Wood stove thermometers come in two main types:

  1. Stovetop thermometers (sit on top of the stove surface)
  2. Flue pipe thermometers (attach to the stovepipe)

Most stoves benefit from using both.

Below is what each zone means and how to use it properly.


🟦 1. Cold Zone (Below 250°F)

What it means:

  • The fire is not burning hot enough.
  • Wood is smoldering rather than burning.
  • Smoke is cooler and moves slowly → creosote forms rapidly.

What to do:

  • Open the air intake fully.
  • Add dry kindling or smaller splits.
  • Warm the flue quickly to create a strong draft.
  • Never let a stove stay in this range for long.

🟧 2. Best Operating Range (300–650°F depending on your stove)

This is usually marked as “Burn Zone,” “Best Zone,” or “Optimal Range.”

What it means:

  • Wood is burning cleanly and efficiently.
  • Minimal creosote formation.
  • Strong flame activity.
  • Good heat output for the home.

What to do:

  • Keep the stove in this range whenever possible.
  • After lighting, gradually close the air only when the fire is fully established.
  • Reload when temperatures start to drop below the zone.

🔴 3. Overfire Zone (Above 700°F)

What it means:

  • The stove is dangerously hot.
  • Risk of warping internal parts or cracking welds.
  • Excessive heat stress can damage the chimney.

What causes over-firing:

  • Air intake left too far open.
  • Wood stacked too high or too tight.
  • Very dry softwoods igniting too quickly.

What to do immediately:

  • Close the air control to reduce oxygen.
  • Do NOT open the stove door — this adds oxygen and makes it worse.
  • Spread out logs if possible (only when safe).
  • Monitor closely until temperature drops back into the safe zone.

📍 Where to Position the Thermometer

Stovetop thermometer:

  • Place on the top surface near the center of the stove (not directly over the hottest corner unless your manufacturer recommends otherwise).

Flue pipe thermometer:

  • If magnetic: place it on the single-wall stovepipe, about 18 inches above the stove.
  • If probe-style: install according to manufacturer instructions for double-wall pipe.

🔥 What a Good Burn Pattern Looks Like

  • The temperature climbs steadily into the optimal range within 15–30 minutes after starting a fire.
  • Stays within the optimal range for most of the burn cycle.
  • Never dips below 250°F except during reloads.
  • Doesn’t exceed the overfire zone except for brief spikes during startup (a few seconds is OK; minutes is not).

🧊 Why Your Thermometer Matters

A wood stove that is too cool will:

  • Produce thick smoke
  • Blacken the glass
  • Build creosote in the chimney
  • Waste wood
  • Heat the home poorly

A stove that is too hot will:

  • Warp firebricks
  • Damage baffles
  • Ruin the stovepipe
  • Void some warranties
  • Create a fire hazard

The thermometer is your most important daily safety tool besides the CO detector.