Are you hiring for a paint job?

A
Adrin Sarwar

If you’ve ever hired a professional painter, you know the drill, the handshake, the quote, and the promise that your house will look like a magazine spread by Friday. But as the plastic sheets come down and the fumes clear, many homeowners start to notice things, a little peeling here, a streaky patch there.

While most painters are honest tradespeople, the pressure to finish jobs quickly and cut costs can lead to some creative storytelling. Here are the five most common lies your painter might be telling you, and why you need to know the truth.

1. ALL PAINT IS BASICALLY THE SAME.

The Lie: Don’t waste money on the premium stuff. This contractor-grade bucket from the big-box store is exactly the same as the gallon designer brand.

The Truth: Cheap paint is cheap for a reason. It has more solvents (water or thinners) and fewer solids (the pigments and resins that actually stay on your wall). Professional-grade paint offers better hide (coverage), better scrub resistance, and most importantly, it lasts years longer. If a painter pushes for the cheap stuff, it’s usually because it’s easier for them to pick up or they’re trying to pad their profit margin on a materials included quote.

2. WE DON’T NEED A PRIMER, THIS IS A ‘2-IN-1’ PRODUCT.

The Lie: Modern paint has primer built in, so we can skip that step and save you a day of labour.

The Truth: While paint and primer in one is great for refreshing a room with a similar color, it is not a magic wand. If you are painting over raw wood, fresh drywall, a glossy oil-based finish, or a dark color (like turning a navy room white), a dedicated primer is non-negotiable. Skipping it often leads to

Flashing, where the finish looks uneven, or paint that peels off like a sunburned layer of skin a few months later.

3. THE WALLS ARE CLEAN ENOUGH TO START RIGHT NOW.

The Lie: I’ve been doing this for twenty years; a little dust won’t hurt the finish.

The Truth: Preparation is 70% of a quality paint job. If your painter doesn’t spend the first several hours (or even a full day) cleaning, sanding, and caulking, they are cutting the most important corner. Paint is an adhesive; it needs a clean, slightly roughened surface to bite into. If they paint over dust, kitchen grease, or cobwebs, the paint is sticking to the grime, not your house.

4. ONE COAT WILL COVER IT PERFECTLY.

The Lie: I’m using a special technique/thick nap roller, so one coat is all we need.

The Truth: Almost every professional paint job requires two coats for a truly uniform finish. A single coat often looks fine from 10 feet away, but once the sun hits it at a certain angle, you’ll see missed spots and uneven pigment. Two coats provide the depth of colour and the protective film thickness that the manufacturer intended. If they promise one-coat coverage, they’re usually just trying to get to their next job sooner.

5. IT’LL BE DRY AND READY FOR THE SECOND COAT IN 30 MINUTES.

The Lie: The sun is out and it’s a light color, it’s already dry to the touch, so we can keep going.

The Truth: There is a massive difference between paint being dry to the touch and being ready for a recoat. If you apply a second layer before the first has fully outgassed and cured, you trap moisture between the layers. This is the no.1 cause of bubbling and that annoying tacky feeling where the windows or doors stick to the frame for weeks after the job is done.

HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF

Check the trash: Look at the cans. Are they the brand you agreed upon?

Watch the clock: If they finished the prep work in 20 minutes, they didn’t do it.

The Flashlight Test: Once they claim they’re done, turn off the overhead lights and shine a flashlight at an angle across the walls. It will reveal every shortcut, drip, and missed spot they hoped you wouldn’t see.