Spray Painting vs Brush & Roller Cost in NZ

Spray painting uses 10–20% more paint than brush and roller but saves 30–50% on labour time for large, open areas. For a full interior repaint, spray is often cheaper overall on new builds and empty houses. Brush and roller wins on occupied homes, detail work, and small jobs where masking time outweighs spray speed.

Prices last updated: April 2026

Who This Guide Is For

Homeowners Planning a Repaint

Understand whether spray or brush-and-roller gives you better value — and better results — for your specific project.

Painters & Trade Businesses

Compare production rates and margins for spray vs traditional methods. See where each approach makes the most financial sense.

Build quotes faster

Spray vs Brush & Roller Costs

Spray Materials
+10–20%
More paint used, masking needed
Spray Labour
–30–50%
Faster coverage on open areas
Brush/Roller
Standard rate
$25–$55/m² interior
Spray (empty house)
–15–25%
Net saving vs brush/roller

Spray vs Brush & Roller: Full Comparison

FactorSpray PaintingBrush & Roller
Speed (walls)3–5× fasterStandard rate
Material usage10–20% more paintStandard coverage
Masking timeHigh (2–4 hours per room)Low (30 min per room)
Finish quality (walls)Very even, no roller marksSlight texture (orange peel)
Finish quality (trim)Excellent on doors/cabinetryGood, brush marks possible
Cutting inStill needs brush at edgesBrush for edges, roller for walls
Best for new buildsYes — empty rooms, fast coverageAdequate but slower
Best for occupied homesNo — too much masking requiredYes — targeted application
Equipment cost$2,000–$8,000 (airless sprayer)$50–$150 (brushes, rollers)
Overspray riskHigh — needs careful maskingNone
Touch-upsHard to match spray finishEasy to touch up with brush

When Spray Painting Is the Better Choice

Spray painting delivers the best value in specific situations:

  • New builds and renovations — Empty rooms with no furniture, no carpets, and no fittings. Masking is minimal, and the sprayer's speed advantage is fully realised. Most NZ new-build painters spray interiors as standard. Master Painters NZ recognises spray application as a specialist skill.
  • Large exterior surfaces — Weatherboard, plaster, and cladding are faster to spray than brush. A 200 m² exterior that takes 4–5 days by brush/roller can be sprayed in 2–3 days.
  • Ceilings — Spraying ceilings gives a flawless, even finish with no roller marks. Many painters spray ceilings even on occupied homes, masking the floor and walls below.
  • Doors and cabinetry — Spray produces a factory-like finish on doors, kitchen cabinets, and built-in joinery. The smooth, even coating is noticeably better than brush work.
  • Fences — Paling fences are dramatically faster to spray (30 minutes for a 10 m section vs 2–3 hours by brush). See our fence painting cost guide for rates.

For overall painting rates, see our full NZ painting cost guide.

When Brush and Roller Is the Better Choice

Traditional brush and roller application wins in many common NZ painting scenarios:

  • Occupied homes — Furniture, carpets, curtains, and fittings all need masking before spraying. In a furnished 3-bedroom house, masking adds 1–2 full days of labour — wiping out most of the spray speed advantage.
  • Small jobs — A single room or a few walls doesn't justify the setup, masking, and cleanup time for spray equipment. Brush and roller is faster for anything under 50 m² of wall area.
  • Detail and trim work — Skirting, architraves, and window frames in occupied rooms are faster to brush than to mask and spray. Most painters brush trim regardless of wall method.
  • Touch-ups — Brush and roller finishes are easy to touch up later. Spray finishes are notoriously hard to match with a brush — the texture difference shows.
  • Ventilation constraints — Spray creates airborne paint particles. In poorly ventilated spaces or near other occupied areas, brush and roller is the only practical option.

For room-by-room cost breakdowns, see our interior painting cost guide.

Ready to Price Your Painting Project?

Whether you go spray, brush and roller, or a mix of both — get an accurate estimate for the full job. Use our calculator or let the AI quoting tool build a detailed quote.

Cost Comparison: Real NZ Examples

Here's how the total cost compares on common NZ painting jobs:

3-Bedroom Interior — Empty House (new build or full renovation)

MethodLabour DaysMaterialsTotal
Spray3–4 days$1,200–$1,800$4,000–$6,500
Brush/roller5–7 days$1,000–$1,500$5,500–$8,500

3-Bedroom Interior — Occupied House

MethodLabour DaysMaterialsTotal
Spray (with masking)5–7 days$1,400–$2,000$5,500–$8,500
Brush/roller5–7 days$1,000–$1,500$5,500–$8,000

In an occupied home, the cost is nearly identical because masking time offsets spray speed. In an empty house, spray saves 15–25% overall.

For a tailored estimate, use our painting cost calculator.

Data References

Frequently Asked Questions

Is spray painting cheaper than brush and roller in NZ?

It depends on the job. Spray painting saves 15–25% on empty houses and large exteriors where masking time is minimal. On occupied homes, the extensive masking needed makes spray and brush/roller roughly the same total cost.

Does spray painting use more paint?

Yes — spray application uses 10–20% more paint than brush and roller due to overspray and the atomisation process. On a full house interior, that's an extra $100–$300 in paint. The labour savings on suitable jobs more than offset this.

Which method gives a better finish?

Spray produces a smoother, more even finish on large flat surfaces like walls, ceilings, and doors. Brush and roller leaves a slight texture (orange peel) that some homeowners actually prefer. For trim and cabinetry, spray gives a factory-quality result that's hard to match with a brush.

Ready to Price Your Painting Project?

Whether you go spray, brush and roller, or a mix of both — get an accurate estimate for the full job. Use our calculator or let the AI quoting tool build a detailed quote.