A Compost Chimney Is the Answer to Faster, Cleaner Composting – and This One Is Super-Easy to Make

Gardeners swear by this simple airflow trick to eliminate smelly compost piles

Vegetable waste and leaves sit atop a compost pile made from wooden pallets
(Image credit: Getty Images/ullstein bild )

Making compost is a great way to turn garden and kitchen waste into valuable gardening gold. For a better and more efficient composting system, a simple chimney in the middle of your pile can make all the difference.

A compost chimney is simply a channel or tube made of wire, PVC, or sticks that sits vertically in the center of a compost pile. It boosts the natural movement of oxygen, stops inactive and smelly piles, and can even speed up the overall composting process.

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What Is a Compost Chimney?

compost bins

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A compost chimney is an easy, convenient way to speed up your composting. It is a simple component to add to any compost pile. It isn’t complicated or expensive to achieve, and there are DIY methods to integrate one into an existing pile.

Lauren Click, founder of Let's Go Compost, explains: ‘A compost chimney is an airflow channel placed vertically through the center of a hot compost pile, and is normally made from perforated PVC pipe or wire mesh.

‘It acts like a pile’s “breathing tube” to help fresh air reach the middle, where compost can become dense, wet, and low in oxygen.’

A compost chimney is specifically designed for a static compost pile. If you have alternative systems, such as a tumbling composter, a wormery composter, or a bokashi system, a chimney is unnecessary.

Lauren Click
Lauren Click

Lauren is the founder of Let's Go Compost, a 501(c)(3) non-profit with a mission to make composting free and accessible throughout the United States. Lauren works both in the dirt (literally) with public schools and community gardens, while also remaining focused on the big picture - working with large organizations and policymakers to ensure composting accessibility and affordability are kept front of mind as infrastructure is developed.

How It Boosts Composting?

A homemade wooden compost heap full of vegetables and garden waste

(Image credit: Getty/Catherine McQueen)

As gardeners routinely add garden trimmings, grass clippings, hedge prunings, leaves, cardboard, kitchen scraps, and more to a compost pile, it can become compacted over time.

Oxygen is essential for good composting. But compaction reduces pore space and oxygen movement, which affects the pile’s efficiency. A lack of oxygen can lead to anaerobic conditions, where decomposition slows, and the pile starts to emit a bad smell.

If your compost is not heating up, it can often be due to a lack of aeration. This is a scenario where a compost chimney can come to the rescue.

Lauren says a compost chimney ‘improves passive aeration’ and the natural movement of oxygen throughout a compost pile, which in turn ‘supports aerobic decomposition’ in the pile.

The chimney provides a channel for fresh air to get into the middle of the pile. Warmth at the base of the compost rises out the chimney, and cooler air is pulled in to create the perfect conditions for efficient composting.

‘A compost chimney also helps regulate moisture distribution by preventing overly saturated wet pockets and supports more uniform thermophilic activity,’ adds the compost expert.

‘In larger or denser piles, this can contribute to faster, more even decomposition and more stable compost over time.’

The coming and going of warm and cooler air through the chimney prevents a compost pile from overheating. While an overheating compost is not a fire risk, once the temperature exceeds 160°F, it can kill the beneficial microbes essential for breaking down organic waste.

What to Use for a Compost Chimney

A hand holding a pile of dark compost

(Image credit: Getty/kirisa99)

There are different ways to incorporate a compost chimney into your pile. A common way is to insert a pipe with drilled holes or chicken wire rolled into a tube into the center of the compost.

While these types of chimneys work, Lauren offers alternative methods, too, as she recommends: ‘A simple compost chimney can be made with a vertical column of hardware cloth, coarse sticks, or bulky browns to create an air channel for passive aeration.’

You can get a roll of hardware cloth at Amazon to create your compost chimney.

‘If you do decide to add an aeration tube, choose food-grade, garden-safe materials to avoid potential leaching,’ she adds.

When it comes to some potential materials, Lauren does warn: ‘Little is known about what will happen if a PVC tube interacts with a hot compost pile for an extended period of time and what types of microplastics or chemicals may leech.’

If you prefer plastic alternatives in the garden, you can opt for the coarse sticks method, as Lauren mentioned above. To do this, you may bundle woody stem prunings, tree branches, or bamboo sticks (you can get bamboo plant stakes at Walmart) together and insert them into the center of the pile.

The bunding will create the required air gaps, and woody plant stems can be chopped up later and added to the compost.

Shop Composting Essentials


Lauren Click from Let's Go Compost says that compost chimneys should be seen as ‘complementary’ to turning compost, rather than a replacement or alternative to turning a pile.

Regularly turning and mixing compost aerates the pile and helps to speed up the decomposition process. This kind of mechanical aeration keeps a pile healthy and should be seen as a regular part of your composting process, even if you add a compost chimney.

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Drew Swainston
Content Editor

Drew has worked as a writer since 2008 and was also a professional gardener for many years. As a trained horticulturist, he worked in prestigious historic gardens, including Hanbury Hall and the world-famous Hidcote Manor Garden. He also spent time as a specialist kitchen gardener at Soho Farmhouse and Netherby Hall, where he grew vegetables, fruit, herbs, and cut flowers for restaurants. Drew has written for numerous print and online publications and is an allotment holder and garden blogger. He is shortlisted for the Digital Gardening Writer of the Year at the 2025 Garden Media Guild Awards.