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What indoor fire pit installation actually involves
Installing an indoor fire pit is less a building job than a siting decision followed by a short setup sequence. There is no flue to route, no combustion air supply to engineer into the wall, and no certified gas connection to commission. What you are really doing is confirming the room can carry the appliance, establishing the clearances that keep the flame away from anything it could affect, and running a careful first fire so you know the unit behaves before you ever leave it lit in company.
The figures throughout this guide are worth trusting for a specific reason: they come straight from EcoSmart Fire's own certified product documentation, the same manuals that carry the appliance through UL 1370, EN 16647-1 and ACCC compliance, rather than from theoretical minimums or rounded rules of thumb. When this guide says a burner needs a given room volume, that number was set by the certification the burner actually holds.
The whole process breaks into a predictable arc:
Assess whether the room is suitable, by volume, ceiling height and surrounding finishes
Choose a fire pit sized to that room rather than to your ambitions
Set the clearance distances to walls, furnishings, seating and the ceiling
Position the unit so airflow works with the flame, not against it
Run the physical setup and a supervised first fire
Complete a pre-use check before the fire pit joins everyday life
Why bioethanol is the indoor fuel
Indoor fire pits run on bioethanol because it is the only common fire-feature fuel that burns cleanly enough to live inside a room without a flue. The combustion reaction, C₂H₅OH + 3 O₂ → 2 CO₂ + 3 H₂O, runs at better than 90% efficiency and produces carbon dioxide and water vapour rather than smoke or soot. Under complete combustion there is no carbon monoxide to vent, which is precisely why no chimney is needed. Gas and propane fire pits, by contrast, are built for the outdoors and are not designed to be burned inside a living space at all.
That single fuel decision shapes everything downstream in an install, from room volume to refuelling. For the practical purpose of installing one, assume bioethanol throughout, and treat the fuel choice itself as already settled by the fact that the fire is going indoors.
The installation journey at a glance
If you read nothing else, hold on to the sequence. Suitability comes first because it can rule a room out before you spend anything. Clearances come second because they decide where in a suitable room the fire can actually sit. Setup and commissioning come last, and they are the quickest part. People who run into trouble almost always do so by starting at the end, buying the unit they liked the look of and then trying to make a room accommodate it.
