Electric fireplaces can come in many different shapes and sizes, and can be found placed on walls or on the floor.

My own electric fireplace is a freestanding unit that’s located on the floor. As it’s quite large, I recently opened up my fireplace to see what’s inside, and I’ve put this article together to show you exactly what’s inside an electric fireplace.

Inside a typical electric fireplace you’ll find two main components:

  • A heating element with blower.
  • Either an LED screen or a rotisserie-style light that provides the flame effect.

Depending on the type of electric fireplace, you’ll also find plenty of open space for ventilation and air circulation.

My own freestanding electric fireplace is designed to look like a wood burning stove. It whole unit has a similar design, with legs, a glass door that opens, and an ash pan compartment cover.

Behind the area that resembles the ash pan compartment on a wood burning stove is the controls to my electric fireplace. The cover helps to hide the controls when they’re not being used, and the cover is held closed with a magnet.

The glass door can also be opened in my electric fireplace, and inside is the plastic fake logs, and back screen that the flames are projected onto.

The back of my fireplace simply contains a metal backing cover.

When taking off the back panel of my electric fireplace you’ll find both the heater and flame effect components.

Heater

Inside an electric fireplace you’ll find the heating component. It works just like a traditional space heater where a blower sucks in cooler air, and blows out warmer air into the room that has been heated up as it passes through a heating element.

Here’s what the heater component looks like in my electric fireplace:

The main heating component that you’ll see in an electric fireplace is the blower. The blower in my fireplace is cylindrical in shape and is made up of a number of metal fan blades, driven by a motor at one end, that forces air through the heating element in front of it.

Here’s a video I took of me turning the heater on and off, highlighting how the blower works and how noisy you can expect it to be.

The clicking sound is me turning the low heat and then the high heat setting switches on an off. There isn’t much difference in the amount of noise the heater makes between the low and high heat settings.

You can see what the heating element coils look like from the front of the electric fireplace through the vents:

Here’s what the heating coils look like after the heater has been on for a while:

The wires leading above the heating element are to power the flame effect on the electric fireplace.