
Full house repainting near me
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How to book a Full House Repainting Pro in South Africa
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Frequently asked questions 👇
Quick guidance and answers to your questions about Full house repainting in South Africa
Interior repaints run R12,000 to R25,000 for a 2-bedroom home, R18,000 to R45,000 for a 3-bedroom, and R30,000 to R60,000+ for larger houses. Adding the exterior brings a typical 3-bed inside-and-out project to R35,000 to R80,000. Preparation needs and whether the house is empty move the number most.
An empty 2 to 3 bedroom interior takes roughly 4 to 8 working days; add the exterior and a full project runs 2 to 4 weeks depending on repairs and weather. Occupied homes take longer because rooms are done in phases around your life — one more argument for the empty-house window.
At once, meaningfully — one setup, one scaffold hire, bulk paint buying, and crew efficiency all compound, typically saving 20 to 30% versus the same rooms done separately over time. Room-by-room only wins when budget timing forces it.
It’s consistently one of the highest-return pre-sale improvements: fresh, neutral walls photograph better, remove buyer objection points, and signal a maintained home. A pre-sale repaint usually costs a fraction of the price-negotiation room that tired paint creates.
No — crews routinely phase occupied homes room by room, sealing off work areas and keeping bedrooms usable. Modern low-VOC paints keep odours manageable. But if a between-homes window exists, use it: empty houses paint faster, cheaper, and to a better finish.
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The Cost of Full House Repainting in South Africa
(Written by the Kandua Team, with practical insights from our network of vetted South African painters)
A full house repaint is the biggest transformation per rand in home improvement — and the project where planning pays most. Interior, exterior, or both, it’s a sequenced operation: preparation, ceilings, walls, trim, and the exterior envelope, ideally by one crew owning the whole result.
Whether it’s pre-move-in, pre-sale, or long overdue, this guide covers full house repainting costs in South Africa and how to get a project quote you can trust.
Expert Advice Before You Book
“Empty is everything,” says a vetted painter on the Kandua network with over 15 years of experience. “An empty house paints 30 to 40% faster than a furnished one — no covering, no moving, no working around life. If you can schedule a repaint between owners or tenants, you’ll get a better job for less money. And get the quote itemised: prep, ceilings, walls, trim, exterior — line by line.”
- Time it empty if you can: between moving out and in, or between tenants, is the golden window — speed, price, and finish all improve.
- Demand an itemised quote: room-by-room and surface-by-surface line items let you compare quotes honestly and trim scope deliberately instead of blindly.
- Sequence exterior around weather: interiors paint year-round; exteriors need dry windows — a combined project plans both around the season.
Typical Costs for Full House Repainting
Here’s what South African homeowners can expect to pay in 2026:
- Interior, 2-bedroom home: R12,000 to R25,000 (walls, ceilings, trim).
- Interior, 3-bedroom home: R18,000 to R45,000.
- Interior, 4-bedroom and larger: R30,000 to R60,000+.
- Exterior added: R15,000 to R45,000 for single-storeys; more with height and repairs.
- Full inside-and-out project (3-bed): R35,000 to R80,000.
- Per square metre benchmarks: R50 to R90 labour interior; R100 to R250 including materials.
For a deeper breakdown of rates, see the Kandua Painter Cost Guide.
How Location Affects Costs in South Africa
Prices vary by region, driven by local labour rates, travel distances, and demand:
- Western Cape: typically 5 to 15% above national averages, with exterior phases planned around winter rain.
- Gauteng (Johannesburg & Pretoria): the widest painter market in the country — comparing multiple itemised quotes pays off most here.
- KwaZulu-Natal: close to national averages, with mould-resistant coatings recommended in humid areas.
Factors That Influence Your Final Quote
- Occupied vs empty: furnished, lived-in homes add covering, moving, and phased scheduling — real cost, worth asking about.
- Preparation load: older homes with cracks, stains, and failing paint can spend 40%+ of the budget before colour appears — and it’s the best-spent portion.
- Colour changes: deep colour changes and feature walls add coats; keeping similar tones saves them.
- Scope edges: cupboard interiors, garage, boundary walls, gates, and pergolas — decide early what’s in and out.
Cost Examples by Job Complexity
- Straightforward job: Empty 2-bed interior: ceilings, walls, and trim in whites and neutrals. Time: 4 to 6 days. Typical cost: R14,000 to R22,000.
- Complex job: Occupied 4-bed inside and out: repairs and stain-blocking, colour changes, exterior with access equipment, gates and fascias. Time: 3 to 4 weeks, phased. Typical cost: R60,000 to R90,000.
Customer Story
A homeowner in Sandton shared: “We bought a tired 90s house and had it fully repainted in the two weeks before moving in — every ceiling, wall, cupboard front, and the exterior. The crew ran it like a project: prep first, ceilings down, colours last. Moving into a completely fresh house was worth every cent, and doing it empty saved us nearly a third of the furnished quote we’d gotten.”
When to Hire a Professional
At whole-house scale, project management is the product. Call professionals when:
- The scope spans surfaces: ceilings, walls, enamel trim, and exterior each need different products and sequencing — a crew that owns the whole result prevents the patchwork look of piecemeal jobs.
- The house has history: older homes carry stains, cracks, damp spots, and layers of old paint; a professional walk-through prices the preparation honestly instead of discovering it mid-project.
- You’re painting to sell or move in: deadlines are real — crews with proper manpower hit dates a solo painter can’t, and pre-sale repaints routinely return more than they cost.
Checklist: Before Your Pro Arrives
- List every room and surface in scope — and explicitly what’s out.
- Schedule for an empty (or emptiest possible) house.
- Choose colours ahead; test patches in the actual light.
- Ask for an itemised, room-by-room quote with prep specified.
- Agree the sequence and daily hours if you’ll be living through it.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How much does full house repainting cost in South Africa?
Interior repaints run R12,000 to R25,000 for a 2-bedroom home, R18,000 to R45,000 for a 3-bedroom, and R30,000 to R60,000+ for larger houses. Adding the exterior brings a typical 3-bed inside-and-out project to R35,000 to R80,000. Preparation needs and whether the house is empty move the number most.
How long does it take to repaint an entire house?
An empty 2 to 3 bedroom interior takes roughly 4 to 8 working days; add the exterior and a full project runs 2 to 4 weeks depending on repairs and weather. Occupied homes take longer because rooms are done in phases around your life — one more argument for the empty-house window.
Is it cheaper to paint the whole house at once or room by room?
At once, meaningfully — one setup, one scaffold hire, bulk paint buying, and crew efficiency all compound, typically saving 20 to 30% versus the same rooms done separately over time. Room-by-room only wins when budget timing forces it.
Should I repaint before selling my house?
It’s consistently one of the highest-return pre-sale improvements: fresh, neutral walls photograph better, remove buyer objection points, and signal a maintained home. A pre-sale repaint usually costs a fraction of the price-negotiation room that tired paint creates.
Do I need to move out during a full repaint?
No — crews routinely phase occupied homes room by room, sealing off work areas and keeping bedrooms usable. Modern low-VOC paints keep odours manageable. But if a between-homes window exists, use it: empty houses paint faster, cheaper, and to a better finish.
Summary of Full House Repainting Costs (2026)
- Budget jobs: from R12,000
- Average jobs: around R40,000
- High-end jobs: R90,000+
- Typical range: R12,000 to R90,000+
Ready to get it sorted? Post your job on Kandua and receive quotes from vetted, reviewed pros near you — fast, free, and with secure payment from start to finish.
Painters in South Africa: what to know before you book
Paint is the cheapest transformation a home can get — and the easiest one to get wrong. Two quotes for “the same job” can differ by thousands, and the difference is almost never the paint. It’s the preparation: what gets washed, scraped, filled, and primed before the first coat goes on.
Kandua helps you get it done properly by matching you with a vetted painter for your job — a single feature wall, a full interior, an exterior repaint, or a roof.
A few quick answers (so you don’t have to scroll)
How do I choose a good painter?
Pick someone whose quote names the exact paint product and number of coats in writing, itemises the prep work, and asks questions about surface condition before quoting. Vague quotes (“paint 3 bedrooms — R X”) are where disputes start.
What should painting cost?
Most painters quote per square metre of wall area: roughly R50 – R90/m² for labour only, or R100 – R250/m² including paint and materials. (There’s a pricing guide further down.)
Is exterior painting different from interior?
Yes — different paints (UV and weather resistance, elasticity), more prep, weather-dependent scheduling, and often work at height. Never use interior paint outside; it will fail early.
Can I just paint over damp, mould, or peeling paint?
No — and any painter who says yes is selling you a repaint in six months. The moisture source must be fixed and the surface properly prepared first, or the new coat bubbles and peels exactly where the old one did.
Common painting jobs (and what they actually involve)
- Interior rooms: moving and covering furniture, washing and filling walls, cutting in, two coats — a pro typically does a standard room in 4–8 hours including prep
- Full interiors: sequenced room by room over several days so you can keep living in the house
- Exterior walls: high-pressure washing, scraping loose paint, repairing cracked plaster, plaster primer on bare patches, then weather-resistant coats — the most prep-heavy job in painting
- Ceilings: often quoted separately; stains from old leaks need a stain-blocking primer or they bleed straight through new paint
- Doors, trim, and windows: enamel work is slow, careful brushwork — expect it itemised per item rather than per m²
- Roof painting: a specialised job with its own coatings and safety requirements, usually priced per m² of roof area
- Feature walls and colour changes: going from dark to light needs primer plus extra coats — budget for it upfront rather than discovering it on day two
Prep is 70% of the job (and why quotes differ so much)
When two quotes are far apart, compare the prep, not the price. A proper job includes:
- Washing: paint doesn’t bond to dust, grease, or chalking old paint
- Scraping and sanding: loose and flaking paint must come off — painting over it just glues the new coat to a failing surface
- Filling and repairs: cracks raked out and filled, holes patched, damaged plaster repaired
- Priming: bare plaster, filled patches, stains, and dark-to-light changes all need the right primer, not just “another coat”
- Masking and protection: floors, fittings, and gardens covered before the first tin opens
The cheap quote usually skips two or three of these. It looks the same on handover day — the difference shows up within a year.
When paint isn’t the fix — and who to call instead
Some “painting problems” are actually building problems wearing a paint costume:
1) Damp, mould, and bubbling paint
Bubbling, flaking, or mould that returns after cleaning means moisture is moving through the wall — from a leak, failed waterproofing, blocked gutters, or rising damp. Fix the source first; then paint. A painter can handle mould treatment and repainting once the cause is resolved, but rising damp and hidden leaks need specialist assessment.
2) Cracks
Hairline plaster cracks are cosmetic — rake, fill, prime, paint. Wide, growing, or stepped cracks in brickwork can signal movement and warrant a professional assessment before any cosmetic work.
3) Waterproofing
Parapet walls, flat roofs, and balconies that leak need proper waterproofing systems, not thicker paint. Some painters do waterproofing as a specialty — confirm the actual system and guarantee being quoted, not just “a waterproof coat”.
The good news: describe the symptoms to Jess and you’ll be matched with the right vetted pro for what the job actually needs — painter, waterproofing specialist, or plumber if there’s a leak behind it.
Pricing: what to budget for a painter in South Africa
Painting is usually quoted per square metre of wall area (not floor area), with day rates common for smaller or mixed jobs:
Typical cost structure
- Labour: per m² or per day, depending on the job
- Paint and materials (or supply your own by agreement)
- Prep and repairs: filling, scraping, priming — itemised on good quotes
- Access: scaffolding or ladders for double-volume walls and exteriors
- Clean-up and disposal where the job creates waste
Typical ranges you’ll see (guideline)
- Labour only: roughly R50 – R90 per m² for standard walls
- Including paint and materials: roughly R100 – R250 per m², depending on paint quality and surface condition
- Day rates: commonly R550 – R1,500 per painter per day depending on skill level
- A single standard room: often R1,500 – R6,000 including materials, by size and spec
What pushes a quote up
Heavy prep, textured surfaces (they take 20–25% more paint), dark-to-light colour changes, work at height, coastal exposure needing higher-spec coatings, and premium paint ranges. Cheap paint is a false economy — quality paint covers better, often needs fewer coats, and lasts years longer.
10 Genuinely helpful painter FAQ’s
- Do painters charge per square metre, per room, or per day?
All three exist. Per m² is standard for whole rooms and exteriors, per-day suits mixed or smaller jobs, and per-room flat rates are common for standard bedrooms. Whichever it is, get the paint product, coats, and prep itemised in writing. - How many coats do I need?
Two coats is the standard for a proper finish. Add primer for bare plaster, filled patches, stains, and dark-to-light changes — “one thick coat” is how patchy walls happen. - Does paint quality really matter?
Yes — it’s most of what you’re paying for. Premium paint covers better (sometimes saving a coat), washes clean, and lasts years longer, especially outside. Ask what product is being quoted and look it up. - How long does painting take?
A pro does a standard room in 4–8 hours including prep; full interiors run 3–7 days and exteriors 4–10 days depending on size, surface condition, and weather. Drying time between coats isn’t padding — it’s the job. - Can painting happen in winter or rain?
Interiors, yes, year-round. Exteriors need dry surfaces and reasonable temperatures for paint to cure properly — in winter-rainfall areas plan exterior work for the dry season, and in summer-rainfall areas work around the afternoon storms. - I’m going from a dark colour to a light one — what changes?
Budget for a coat of primer plus potentially a third colour coat. Skipping the primer means the old colour ghosts through and the “cheaper” quote ends up patchy. - What’s the difference between interior and exterior paint?
Exterior paint is engineered for UV, rain, and temperature movement; interior paint is engineered for washability and finish. They are not interchangeable — interior paint used outside fails fast. - Are ceilings, doors, and trim included in a wall quote?
Usually not — they’re itemised separately because ceiling work and enamel brushwork take different time and materials. Confirm exactly what surfaces the quote covers before comparing prices. - Do painters guarantee their work?
Reputable pros offer a workmanship guarantee — ask what’s covered and for how long, in writing. Paint manufacturers’ warranties apply only when the product is applied to spec, which is another reason proper prep matters. - What should I ask a painter before they start?
Three questions cover most issues:
- “Which exact paint product will you use, and how many coats — in writing on the quote?”
- “What prep is included — washing, scraping, filling, priming — and what’s excluded?”
- “What do you guarantee on workmanship, and for how long?”
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