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Seasonal & Local

Painting on the Treasure Coast vs. Broward: What's Different

Our team brings 25+ years of combined experience painting homes and commercial buildings across both the Treasure Coast and South Florida’s Broward County — experience that shapes how we approach every job in each region. From the outside, a stucco home in Port St. Lucie and one in Fort Lauderdale might look like the same job. In practice, there are meaningful differences — in climate exposure, HOA culture, permit requirements, and the types of projects we see most often. Here’s an honest look at what’s different and why it matters.

Salt air exposure

This is the single biggest environmental difference between the two regions, and it affects material selection more than anything else.

The Treasure Coast — particularly coastal areas of Jensen Beach, Stuart, Vero Beach, and Hobe Sound — has significant coastal exposure. Homes within a mile or two of the inlet or Indian River Lagoon see constant salt-laden air. That salt deposits on exterior surfaces and accelerates chalking of lesser-grade paints, causes corrosion of metal fasteners and trim, and can compromise paint adhesion on surfaces that weren’t properly prepped.

Broward County has coastal areas too — Fort Lauderdale beach homes and properties in Pompano Beach along A1A see intense salt exposure — but many Broward properties are 10, 15, or 20 miles inland, where salt air is a much smaller factor.

What changes: on coastal Treasure Coast and coastal Broward properties, we specify Sherwin-Williams products rated for coastal environments (typically Duration or Emerald with an alkali-resistant primer on stucco), and we pay particular attention to metal prep — sanding and priming window frames, gutters, and garage door hardware before topcoats. On inland Broward properties, the spec can sometimes be simplified.

HOA rules and color approval

Both regions have heavy HOA penetration, but the character of those communities differs.

On the Treasure Coast — particularly in planned communities throughout Port St. Lucie, Palm City, and Stuart — HOAs often have large community-wide color palettes with a modest number of approved combinations. Getting approval is usually a matter of submitting a color selection from the approved list and waiting for the next meeting. Turnaround is often 2–4 weeks.

In Broward County — areas like Fort Lauderdale, Coral Springs, Plantation, and Wellington — HOA rules vary more widely. Some are newer master-planned communities with fairly streamlined digital approval processes. Others are older associations with more complex rules, sometimes requiring in-person board approval or specific exterior finish requirements (certain sheens, specific application methods over Venetian plaster, etc.). The variance is wider, and occasionally more time-consuming.

In both regions, we’ve built the HOA documentation process into our standard workflow. We provide color chip samples, product data sheets, and spec letters for approvals. Homeowners who try to shortcut the process and paint without approval can face fines and mandatory repainting — we’ve seen it.

Permit requirements

Building permit requirements for painting vary by municipality, and both regions have their share of jurisdictions that require permits for full exterior repaints involving stucco repair.

In Port St. Lucie and Stuart, the threshold for permit-required work is typically tied to the extent of stucco patching — minor cosmetic patching generally doesn’t trigger a permit, but substantial repairs or re-stucco work usually does. We handle permit pulls when required.

In Broward’s incorporated cities — Fort Lauderdale, Coral Springs, Pompano Beach — permit requirements can be more strictly enforced, particularly in areas with active code enforcement. We’re familiar with the requirements across the municipalities we serve and we build permit costs and timelines into project estimates where applicable. A homeowner who’s surprised by permit fees at the end of a job is a homeowner whose contractor didn’t plan properly.

Typical project profiles

The Treasure Coast skews toward single-family CBS homes, typically one or two stories, often 2,000–3,000 sq ft, with large driveways and pools. Exterior repaints in the $3,500–$8,000 range are the bread and butter. Interior projects tend to be full whole-home repaints coordinated around a move or renovation.

Broward has more density and variety — we do more townhomes, condos with association common areas, commercial storefronts, and larger multifamily properties. Project scopes are wider, and commercial work is a larger share of the mix in the Fort Lauderdale area specifically.

Weather timing differences

Both regions follow Florida’s wet/dry season pattern, but there’s a subtle difference: the Treasure Coast is slightly less humid overall and rainy season storms tend to track a bit further inland, while coastal Broward sometimes gets ocean-effect moisture even outside the peak rainy season. For practical scheduling purposes, this is a small difference — but it’s worth noting that a Broward project in October can still encounter rainy-season-like conditions that a Treasure Coast project in the same month might not.

For a deeper look at how we plan around weather, see our posts on the best time of year to paint in South Florida and painting during Florida’s rainy season.

One thing that doesn’t change

Regardless of whether a job is in Vero Beach or Boca Raton, our approach is the same: our own employees do the work (no subcontractors), we use Sherwin-Williams products throughout, and every job comes with a five-year workmanship warranty. The logistical details change. The standard doesn’t.

To see how we approach projects in your specific area, explore our locations page or request a free written estimate. We’ll come out, walk the property, and give you a detailed written scope — no surprises.

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