Quick answer: A proper painting quote should include the company’s details and GST number, a full scope with measurements, the surface prep, the exact paint products and number of coats, labour and timeline, payment terms, a final sign-off process, and a workmanship guarantee with a validity date. If a quote is missing these, you can’t compare it fairly — and that’s usually where the cheap surprise costs hide.
A bit of paint can make a home feel new again and lift its value. Getting there without nasty surprises comes down to one unglamorous document: the quote.
A painting quote isn’t just a number on a page. Anyone can scribble a figure down. What separates a professional quote from a risky one is the detail behind that figure — what’s being painted, how it’s being prepped, which products are going on, and what happens if something isn’t right. Get a vague one-line price and you’ve got no way to compare it against the next company, and no protection when the scope quietly changes halfway through.
Here are the eight things every painting quote should include before you sign, whether you’re weighing up residential or commercial painters in Auckland — plus how to actually compare the quotes you get.
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The Company’s Details, Accreditation and Insurance
A quote should arrive on proper letterhead with the company’s full details — legal name, physical address, contact numbers and GST number. That’s not just for looks; it tells you the price comes from a real, accountable business you can hold to it.
Look for signs the company is established and covered: a GST number, public liability insurance, and membership of an industry body such as Master Painters New Zealand. A GST-registered price also matters for a fair comparison — a quote that looks cheaper because GST has quietly been left off isn’t actually the lower price.
🎨 Painting tip: Ask straight out whether the company carries public liability insurance and whether their painters are covered on your site. A reputable Auckland painter will answer without hesitation.
A Clear Scope With Measurements
The quote should spell out exactly what’s being painted and the measurements it’s based on. Most painters charge per square metre, so the measurements are where the price comes from — and where you can spot an error before it costs you.
Each area should be listed and labelled: interior walls, ceilings, trims, doors, exterior elevations, soffits, fascia. On a larger job, walls should be identified by location so there’s no confusion about what’s included and what isn’t. If the scope just says “paint house” with a lump-sum figure, push for the breakdown. Vague scope is where disputes start.
What “in scope” and “out of scope” should look like
A good quote states not only what’s included but what isn’t — for example, whether it covers the garage, the fence, the eaves, or minor timber repairs. Knowing the exclusions upfront stops the “oh, that’s extra” conversation later.
The Surface Preparation, in Detail
Prep is 80% of a lasting paint job, and it’s the first thing a cheap quote cuts. The quote should describe the preparation for each surface, not just assume it.
Depending on the home, that can mean washing down, scraping and sanding back flaking paint, filling cracks and nail holes, GIB stopping and plaster repairs, treating mould, and priming bare or patched areas. A villa in Grey Lynn with old flaking weatherboards needs a very different prep run to a near-new fibre cement home — and the quote should reflect that. If prep isn’t itemised, you have no idea whether the painter is doing it properly or skimming over it to win on price.
🎨 Painting tip: When two quotes are far apart on price, the gap is almost always in the prep. Compare the preparation lines side by side before you compare the totals.
The Exact Paint Products and Number of Coats
“Premium paint” means nothing on its own. A quote should name the actual products and the number of coats for each surface.
That might read as two coats of Resene Lumbersider on the weatherboards, Dulux Weathershield on a plaster exterior, or Resene SpaceCote Low Sheen on interior walls. Named products let you check the spec yourself and confirm you’re comparing like with like. Most jobs need two coats; a bold colour change, bare timber or patched repairs can need three, and each coat should be stated.
Materials beyond paint matter too — undercoats, primers and sealers should be listed where the surface calls for them. If you want a full picture of how product choice feeds the price, our guide to interior and exterior painting costs breaks it down.
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Labour, Crew and a Realistic Timeline
The quote should give you a sense of the labour involved and how long the job will take. An estimated start date, completion date and crew size tell you the painter has actually planned the work, not just pulled a number out of the air.
Painting labour in New Zealand generally runs around $35 to $45 an hour, and the timeline should be realistic for the scope — a whole-house repaint isn’t a two-day job. A clear timeline also helps you plan around the work, especially if you’re living in the house, prepping for an open home, or coordinating other trades. A dedicated project manager on the job, which we run as standard, is what keeps that timeline honest and gives you a single point of contact for updates.
Payment Terms You’re Comfortable With
Every quote should state clearly how and when you pay. Be wary of any company asking for a large sum upfront before work begins.
Reasonable arrangements vary — a modest deposit, progress payments on a larger job, and the balance on completion is common. What matters is that the terms are written down, not agreed on a handshake. The labour and materials should tie back to the payment schedule so you can see what each stage covers. If a painter wants the full amount before lifting a brush, treat that as a red flag.
A Final Walk-Through and Sign-Off
No job is flawless on the first pass, so the quote should describe how completion is checked. A professional painter finishes with a walk-through, fixing any missed spots before you sign off and pay the balance.
This is where a standardised quality check earns its keep. Every job we complete runs through a 97-point inspection checklist and carries our Picture Perfect guarantee, so nothing slips through on the strength of “she’ll be right”. Ask any company how they handle final inspection and touch-ups — if the answer is vague, so will the finish be.
A Workmanship Guarantee and a Validity Date
Two things round out a solid quote: a guarantee, and an expiry. A workmanship guarantee tells you the company stands behind its finish; a validity date tells you how long the price holds.
Ask what’s guaranteed and for how long. Master Painters NZ members, for instance, back their work with a workmanship guarantee, and a quality painter will happily put the terms in writing. Every quote should also carry a validity date, typically a few weeks to a few months, so you know how long you’ve got to decide before prices are revisited. That protects you when you come back to accept it.
How to Compare Painting Quotes Fairly
Once you’ve got two or three quotes, don’t just line up the totals. Compare what’s inside them, line by line — because the cheapest number is often quoting the smallest job.
Use the table below as a quick checklist. If a quote is missing a row, that’s your first question back to the company.
| What to check | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Company details + GST number | Confirms an accountable, registered business and a like-for-like price |
| Scope + measurements | Shows exactly what’s included and where the price comes from |
| Prep itemised per surface | The biggest hidden variable and the first thing cheap quotes cut |
| Named products + coats | Lets you compare quality, not just price |
| Timeline + crew | Proves the work has been planned realistically |
| Payment terms | Protects your money; no large upfront demand |
| Guarantee + validity date | Backs the finish and locks the price for a set period |
If you’d like a properly detailed quote to measure the others against, that’s exactly what we provide free, on-site, with no obligation. Weighing up who to trust with the job? Our guide on how to choose the right painter in Auckland pairs well with this one, and our quality-first approach explains what sits behind our numbers.
➡ Book a free colour consultation with Superior Painters
➡ See our before and after painting transformations
➡ Learn more about our house painting services in Auckland
What should a painting quote include?
A complete painting quote should include the company's details and GST number, a clear scope with measurements, the surface preparation itemised per area, the exact paint products and number of coats, labour and a realistic timeline, payment terms, a final walk-through and sign-off process, and a workmanship guarantee with a validity date. If any of these are missing, ask for them before you compare quotes or sign.
How do you compare home painting quotes fairly?
Don't just compare the totals — compare what's inside each quote. Line up the scope, the prep detail, the named products and number of coats, the timeline and the guarantee side by side. The cheapest quote is often for the smallest job, with less prep or fewer coats. A quote missing a section is your first question back to that company.
How do painters quote a painting job?
Most painters quote after an on-site visit, measuring the surfaces to be painted and assessing how much preparation each needs. They then build a price from the square-metre area, the labour hours (generally around $35 to $45 per hour), the paint system and any access gear. A reputable painter gives a fixed written price rather than a rough figure over the phone.
Why are two painting quotes so different in price?
Usually because they're quoting different work. One might include two coats of a named premium system over full preparation; the cheaper one might be a single coat over a quick wash. Differences in prep, the number of coats, the products specified, and whether GST is included all move the price. Compare the detail, not just the bottom line.
Should I pay a painter a deposit upfront?
A modest deposit is normal, and on larger jobs progress payments are common, with the balance due on completion. Be cautious of any painter demanding a large sum before work begins. Payment terms should be written clearly in the quote and tied to the stages of the job, so you can see what each payment covers.
What is a fair hourly rate for a painter in NZ?
Professional painting labour in New Zealand generally runs about $35 to $45 per hour. Most Auckland painters quote a fixed price for the whole job rather than an open hourly rate, which puts the risk of the work running long on them rather than you. The hourly figure is still useful for checking whether a quote's total looks realistic.
How long should a painting quote be valid for?
A painting quote should carry a validity date, typically ranging from a few weeks to a few months. This tells you how long the price is locked in before it might be revisited, and it protects you when you come back to accept it. If a quote has no expiry date, ask the company to confirm one in writing.
Do I need a written guarantee with my painting quote?
Yes. A workmanship guarantee shows the company stands behind its finish and will put right any defects within the guarantee period. Master Painters New Zealand members back their work with a workmanship guarantee, and any quality painter will happily state the terms in writing. Treat a reluctance to guarantee the work as a warning sign.
What does a final walk-through involve?
At completion, a professional painter walks through the job with you to check every surface and fix any missed spots or minor defects before you sign off and pay the balance. Companies with a standardised quality check — ours runs to a 97-point inspection checklist — catch things a quick glance would miss, so the finish matches what you were quoted.