Guide ranges based on typical NZ quoting. Actual prices vary with access, prep, repairs, and location. Always get a written quote for your specific job.
What Affects Painting Costs in NZ?
The quote a painter gives depends on what they find on site. In New Zealand, the housing stock, climate, and regional labour markets mean prices vary more than most people expect.
Surface area and layout — Total paintable area drives the quote, not floor area. A 120 m² villa with high stud ceilings and ornate cornices takes far longer than a 120 m² modern build with flat walls. See our per-m² pricing guide for rates by surface type.
Cladding type — Weatherboard needs more prep than plaster or brick. Timber swells and cracks in NZ winters, adding sanding, filling, and priming time on older homes.
Surface condition — The biggest variable. A maintained surface needs a light sand and two coats. A neglected exterior with peeling paint, rotten boards, or mould adds 30–50% in prep alone. Coastal properties around Mount Maunganui or Island Bay often need salt damage treated first.
Paint system — Resene or Dulux over a quality primer is the NZ standard. Budget paint ($40–$60 per 10L) saves upfront but lasts 4–6 years. Premium ($80–$150 per 10L) lasts 8–12. The gap matters more on exterior work where coatings take more punishment.
Number of coats — Two is standard. Dark-to-light changes or bare timber need three — roughly 30–40% more paint and labour.
Height and access — Single-storey work needs ladders at most. Two-storey homes, stairwells, and villas with verandah rooflines need scaffolding at $1,500–$4,000.
Location — Auckland and Wellington run 10–20% above Hamilton, Christchurch, or Dunedin. Rural or remote sites may attract travel surcharges.
How NZ Painters Actually Calculate a Quote
Every painting quote breaks down into the same five cost components:
Labour — The largest portion. A qualified painter covers 10–15 m² per hour depending on surface and coats.
Materials — Paint, primer, filler, tape, and drop sheets. Paint runs $80–$150 per 10L for Resene or Dulux.
Prep and repairs — Scraping, sanding, filling, mould treatment. On older homes this can be 30–50% of the labour bill.
Access — Ground-floor work needs nothing extra. Scaffold hire for two-storey homes adds $1,500–$4,000.
Overhead and margin — Insurance, vehicle costs, admin. Most painters work on a 20–35% gross margin. Master Painters NZ provides industry guidance on professional quoting and business standards.
The typical quoting process looks like this:
Inspect — Walk the site. Note surface condition, access, and repairs needed.
Estimate prep — Work out how many hours the surfaces need before painting starts. This is where most under-quoting happens.
Measure — Calculate m² for walls, ceilings, eaves, and trim to size the paint order and labour estimate. Our quoting guide walks through each step.
Price labour + materials — Hours multiplied by charge-out rate, plus paint and consumables at cost.
Add margin and exclusions — Apply the margin, then list what's included and what's not.
Our AI quoting tool follows this same workflow, so painters can price jobs in minutes without missing line items.
Interior vs Exterior Painting Costs
Exterior work costs 30–50% more per m² than interior. The difference comes from weatherproof paint systems, surface washing and scraping, and scaffold or ladder access. Interior work is quicker per m² but involves more fiddly detail — cutting in around architraves, skirting, and window frames.
If you're doing both, bundling into one job saves on setup and mobilisation. Most painters offer a lower combined rate than pricing interior and exterior separately.
Need to Price a Painting Job?
Whether you're a painter building a quote or a homeowner sense-checking one — calculate labour, materials, and margin for NZ painting jobs in minutes.
Get 3 quotes — Compare like-for-like: same paint brand, same number of coats, same prep scope.
Paint in the right season — Book for late spring or autumn. Some painters discount winter work to keep crews busy.
Do your own prep — Move furniture, pull off curtain hooks, remove switch plates. Every hour of prep you do is an hour off the invoice.
Pick mid-range paint — Budget paint needs repainting sooner. Premium isn't always worth the jump. Mid-range Resene or Dulux hits the sweet spot for most homes.
Bundle interior + exterior — One mobilisation, one scaffold setup, one painter relationship. Always cheaper than two separate jobs.
Painting Costs by City in New Zealand
Rates vary between cities — regional labour costs and cost of living (tracked by Stats NZ) are the main drivers. Here's what influences pricing in each centre:
Auckland — The most expensive market in NZ. Higher labour demand, longer travel times between jobs, and elevated overheads push rates 10–20% above the national average.
Wellington — Wind exposure and steep hillside access make exterior work harder and slower. Scaffolding costs tend to run higher than other cities, and painters factor in more weather-delay days.
Christchurch — More moderate rates than Auckland or Wellington. Flat suburban layouts keep access costs down, and strong competition among painters since the post-earthquake rebuild keeps pricing competitive.
Hamilton — A growing market with rates sitting below the main centres. Newer housing stock in subdivisions means less prep, which keeps average job costs lower.
Tauranga — Coastal salt spray and UV exposure wear paint faster, so repaints are more frequent. Painters price in marine-grade prep and coatings for properties near the coast.
Dunedin — Lower cost of living keeps hourly rates competitive, but older villas and character homes require more prep. Cold, damp winters shorten the painting season and adds weather-related surcharges.
Queenstown — The most expensive painting market in NZ. Premium holiday homes, a small local workforce, and alpine weather conditions push rates well above every other city.
Whangarei — Northland's subtropical climate means high humidity and mould growth, driving more frequent repaints. Rates sit below the main centres but prep costs can be higher on older homes.
Data References
Pricing in this guide is based on current NZ market quoting data, manufacturer specifications, and industry benchmarks.
Resene — Paint specifications, coverage rates, and product technical data.
Dulux NZ — Paint product ranges, application guides, and system recommendations.
Stats NZ — Regional cost-of-living indices and labour market data.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does an average full house repaint cost in NZ in 2026?
For a standard 3-bedroom single-storey home, expect $8,000–$15,000 for interior and exterior combined. A 4-bedroom or two-storey home runs $12,000–$35,000 because of the extra area and scaffolding. These ranges assume surfaces in reasonable condition — heavy prep or repairs push costs higher.
How much does location affect painting prices in NZ?
Significantly. Auckland and Wellington painters charge 10–20% more than the national average due to higher overheads and demand. Christchurch and Hamilton sit closer to the median, while Dunedin and smaller centres tend to be the most affordable. Coastal areas like Tauranga or Mount Maunganui may also attract premiums for marine-grade prep and coatings.
Is per-m² pricing or hourly pricing more useful for comparing quotes?
Per-m² pricing is better for comparing quotes because it accounts for the actual job size. Hourly rates ($45–$75/hr) tell you what a painter charges for their time but don't reflect how efficiently they work or how much prep is included. When reviewing quotes, ask for a fixed price based on measured areas rather than an open-ended hourly estimate.
What usually adds the most cost to a painting quote?
Prep work and access. A home with peeling paint, timber rot, or mould can need 30–50% more labour before painting even starts. Scaffolding for two-storey homes or difficult access adds $1,500–$4,000. After that, paint quality and the number of coats have the biggest impact — a three-coat premium system costs roughly 40% more than a standard two-coat job.
When should I use a cost calculator vs getting a formal quote?
Use a calculator to get a ballpark range before you contact painters — it helps you budget and spot quotes that are unusually high or low. But a formal quote is essential before committing, because no calculator can assess surface condition, access issues, or repair work on site. Get at least three written quotes and check that each one specifies what's included.
Related Guides
Use these guides to drill into room type, home size, pricing method, and quoting strategy.