What's Included
🏠 Siding (Wood, Vinyl, Fiber Cement)
Full siding repaints with appropriate surface prep and primer for each material type — wood, vinyl, and fiber cement all require different preparation approaches.
🏠 Trim, Fascia & Soffits
The detail areas that frame a home's exterior, often showing wear before the main siding does.
🏠 Front Entry & Exterior Doors
A fresh front door is one of the highest-impact, lowest-cost exterior updates available.
🏠 Stucco & Masonry Surfaces
Specialized coatings appropriate for stucco and masonry that allow proper moisture vapor transmission.
🏠 Caulking & Minor Repair
Cracked or missing caulk around windows, doors, and trim joints addressed before painting — this is often what determines how long the paint job actually lasts.
🏠 Pressure Washing Prep
Surfaces properly cleaned before any paint is applied, removing dirt, mildew, and chalking residue that would otherwise compromise adhesion.
Why a Local Spokane Crew Matters
Spokane's combination of over 300 sunny days a year and a real winter freeze-thaw cycle is a genuinely demanding environment for exterior coatings — more so than the milder, wetter climate west of the Cascades that most national paint guidance is written around. South and west-facing walls absorb intense UV through long summer days, which breaks down paint binders and causes chalking years before the same product would show wear on a shaded north wall. We factor wall orientation into both product selection and the expected repaint timeline when we walk a property.
The freeze-thaw cycle matters just as much as the sun. Spokane regularly swings from above-freezing afternoons to sub-zero nights through the winter months, and that repeated expansion and contraction is hard on caulking, trim joints, and any paint film that's lost flexibility with age. This is why caulk inspection and re-caulking around windows, doors, and trim is treated as a standard part of our exterior process rather than an upsell — a paint job applied over compromised caulk lets moisture behind the siding regardless of how good the paint itself is.
Timing is the third local factor. Exterior paint needs a real curing window — consistent temperatures, manageable humidity, and enough daylight hours — and Spokane's painting season is genuinely narrower than coastal Washington's. A crew that's scheduled exterior work here for years reads the specific weather patterns (not just a generic "above 50°F" rule) to sequence projects so they cure properly the first time, rather than risking a rushed job in a marginal weather window.