sale of new residential wood-burning stoves. Does anyone truly believe the state wouldn’t make it more difficult to purchase or maintain a wood-burning fireplace?
More from Jason Rantz:听Democrats embrace sanctuary status as law gives illegal immigrants unemployment benefits
This is part of a larger plan to ban wood-burning fireplaces
SB 5174 is part of a larger movement to phase out traditional wood-burning devices altogether. It鈥檚 the same logic we鈥檝e seen applied to gas stoves, leaf blowers, and even internal combustion vehicles.
The playbook is simple: regulate these items so heavily that they become impractical or unaffordable, and eventually, people will stop using them. It鈥檚 a backdoor ban, plain and simple.
For future homeowners, this bill sends a clear message: New fireplace installations will face such stringent rules that they may disappear entirely from modern home construction. And for current homeowners, the writing is on the wall. Your fireplace may not be illegal today, but it鈥檚 being regulated into irrelevance. The joy of a crackling fire is being replaced by regulatory overreach.
This bill may not explicitly ban Washington fireplaces, but it鈥檚 a slippery slope. Once the government has the power to regulate something so basic as a fire in your own home, it won鈥檛 stop there. SB 5174 makes sure of it.
More from Jason Rantz:听Here鈥檚 what left-wing media choose to ignore after Jan. 6 mass pardons, commutations