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🎨 Cost Guide · Philadelphia, PA

Average House Painter Cost in Philadelphia, PA (2026)

A house painter in Philadelphia charges $56/hour for a standard service call — that's 5% below the US median of $59/hour. The differential reflects the PA cost-of-living composite of 95.6 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2141.

House Painter project costs in Philadelphia, PA

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Single room paint (10×12, walls only, 2 coats) 1 day $499 $409 – $599
Whole interior repaint (1700 sq ft, walls + ceilings) 4–6 days $4,286 $3,515 – $5,144
Exterior repaint (1700 sq ft, prep + 2 coats) 4–7 days $4,998 $4,099 – $5,998
Kitchen cabinet refinish (sand, prime, sprayed enamel) 3–5 days $1,940 $1,591 – $2,328
All trim + 6 interior doors (whole house) 2 days $1,224 $1,004 – $1,469
Ceiling paint refresh (avg 1500 sq ft) 1 day $697 $571 – $836
Deck stripping + restain (300 sq ft) 2 days $848 $695 – $1,017
Pre-paint pressure wash (whole exterior) half day $254 $208 – $305
Wallpaper removal + skim coat (one room) 1–2 days $564 $463 – $677

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2141), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 95.6 for PA, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Philadelphia compares

At an effective contractor rate of $56/hour, Philadelphia sits right around the national median for house painter work. Homeowners here will see lower-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat below the national figure because regional materials inflation in PA runs about 4% below the US benchmark.

What the work involves

A pro painter's job is mostly prep, not paint: washing, sanding glossy/peeling areas, scraping, patching nail holes and drywall damage, caulking trim seams, masking floors and fixtures, priming bare or stain-prone areas, then finally rolling, brushing, or spraying two coats of finish. On exteriors, that prep includes a full pressure wash, scraping any peeling sections to bare wood, spot-priming with a bonding primer, and re-caulking every trim seam — typical exterior jobs are 3–5 days for a 1,700 sq ft home. The most common scope inflation is "spraying" cabinets without sanding/de-glossing first; it looks great for six months and then peels. Lead-paint disclosures are required for any pre-1978 home (EPA RRP rule) and a properly-trained painter will follow a containment protocol.

Six questions to ask any house painter in PA

  1. How many coats of finish, and is the primer included or extra?
  2. What brand and product line are you using? (Sherwin-Williams Emerald, Benjamin Moore Aura, and Behr Ultra are all premium tiers.)
  3. Are you EPA RRP-certified for lead-paint work? (Required for pre-1978 homes.)
  4. How will you prep glossy or peeling surfaces — sanding, de-glossing, bonding primer?
  5. What's included in the prep (caulking, drywall patches, masking, removing outlet covers)?
  6. What's the workmanship warranty, and what triggers a re-do (peeling, cracking, drips)?
A bid that's 40% lower than competitors almost always means thinned paint, one coat instead of two, or skipping primer on patched areas — and it shows within a year.

Featured house painters in Philadelphia

Coleman Spectrum Painters

📍 5886 Sycamore Way, Philadelphia, PA 19109
★ 3.7 / 5 · 296 reviews · 17 yrs
✓ Licensed

Philadelphia Color Co

📍 4381 Lake Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19102
★ 5.0 / 5 · 407 reviews · 18 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Patriot Color Co

📍 8956 Hickory Ter, Philadelphia, PA 19109
★ 3.6 / 5 · 242 reviews · 27 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

See all House Painters in Philadelphia →

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Seasonal painting checklist

Spring

  • Walk the exterior and mark any peeling, blistering, or chalking paint — these areas need scraping, sanding, and spot-priming before any topcoat goes on.
  • Check south- and west-facing walls first; they take 2–3× the UV exposure of north-facing walls and fail first.
  • Inspect trim caulk lines and re-caulk any cracked or pulled-away beads with a paintable acrylic-latex caulk before painting season starts.
  • Plan whole-house exterior repaints for late spring through early fall — surface temps must be 50–85°F with low humidity for proper film formation.

Fall

  • Touch up exterior trim and any spots where summer UV faded the topcoat — this extends the life of the coating system by 2–3 years.
  • Now is the best window for interior repaints (open windows for ventilation without summer humidity messing with cure times).
  • Stain or reseal wood decks every 2–3 years — fall is the safest window since deck wood needs 48 hours of dry weather after a clean.

Winter

  • Interior repaints are easiest in winter; just keep room temps above 60°F for 24 hours after each coat to allow proper film formation.
  • Use a low-VOC paint (Greenguard Gold-certified) for any room that will be sealed up overnight after painting; fumes accumulate fast in heated, closed homes.
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