How flue siting is governed in the UK, why the position of your flue matters for carbon monoxide safety, and why exact clearances must always be confirmed by a Gas Safe registered engineer.
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The flue is the pipe that carries the products of combustion — including carbon monoxide (CO) — safely out of your boiler and away from your home. Get the position wrong and those gases can be drawn back inside through an open window, a door or an air brick, or can pool against a neighbouring wall. Carbon monoxide is colourless, odourless and potentially fatal, which is why flue siting is treated as a genuine safety matter rather than a cosmetic one.
That's also why this is not a DIY job. Anyone working on a gas boiler, its flue or its combustion circuit must be on the Gas Safe Register — the official UK body for gas safety since it replaced CORGI in 2009. This guide explains the principles so you know what "good" looks like; it does not give you instructions to move or alter a flue yourself.
There is no single magic number that applies to every boiler. In the UK, the minimum distances a flue terminal must keep from windows, doors, air bricks, gutters, corners and boundaries are governed by two things working together:
Because the correct clearance depends on the appliance, the flue type (for example a standard horizontal flue versus a plume management kit) and the surroundings, the only reliable figures for your home come from a Gas Safe registered engineer who can read your boiler's manual and assess the site. We've deliberately not printed a blanket distance here, because publishing one universal number would be misleading — and potentially unsafe.
While exact distances vary, the underlying principles are consistent. A correctly sited flue terminal should:
If a flue can't physically meet the required clearances, the answer isn't to fudge it — the engineer will look at a different terminal position, a flue extension or a plume kit. Forcing a non-compliant position is exactly the kind of shortcut that creates a CO risk.
When a boiler is installed or its flue altered, the Gas Safe registered engineer is responsible for confirming the flue is sited and terminated correctly, that it's properly supported and sealed, and that combustion is safe. For most domestic gas boiler installations in England and Wales the work is also notified to Building Control (commonly through the Gas Safe / Building Regulations Compliance scheme), and you should receive a Building Regulations Compliance Certificate. Keep that paperwork with your warranty — it's useful proof the installation was done properly, and some boiler-cover providers will ask about installation and servicing history.
Boiler-cover plans assume your boiler was correctly installed and is maintained — an annual service is where an engineer re-checks combustion and the flue. A boiler with a non-compliant or unsafe flue may be turned off as "At Risk" or "Immediately Dangerous" at a service, and pre-existing safety faults are typically excluded from cover. So flue compliance isn't just a legal box-tick: it protects the people in your home and keeps your boiler in the condition your plan expects. If you're weighing up a plan, our guide to what boiler cover is explains exactly what's included and excluded, and you can compare boiler cover across our selected panel.
You can't legally work on the flue yourself, but you can keep an eye on it:
If you spot a problem, don't try to investigate behind the casing — describe the symptoms and book a Gas Safe registered engineer to inspect it.
There's no single figure that applies to every boiler. The minimum distance is set by BS 5440-1 together with your boiler manufacturer's installation instructions, and it varies by appliance and flue type. The reliable distances for your home can only be confirmed by a Gas Safe registered engineer.
No. Any work on a gas boiler flue must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer. Moving, extending or altering a flue affects how combustion gases are removed and is a carbon monoxide safety risk if done incorrectly.
Most domestic gas boiler installations in England and Wales are notifiable, and a Gas Safe engineer usually handles this through the Building Regulations compliance scheme. You should receive a compliance certificate — keep it with your warranty and servicing records.
It can be. Flues must respect the boundary with neighbouring properties and shouldn't discharge across it in a way that affects a neighbour. If you're concerned, have a Gas Safe registered engineer assess the siting at your next service.
Yes. A correctly sited flue reduces risk but doesn't remove the need for an audible CO alarm to BS EN 50291. Fit one in any room with a gas appliance and test it regularly — it's your last line of defence if anything goes wrong.
A correctly installed, serviced boiler is the condition most plans expect. See indicative prices and cover levels across our selected panel, then buy direct on the provider's own site.
Compare boiler coverThis article is general information about UK flue siting rules, not installation instructions or personal advice. Gas work must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer. Standards and manufacturer requirements change — always confirm the current rules for your appliance with a qualified engineer.