House Painting Costs Explained
A closer look at what drives the price, where homeowners overpay, and how to plan and pay for a house painting.
Painting is a labor business, not a paint business
It surprises people that paint itself is a small fraction of a paint job. Roughly seven of every ten dollars you spend goes to labor, because the visible result depends almost entirely on the hours of prep, masking, cutting in, and second coats that happen before the room or façade looks 'done.' When two painting bids differ by thousands, the gap is almost always in how much prep is included, not in the can of paint.
That's why the cheapest quote is so often the most expensive in the end. A crew that scrapes, sands, patches, caulks, and primes properly costs more per day but delivers a finish that lasts years longer than one that rolls paint over dirty, peeling, or unprimed surfaces.
Interior vs. exterior — two different jobs
Interior painting is priced by room count, ceiling height, and how much trim, doors, and detail work is involved — a stairwell or vaulted great room costs far more per square foot than a flat-walled bedroom because of staging and reach. Exterior painting is priced by the home's footprint, number of stories, siding material, and condition. A two-story home needs ladders, scaffolding, or lifts, and that access cost is real.
Exterior work also lives and dies by surface prep and weather. Power washing, scraping failed paint, replacing rotten trim, and priming bare wood are what make exterior paint last 7 to 10 years instead of peeling in two. Bare or chalky surfaces, and a switch from a dark to a light color (or vice versa), both add coats and cost.
Where homeowners overpay or under-spend
The overpay trap is premium designer paint on a surface that wasn't prepped — you're paying for a label that the bad substrate will undermine. The under-spend trap is the opposite: choosing a one-coat budget paint on a big color change, which ends up needing three coats and more labor than a quality paint would. Mid-to-premium paint on a properly prepped surface is the value sweet spot.
Be specific about what's included: number of coats, whether trim and doors are in the price, whether they're moving and protecting furniture, and how they'll handle repairs they find mid-job. Vague 'we'll paint your house' quotes are how change orders sneak up on you.
Timing, financing, and comparing painters
Exterior painting needs dry, moderate weather — too cold and the paint won't cure, too hot and humid and it won't adhere or dry evenly — so summer and early fall are peak season and book up. Interior painting can be done year-round. Painting is usually small enough to pay from savings, but homeowners doing a whole-house exterior repaint sometimes fold it into a broader improvement loan.
Get three bids and ask each painter to spell out the prep, the number of coats, the paint brand and line, and the warranty on their workmanship. Confirm they carry liability insurance — a fall or an overspray claim on an uninsured crew becomes your problem.
More House Painting Questions
Why are painting quotes so different from each other?
Almost always because of prep, not paint. A bid that includes scraping, sanding, caulking, and priming costs more than one that just rolls over the existing surface — and lasts far longer. Compare what prep and how many coats are included, not just the bottom line.
How long should an exterior paint job last?
Seven to ten years with proper prep and quality paint, and as little as two or three years without. Sun exposure, siding material, and how well bare wood was primed all affect longevity.