Painting Material Costs in NZ

Interior paint in NZ costs $60–$150 per 10L, exterior paint $80–$180 per 10L, primer $50–$90 per 10L, and filler $15–$30 per tube in 2026. Resene and Dulux are the dominant brands in NZ. Materials make up 15–25% of a total painting quote, with the remainder being labour, overheads, and margin. NZ painter pricing data — updated April 2026.

Prices last updated: April 2026

Who This Guide Is For

Painters Pricing Materials

You want current NZ paint prices to use when building quotes.

Build accurate quotes

New Contractors

You're not sure how much to budget for materials and want to understand coverage rates.

Homeowners Buying Paint

You want to understand paint pricing and quality differences before buying.

Material Cost Summary

Interior Paint
$60–$150/10L
Quality dependent
Exterior Paint
$80–$180/10L
Premium recommended
Primer
$50–$90/10L
Surface dependent
Filler
$15–$30/tube
Interior/exterior

Resene vs Dulux Product Pricing (Approximate)

Product TypeReseneDuluxNotes
Interior walls (10L)SpaceCote: $140–$180Wash&Wear: $130–$170Premium ranges
Interior walls (10L)Zylone: $80–$110Ceiling White: $70–$90Budget/ceiling
Exterior (10L)Sonyx 101: $160–$200Weathershield: $150–$190Premium exterior
Primer (10L)Sureseal: $80–$1101 Step Prep: $70–$100Multi-purpose
Timber primer (10L)Wood Primer: $70–$90Timber Primer: $65–$85Bare timber
Enamel/trim (1L)Lustacryl: $35–$45Aquanamel: $30–$40Doors, trim, skirting

Paint Costs by Brand

Resene and Dulux dominate the NZ market. Both offer quality products, but there are pricing and performance differences:

  • Resene — NZ's largest paint brand with the widest colour range. Premium products (SpaceCote, Sonyx 101, Lustacryl) are industry standard for residential and commercial work. Trade pricing is available through Resene ColorShops with a trade account — 20–30% off retail.
  • Dulux — Strong competitor with slightly lower pricing on some products. Wash&Wear and Weathershield are their premium residential lines. Available through paint retailers and hardware stores. Trade pricing through a trade account.
  • Budget brands — Brands like Taubmans and house-brand paints cost 30–50% less but offer lower coverage, durability, and colour accuracy. For professional work, the time savings from premium paint usually outweigh the material cost difference.

Always use the paint specified in your scope of works. Substituting cheaper paint without client agreement is unprofessional and can lead to disputes.

Consumables and Sundries

Paint is only part of your material costs. Budget for these consumables on every job:

  • Filler — $15–$30 per tube. Interior: Selleys Spakfilla ($8–$15). Exterior: flexible filler ($15–$25). Budget 1–2 tubes per room for repaints.
  • Sandpaper — $3–$8 per sheet. Budget $20–$50 per job. P80 for heavy prep, P120 for general, P180 for fine finishing.
  • Masking tape — $5–$12 per roll. Budget 3–6 rolls per interior job. Use quality tape (3M, Frog Tape) to avoid bleed-through.
  • Caulk — $8–$15 per tube. Budget 2–4 tubes per interior repaint for gap sealing.
  • Roller sleeves — $8–$20 each. Microfibre for smooth finishes, medium nap for general use, long nap for textured surfaces. Replace every 1–2 jobs.
  • Brushes — $15–$50 each. Quality brushes (Purdy, Hamilton) last longer and give a better finish. Budget for replacement every 3–6 months with heavy use.
  • Drop cloths — $30–$80 each for heavy-duty canvas. One-time purchase that lasts years.

Total consumable cost per job runs $100–$300 for a standard residential interior repaint.

Build Accurate Material Costs Into Every Quote

Use our calculator to estimate materials, labour, and overheads for any painting job. Get your pricing right every time.

Coverage Rates and Material Estimation

Understanding coverage rates prevents over-ordering and under-ordering:

  • Standard coverage — Most premium paints cover 12–14m² per litre on smooth surfaces, per coat. Rough or porous surfaces may drop to 8–10m² per litre.
  • Primer coverage — 10–12m² per litre on sealed surfaces, 6–8m² per litre on bare timber or plaster.
  • Number of coats — Standard is 2 top coats. Dark-to-light colour changes needs 3 coats or a tinted undercoat. Always check the manufacturer's recommendations.
  • Waste factor — Add 10% to your calculated quantity. You'll always use more than the theoretical amount due to roller loading, tray loss, and touch-ups.

Example calculation: 200m² of interior walls, 2 coats at 13m²/L = 200 × 2 ÷ 13 = 30.8L. Add 10% waste = 34L. Order 4 × 10L tins. At $140/10L (Resene SpaceCote) = $560 for wall paint.

For help calculating total job costs including labour and overheads, see our quoting guide.

Budgeting Materials for a Job

Materials should be 15–25% of your total quote. Here's how to budget accurately:

  • Calculate paint quantities — Measure surfaces, apply coverage rates, add waste factor. Order paint before starting the job.
  • Estimate consumables — $100–$300 for a standard interior repaint. More for extensive prep or exterior work.
  • Add delivery or collection time — Factor in time to pick up or receive materials. Trade deliveries from Resene and Dulux are often free over a minimum order.
  • Get trade pricing — Set up trade accounts with Resene and Dulux. Trade discounts of 20–30% off retail significantly improve your margins on materials.
  • Track material costs per job — Record what you actually spend on each job. Over time, this gives you accurate material cost averages for different job types.

Materials are the easiest part of a quote to get right — the quantities are mathematical. The challenge is making sure your labour rates and overhead allocation are equally accurate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use Resene or Dulux for professional painting?

Both are quality brands used by professional painters across NZ. Resene has a larger NZ colour range and is the most specified brand by architects. Dulux is competitive on price and widely available. Choose based on client preference, project specification, and your trade pricing — both deliver professional results.

How much paint do I need for a 3-bedroom house?

A standard 3-bedroom interior (walls and ceilings, ~250m²) needs 40–50L of wall paint (2 coats) and 15–20L of ceiling paint (2 coats). Add 4–5L of trim enamel for doors and skirting, and 5–10L of primer. Total material cost: $800–$1,500 depending on brand and product.

Is cheap paint worth using?

For professional work, no. Cheap paint has lower coverage (more coats needed = more labour), poorer durability (callbacks sooner), and less accurate colour. The labour cost of applying an extra coat far exceeds the savings on cheaper paint. Premium paint saves time and delivers a better, longer-lasting finish.

Should I charge clients for paint at retail or trade price?

Standard practice is to charge materials at retail price or a small mark-up above your trade cost. Your trade discount is part of your business margin. If a client asks, be transparent that you receive trade pricing — but the mark-up covers your time selecting, ordering, collecting, and managing materials.

Build Accurate Material Costs Into Every Quote

Use our calculator to estimate materials, labour, and overheads for any painting job. Get your pricing right every time.