House painting cost in New Zealand ranges from $8,000 to $45,000+ in 2026, depending on interior vs exterior scope, preparation, and scaffolding.
A professional repaint is one of the most cost-effective ways to improve both the appearance and durability of a property. But exterior painting on two-storey homes can see access costs account for over 30% of the total bill — and that surprises most homeowners.
In this guide, a Quantity Surveyor breaks down the real 2026 rates for interior and exterior painting, per m² rates by surface type, and the hidden cost drivers that separate a quality job from one that peels within three years.
Typical Painting Costs by House Size (2026)
| House Size | Interior Only | Exterior Only | Full Repaint |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-bed (approx. 100m²) | $6,000 – $10,000 | $10,000 – $15,000 | $16,000 – $25,000 |
| 3-bed (approx. 130m²) | $8,000 – $13,000 | $12,000 – $18,000 | $20,000 – $30,000 |
| 4-bed (approx. 180m²) | $12,000 – $18,000 | $18,000 – $28,000 | $30,000 – $45,000+ |
QS Note: The biggest variable in interior painting is whether you are doing walls only, or including the labour-intensive trims, doors, and window frames. Always clarify this scope point when comparing quotes.
👉 For overall renovation cost context: [Renovation Cost per m² NZ (2026)]
Typical Painting Project Budgets by Scope NZ (2026)
| Project Type | House Size | Estimated Total | What’s Included |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interior only | 3-bed (approx. 130m²) | $8,000 – $13,000 | Walls, ceilings, doors, frames, and window trims. Includes basic surface preparation |
| Exterior only | Standard single-storey weatherboard | $12,000 – $18,000 | Washdown, preparation, sanding, 1 primer coat, 2 top coats on walls and fascia |
| Exterior only | Standard two-storey weatherboard | $18,000 – $28,000 | As above plus scaffolding for full access |
| Full repaint | Standard 3-bed single-storey | $20,000 – $30,000 | Complete interior and exterior — scope combination delivers cost efficiency |
| Full repaint | Standard 3-bed two-storey | $30,000 – $45,000+ | As above with scaffolding and extended access time |
Painting Cost per m² NZ (2026)
Per m² rates are useful for estimating individual rooms or new construction work. These rates are based on paintable surface area (wall and ceiling area) — not floor area.
Interior painting per m²
| Finish | Cost per m² |
|---|---|
| Standard walls and ceilings (professional finish) | $35 – $55 / m² |
Includes: surface wash, filling minor defects, 1 primer coat, 2 top coats on standard plasterboard.
Exterior painting per m² (by cladding type)
| Cladding Type | Cost per m² |
|---|---|
| Weatherboards / timber | $45 – $70 / m² |
| Stucco / plaster | $40 – $60 / m² |
| Brick (if painted) | $35 – $50 / m² |
Quick Cost Estimate: Exterior Weatherboard Repaint
Here is how a QS builds a quick baseline for a typical single-storey weatherboard exterior repaint:
| Input | Example |
|---|---|
| Cladding surface area | 180m² |
| Material type | Timber weatherboard ($55/m²) |
| Labour & materials subtotal | 180 × $55 = $9,900 |
| Scaffolding & fall protection | + $3,500 |
| Total estimated budget | $13,400 |
QS Tip: Combine with roofing works to reduce access costs — scaffold hire across both trades saves $2,000–$4,000. See: [Roofing Cost NZ (2026)]
Where Does the Money Actually Go?
Many homeowners see the cost of a 10L bucket of Dulux at Bunnings and assume the painter is overcharging. In reality, preparation and access account for the majority of the cost on any professional paint job.
For a typical $15,000 exterior painting project:
| Cost Component | Typical % | Approx. Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Specialist labour (painters) | 50 – 60% | $7,500 – $9,000 |
| Access (scaffolding / edge protection) | 15 – 25% | $2,250 – $3,750 |
| Materials (paint, fillers, sandpaper) | 10 – 15% | $1,500 – $2,250 |
| Preliminaries, waste & margin | 5 – 10% | $750 – $1,500 |
QS Tip: A professional painter using high-grade Dulux, Resene, or PPG trade paint is paying for superior coverage, UV resistance, and longevity. Using cheaper paint may save $500 upfront but will require repainting 3–5 years sooner — poor long-term value.
The Hidden Cost Drivers
1. Lead-based paint removal If your home was built before the 1980s, it almost certainly has lead-based paint in the original layers. When sanded, this generates toxic dust. WorkSafe NZ regulations require lead testing and specialised containment and disposal. Testing alone typically costs $200–$500 before removal is even priced. Budget an additional $5,000 – $12,000+ if lead paint is confirmed — get testing done before accepting any painter’s quote.
2. Extensive surface preparation If interior walls have water damage, peeling wallpaper, or significant cracking, the painter must spend substantially more time on preparation — skim coating, stopping, and priming. Expect a 20–30% premium if your plasterboard is in poor condition.
3. Two-storey scaffolding Full scaffolding for a two-storey home costs $4,500 – $8,000+ and must be included in any exterior painting quote. If a quote for a two-storey exterior repaint does not mention scaffolding, ask directly — it may have been excluded to make the price look competitive.
4. Roof painting Painting a Colorsteel roof requires specialist paint, harness and height safety equipment, and surface preparation including moss and mould treatment. This is almost always priced as a separate scope. Budget $4,000 – $8,000+ for a standard residential roof repaint.
How to Get a Reliable Quote
When approaching painters, provide this brief for comparable quotes:
- Scope (interior only / exterior only / full repaint)
- Storeys (single or double — scaffolding cost driver)
- Cladding type (weatherboard, plaster, brick)
- Condition (any water damage, peeling, cracks, or known lead paint)
- Finish specification (number of coats, paint brand preference)
Ask each painter to itemise their quote — labour, materials, and scaffolding as separate line items. A single lump-sum quote with no breakdown is a yellow flag.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I paint my house myself to save money? Yes. Unlike plumbing or electrical work, painting does not require a licence in NZ. DIY interior painting can save 50–60% of the total cost. However, professional surface preparation is what prevents peeling within 2–3 years. Skipping the prep is the most common and most expensive DIY mistake.
When is the best time to paint a house exterior in NZ? Exterior painting is best scheduled between October and April. Cold temperatures and high humidity in winter prevent paint from curing correctly, leading to early failure. Most professional painters book out 4–8 weeks ahead during peak season.
How long does a professional paint job last in NZ? A well-executed exterior repaint using high-quality materials and thorough surface preparation should last 8 to 12 years. Interior painting lasts longer — typically 10–15 years — as it is not exposed to UV and weather. If a quote looks unusually cheap, ask specifically how the surface is being prepared — that is where corners are cut first.
Do I need building consent to repaint my house? No. Repainting is maintenance work and does not require building consent. However, if you are changing the colour of a heritage property or a property in a special character zone, you may need resource consent. Check with your local council if this applies.
What is the difference between interior and exterior paint? Exterior paint contains higher concentrations of UV stabilisers, mould inhibitors, and binding agents to withstand NZ weather conditions. Using interior paint on exterior surfaces will fail significantly sooner. Always use the correct product for the substrate and location.
Why is painting labour so expensive in NZ? Three factors drive the high labour cost. First, preparation work — washing, filling, sanding, and priming — takes significantly longer than the painting itself and cannot be rushed without compromising the finish. Second, access — scaffolding, edge protection, and working at height adds time and compliance costs to every exterior job. Third, weather delays — NZ painters frequently lose productive days to wind and rain, which is factored into their pricing on exterior projects.
Summary: Painting Cost NZ 2026
| Project | Estimated Total |
|---|---|
| Interior only (3-bed) | $8,000 – $13,000 |
| Exterior only — single storey | $12,000 – $18,000 |
| Exterior only — two storey | $18,000 – $28,000 |
| Full repaint — single storey | $20,000 – $30,000 |
| Full repaint — two storey | $30,000 – $45,000+ |
| Interior per m² | $35 – $55 |
| Exterior per m² (weatherboard) | $45 – $70 |
A repaint is rarely a standalone decision — it is usually part of a broader renovation or property refresh. If you are combining painting with other exterior work, get the scaffold hired once and cover multiple trades at the same time.
For broader project budgeting:
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