4 Steps to Make Your Home’s Exterior Paint Look as Good as New

By Christine Tusher, Houzz

A pristine exterior paint job not only increases your home’s curb appeal; it also helps protect its trim, flashing and siding from damage from the elements. That’s why maintaining your paint is so important — letting it bubble and flake between paint jobs can end up harming your house.

Fortunately, you can prevent damage with annual paint touch-ups. Here’s how to do it right.

roof

James Hardie Building Products, original photo on Houzz

This is a project you can likely handle yourself. In fact, Scott Bondy of Vivax Pro Painting says many painting companies won’t even do touch-up jobs, because they may result in a spotty-looking house due to nonmatching paint colors.

If you’re taking care of this on your own and are touching up only a few spots, it will likely cost you less than $100. If you’re nervous about climbing or toting ladders, however, it’s best to leave things to a handyperson or painter.

Related: Order the Right-Height Ladder for the Job Today

Bondy points out that if you hired a professional painter to paint your house initially, he or she should stand behind the work and take care of any spots that aren’t wearing well. As long as the job was fairly recent, there shouldn’t be a charge.

Typical project length: Between inspecting the paint on your house from roof to foundation, purchasing supplies and actually repainting, this project will likely take a full weekend.

ExteriorPaint2

Michael Piccirillo Architecture PLLC, original photo on Houzz

Best time to start: During warm-weather months. Bondy recommends checking your paint can to make sure you’re applying the paint when the temperature is in the right range for that particular product. Keep in mind that temperatures can be 10 to 15 degrees cooler in the shade.

“If it’s really hot when we paint, we’ll just paint on the shady side of the home and then follow the sun around the house so we’re always in the shade,” he says.

Rain is less of a consideration, as paint tends to dry quickly during the warmer months. Just check the weather to make sure there’s no rain in the forecast the day you’re planning to paint.

Project considerations: If your house was built before 1978, be sure to test for lead paint. If the test comes back positive, you may want to call in a pro who specializes in lead paint removal.

ExteriorPaint3

MB Jessee, original photo on Houzz

How to get started:

1. Look closely at your house’s siding, trim and flashing for any bubbling, peeling or signs of water damage. Bondy says the high peaks of a house tend to be most affected, because they get the most sun, so get up on your ladder to take a close look.

He also recommends paying extra attention to the trim around the garage doors, as well as any areas that tend to be exposed to standing water or snow banks.

Related: Is Your Garage Door in Need of Repair? Contact These Pros Today

2. Even if you have leftover paint from the last time you painted your house, it probably won’t match, due to fading. Remove some chips from the side of your house and bring them to the paint store for matching. Even then, Bondy warns, the new paint may not match exactly. He recommends painting a test patch and letting it dry to make sure the colors aren’t noticeably different.

ExteriorPaint4

CG&S Design-Build, original photo on Houzz

3. While you’re at the hardware store, grab the following supplies:
○ Paint
○ Paint applicator
○ Wire brush
○ Primer
○ Paint scraper
○ Rags

4. The rest of the process is quite simple: Scrape, prime and repaint areas where the paint has been damaged. If the damage is on only part of a shingle or clapboard, be sure to repaint the entire piece, so the finish doesn’t look spotty.

By the time the weekend is over, your home will look as good as the day you last painted.