What to Ask Before Hiring a Painter: Questions That Reveal Quality

June 19, 2026

Most first-time renovators walk into painter consultations armed with the wrong questions. They ask about price and availability, get reassuring answers, and sign contracts with people who’ll deliver mediocre work at best.

The problem isn’t that you’re asking questions. It’s that generic questions get generic answers designed to hide red flags. A dodgy painter knows exactly how to sound professional when you ask “How much?” or “When can you start?” Those questions reveal nothing about whether they’ll actually deliver quality work.

This guide gives you the exact questions that separate quality painters from cowboys. The right questions make corner-cutters uncomfortable and confident professionals eager to explain their process. You’ll know which answers to trust and which ones should send you looking elsewhere.

Why Most First-Timers Ask the Wrong Questions (And Hire the Wrong Painter)

When you don’t know what actually predicts quality, you default to surface-level questions. That’s completely normal. The issue is that experienced cowboys have heard these questions hundreds of times and know exactly how to answer them in ways that sound good but reveal nothing.

“Do you have insurance?” gets a confident “Yes, fully insured.” “How long will it take?” gets “About a week, depending on weather.” Both answers sound fine. Neither tells you if they’ll scrape properly, use decent paint, or show up when they say they will.

The shift happens when you ask questions that force painters to reveal their actual process. Quality painters get more confident as you dig deeper because they know their work holds up. Cowboys get vague or defensive because they’re hoping you won’t notice the shortcuts until after they’re paid.

This isn’t about shaming anyone for not knowing what to ask. It’s about giving you the tools to spot the difference before you hand over a deposit.

How Long Have You Been Painting Professionally?

Experience level directly affects quality and problem-solving ability. Someone who’s been painting for ten years has seen enough projects to know how different surfaces behave, what prep work actually prevents peeling, and how to handle unexpected issues without panicking.

But years alone don’t tell the whole story. Training matters as much as time on the job, and many companies offer little or no training beyond fixing mistakes after they happen. That means you could hire someone with five years of experience who’s been doing substandard work the entire time.

Ask the follow-up: “Have you done projects like mine before?” Emphasis on similar scope and surfaces. If you’re repainting weatherboard exteriors, their portfolio of commercial office interiors doesn’t prove they can handle your job. You need relevant experience, not just any experience.

What Their Answer Reveals About Training and Consistency

Good painters talk about formal training, apprenticeships, or mentorship. They’ll mention learning from experienced tradespeople or completing structured programs. If someone just says “I’ve been painting for eight years” without any detail about how they learned, that’s worth probing.

Consistent work history matters too. Someone who’s been a painter for their entire career shows commitment to the trade. Someone who’s jumped between industries and only recently started painting might be treating it as temporary work, which rarely produces quality results.

Watch for vague answers that avoid specifics about training or skill development. “I learned on the job” could mean anything from working under a master painter to figuring it out through trial and error on paying customers’ homes.

Why You Need to See Photos of Similar Projects, Not Just Any Work

A portfolio of commercial work doesn’t prove they can handle detailed residential interiors. The skills overlap, but the standards and techniques differ. Commercial painters often work at speed on large, simple surfaces. Residential work requires precision on varied surfaces with different prep needs.

Ask for photos of projects with similar surfaces, prep challenges, or finishes to yours. If you’re repainting timber trim, you need to see their timber work. If you’re dealing with old plaster walls, you need to see how they’ve handled similar surfaces before. For inspiration on colour choices that work well in residential settings, our guide to unexpected colours that boost curb appeal shows what’s possible with the right application.

Reluctance to show recent, relevant work is a red flag. Either they don’t have any, or they’re not proud of how it turned out.

Walk Me Through Exactly What Prep Work You’ll Do Before the First Coat Goes On

painter scraping and sanding wall surface preparation

Photo by La Miko on Pexels

Prep work is where quality painters separate from cowboys. It’s also where cost-cutting usually happens because most customers can’t see the difference until months later when paint starts peeling or bubbling.

This question forces painters to reveal their process. Painters should explain scraping, sanding, or grinding in detail, particularly for exteriors where weather exposure makes proper prep critical. Good ones will talk for minutes about surface preparation. Dodgy ones stay vague and try to move the conversation back to price.

Don’t accept “We do all the standard prep” as an answer. There’s no such thing as standard prep because every surface needs different treatment.

The Scraping, Sanding, and Priming Details That Matter

Quality painters mention specific steps: cleaning surfaces to remove dirt and grease, scraping loose or flaking paint, sanding rough spots smooth, filling cracks and holes, priming bare surfaces. Each step matters because skipping any of them leads to peeling, bubbling, or uneven finish within months.

Listen for surface-specific prep. Timber needs different treatment than plaster or weatherboard. Old paint might need testing for lead before sanding. New drywall needs priming before colour coats. Painters who understand this will explain why each step matters for your specific surfaces and conditions.

If they mention using low-VOC or eco-friendly products during prep, that’s often a sign they’re thinking about both quality and health impacts. Our guide to eco-friendly house paints covers why this matters for indoor air quality.

Red Flag: Vague Answers About “Standard Prep”

“Standard prep” or “whatever’s needed” without specifics means they’re either inexperienced or planning to skip steps. Good painters explain why each prep step matters for your specific surfaces. If they can’t explain their process clearly, they probably don’t follow one consistently.

This sounds simple. It rarely is. Proper prep takes time and skill, which is why it’s the first thing cut when painters are rushing or underpricing jobs.

What’s Included in Your Written Quote, and What Could Change the Price?

contractor reviewing written estimate document with client

Photo by RDNE Stock project on Pexels

This question tests transparency and prevents surprise costs halfway through the job. Detailed written estimates should include scope, materials, timeline, and cost breakdown so everyone knows exactly what’s covered and what isn’t.

Good painters list potential price changes upfront. Discovering rotten timber that needs replacing. Finding more layers of old paint than expected. Needing extra coats because the existing colour is darker than anticipated. These are legitimate reasons for price adjustments, but they should be discussed before work starts, not presented as surprises when you’re halfway through.

Verbal quotes are worthless. Get everything in writing.

The Line Items That Should Always Appear

Essential quote components include labour costs separated from materials, prep work itemised, paint brand and type specified, and cleanup included. Itemised quotes let you compare apples to apples between painters and spot where someone’s cutting costs.

Lump-sum quotes with no breakdown make it impossible to know what you’re actually paying for. A $4,000 quote could include premium paint and thorough prep, or it could include the cheapest paint available and minimal surface preparation. Without itemisation, you can’t tell the difference.

Why Contractor-Grade Paint Might Explain a Suspiciously Low Quote

Cheap quotes often use builder-grade paint that looks fine initially but fades, marks, or needs repainting sooner. Painters typically receive 20-50% discounts from suppliers, and some use contractor-grade products to maximise their margin while keeping the quote low.

Ask specifically which paint brand and product line they’ll use, then check if it’s contractor-grade or premium. Saving $500 on paint can cost $3,000 in repainting two years earlier than necessary.

Who Will Actually Be Doing the Work, and Are They Background-Checked Employees?

This question reveals whether you’re hiring a company with accountable employees or a broker who subcontracts to whoever’s available. Subcontracting creates quality and security risks because subcontractors may not know the agreed payment or standards.

Painters working in your home should be vetted employees, especially around families and children. This isn’t about creating fear. It’s about accountability and quality control.

Why Subcontractors Create Quality and Security Risks

Subcontractors have no direct relationship with you and may rush work to move to the next job. They might not know what the original contractor was paid, leading to cost-cutting to preserve their own margin. If something goes wrong, subcontractors are harder to hold accountable than direct employees.

The Insurance and Checks You Need Confirmed in Writing

Verify public liability insurance, workers compensation, and background checks. In Australia, this means police checks equivalent to CORI/SORI screening. Ask for proof in writing – certificates, not just verbal assurances.

Without proper insurance, you could be liable if a worker is injured on your property. That’s not a theoretical risk. It happens.

What’s Your Warranty, and Does It Cover More Than Just the Paint?

Warranties reveal how confident painters are in their work. Good ones stand behind application and labour, not just materials. Warranties should cover at least two years and include application and labour, not just paint defects.

Paint manufacturer warranties are meaningless if the painter won’t fix application problems. The paint itself might be guaranteed for ten years, but if it’s peeling because of poor prep, the manufacturer won’t help you.

Why Two Years Covering Application and Labour Is the Minimum

Quality paint jobs should last 5-10 years, so a two-year warranty is the bare minimum for catching application failures. Warranties covering only paint defects – not labour to fix them – are essentially worthless. You’re paying for the paint anyway. The value is in someone standing behind their workmanship.

Get warranty terms in writing as part of the contract, not as a separate document you might lose.

What Happens If the Weather Turns Bad During My Project?

This question tests planning, professionalism, and whether they’ll rush work in poor conditions to stay on schedule. Painters should have policies for bad weather and strategies for dealing with heat or moisture.

Good painters will delay work rather than paint in conditions that compromise quality. Weather delays aren’t always the painter’s fault, but how they handle them reveals professionalism.

How They Handle Heat, Moisture, and Delays Reveals Professionalism

Professional painters know temperature and humidity limits for different paints and won’t work outside those ranges. They should have contingency plans: working different areas, rescheduling, or using products suited to current conditions.

Painters who say “weather won’t be a problem” either don’t understand paint chemistry or plan to work regardless of conditions. Neither option is good for you.

Getting Firm Start and Finish Dates

Ask for specific start and completion dates in the contract, with allowances for weather delays. Reluctance to commit to dates often means they’re juggling too many jobs or don’t have a proper schedule.

“We’ll start when we finish the current job” is a red flag. Professionals book weeks ahead with specific dates. If you’re weighing whether to hire professionals at all, our comparison of DIY versus professional painting breaks down when expertise actually matters.

The One Question That Ties It All Together

person making phone call checking references

Photo by Gustavo Fring on Pexels

Here’s the final question: “Can you provide three recent references I can contact?”

Painters confident in their work eagerly provide references. Those who hesitate or make excuses are hiding something. But getting references isn’t enough. You need to actually call them and ask about prep quality, timeline accuracy, cleanup, and whether they’d hire them again.

Ask references specific questions: Did the painter show up when promised? How did they handle unexpected issues? Was the site left clean each day? Would you hire them again? These questions reveal patterns that predict how your own project will go.

You now have the tools to vet painters like a professional, even on your first renovation. The right questions give you confidence to spot quality painters and avoid costly mistakes. Most importantly, they shift the dynamic from hoping you’re making the right choice to knowing you are.

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