A five-year painting warranty sounds reassuring. But warranties in the painting industry vary enormously in what they actually cover, and the gap between “we stand behind our work” and a warranty that’s enforceable in practice is often significant. Here’s what to look for — and what to watch out for.
The two things a painting warranty can cover
Workmanship warranty: covers defects caused by how the paint was applied — peeling, bubbling, cracking, or premature adhesion failure that results from improper prep, application errors, or the wrong product for the surface. This is what a painting contractor’s warranty should cover.
Manufacturer’s warranty: covers the paint product itself — if a properly applied product fails due to a defect in the paint. This comes from the paint manufacturer (like Sherwin-Williams), not the contractor. Most quality paint products carry their own separate warranty.
A good painting contractor offers both: their own workmanship warranty plus quality products with manufacturer backing.
What a workmanship warranty typically excludes
This is where the fine print matters. Most painting warranties — even legitimate ones — don’t cover:
- Normal fading over time from UV exposure (this is expected; it’s not failure)
- Damage from impact, vandalism, or power washing by the homeowner after the job
- Substrate movement or structural failure — if stucco cracks because of foundation settling or hurricane damage, that’s a structural issue, not a coating failure
- Work done by other contractors after the original paint job
- Mold or mildew growth in conditions with persistent moisture problems (drainage issues, leaking gutters, etc.) — paint won’t stop water intrusion that’s coming from behind the wall
In Florida’s climate, some of these exclusions matter a lot. Hurricane damage, for example, is clearly outside a painter’s control. But salt-air adhesion failure on a coastal home — if it results from using the wrong primer on a stucco surface — should be covered.
What makes a warranty actually enforceable
The warranty being in writing is the starting point. Beyond that:
Is the company still around? A warranty from a crew that’s out of business next year is worthless. Established companies with a local track record — fixed address, phone number, licensed with the state, reviews from years ago — are more likely to still be there in year four.
Do they use their own employees? If your home was painted by a subcontractor the company brought in, there’s a practical question of who actually did the work and who’s responsible when something goes wrong. Companies with their own trained workforce have a clearer accountability chain. See our post on why it matters that your painters are employees, not subcontractors for more on this.
What’s the claims process? Ask before you sign. A contractor who can clearly explain what you’d do if something failed — contact them, they inspect, they determine whether it’s a covered defect, they repair it — is more credible than one who says “don’t worry, we’ll take care of it.”
How KB Painting’s warranty works
KB Painting offers a 5-year workmanship warranty on exterior and interior painting projects, and a 6-month workmanship warranty on cabinet refinishing (a different substrate with different dynamics).
The warranty covers defects in application: if paint peels, bubbles, or fails adhesion in a way that a properly prepared and applied coating shouldn’t, we come back and fix it. It doesn’t cover structural damage, homeowner modifications, or normal UV fading over time — those are honest exclusions that any legitimate contractor will include.
Because we use our own employees — not subcontractors — we know exactly how every job was done. That matters when a warranty claim comes in. We can look at what prep was done, what products were used, and assess the situation accurately rather than having a finger-pointing situation with a subcontractor who’s since moved on.
Full warranty details are on our warranty page.
The Florida context
In a climate like South Florida’s — extreme UV, high humidity, coastal salt air, periodic hurricane-force wind and rain — a painting warranty is more than a sales tool. Coatings fail here faster when they’re applied poorly. A contractor who offers a meaningful warranty has financial skin in the game to do the prep correctly the first time.
If a quote comes with no warranty or a very short one, ask why. If the warranty exists but isn’t in writing, push for documentation before you sign.
Request a free written estimate from KB Painting, and we’ll walk you through exactly what our warranty covers and how the process works if you ever need to use it. No fine print surprises.