Professional Painters San Francisco CA | Free Estimates

Welcome to our San Francisco painters directory – your go-to spot for finding talented local painters who know their way around the city's unique homes and businesses. Whether you're dealing with Victorian details, modern condos, or anything in between, we've got you covered with SF's best painting pros.

San Francisco, CA 6 painters listed Painters

All Painters in San Francisco

6 listings
McCartney Painting

McCartney Painting

Painter
★★★★★ (137)
2071 Vicente St, San Francisco, CA 94116, United States
Prestige Custom Painting

Prestige Custom Painting

Painting
★★★★★ (56)
100 Pine St #1250, San Francisco, CA 94111, United States
Rhapsody Painting & Environmental Services

Rhapsody Painting & Environmental Services

Painter
★★★★★ (33)
850 S Van Ness Ave ste 5, San Francisco, CA 94110, United States
San Francisco Painting Company

San Francisco Painting Company

Painting
★★★★★ (15)
415 Duncan St, San Francisco, CA 94131, United States
SF House Painting

SF House Painting

Painter
★★★★☆ (97)
4220 18th St, San Francisco, CA 94114, United States
Tom's Painters Inc

Tom's Painters Inc

Painting
★★★★☆ (28)
1319 26th Ave, San Francisco, CA 94122, United States
Local Info

Painting in San Francisco

San Francisco's painting market is absolutely bonkers right now—we're seeing 34% more residential projects year-over-year, with the average exterior paint job hitting $12,400 in 2024. That's up from $9,200 just two years ago. The city's Victorian and Edwardian housing stock drives constant demand. With 47% of SF homes built before 1940, you've got lead paint remediation requirements pushing costs up and creating specialized niches. Meanwhile, new construction permits jumped 28% this year (3,847 units approved through October), feeding commercial and high-end residential work. Tech money isn't gone—it's just pickier. The median household income of $126,000 means people can still afford quality work, but they're shopping harder for value. What sets SF apart? Fog. Seriously. That marine layer means painters work year-round but deal with moisture issues other cities don't see. Plus our Byzantine permit process—even simple exterior color changes in historic districts require approval. I've watched crews wait six weeks for paperwork while materials sat in storage.

Pacific Heights

  • Area Profile: Grand Edwardians and modern condos, $3M+ median, large single-family lots
  • Common Painters Work: Full exterior restoration, specialty finishes, high-end interior work with designer coordination
  • Price Range: $18K-$45K for typical exterior jobs, $8K-$25K interior projects
  • Local Note: Historic preservation rules mean color approval processes; many buildings require lead-safe practices

Mission District

  • Area Profile: Mix of Victorian flats and new construction, $1.2M median, dense urban lots
  • Common Painters Work: Exterior touch-ups, rental unit turnovers, mural work, graffiti removal
  • Price Range: $6K-$15K exterior, $3K-$8K interior residential
  • Local Note: High foot traffic means faster wear; lots of rental properties needing quick turnarounds

Richmond District

  • Area Profile: Sunset-style row houses, fog belt location, $1.4M median home value
  • Common Painters Work: Moisture damage repairs, exterior maintenance, garage door painting
  • Price Range: $8K-$18K for full exterior, $4K-$12K interior projects
  • Local Note: Constant fog means mildew issues and longer dry times—painters need moisture-resistant products

📊 **Current Pricing:**

  • Entry-level projects: $3K-$6K (single room interiors, small touch-up work)
  • Mid-range: $8K-$15K (full home interiors or standard exterior jobs)
  • Premium: $20K+ (historic restoration, specialty finishes, lead remediation)

The market's weird right now. Labor costs jumped 18% this year—good painters are booking 8-10 weeks out versus 4-6 weeks in 2022. Material prices finally stabilized after that crazy 2021-2023 surge, but specialty products (low-VOC, historic-appropriate colors) still command premiums. 📈 **Market Trends:** Demand is up but concentrated. Residential work grew 34% year-over-year, driven by people finally tackling pandemic-deferred maintenance. Commercial projects dropped 12%—office space uncertainty has businesses holding off. Wait times average 7 weeks for quality crews (12 weeks for specialized historic work). Summer booking starts in February now. 💰 **What People Are Spending:**

  1. Full exterior repaints: $12,400 average (most common project)
  2. Interior whole-house: $9,800 average
  3. Kitchen/bathroom refresh: $4,200 average
  4. Lead-safe work: $18,600 average (includes abatement)
  5. Commercial tenant improvements: $8,500 per 1,000 sq ft

Here's what's driving costs up: everyone wants low-VOC everything now, lead-safe practices are mandatory for pre-1978 buildings (that's 73% of SF housing stock), and good painters are cherry-picking jobs.

**Economic Indicators:** SF's population actually dropped 3.1% since 2020, but household income rose 11%. The tech sector stabilized—no more mass layoffs, but hiring's selective. Major projects include 5M development (680 units), Oceanwide Center (finally moving), and 706 Mission Street tower. Commercial construction permits hit $2.8 billion in 2024. **Housing Market:** - Median home value: $1,647,000 (up 4.2% year-over-year) - New construction permits: 3,847 units approved through October 2024 - Inventory: 2.1 months supply (still tight) - Condo median: $1,280,000 **How This Affects Painters:** New construction means commercial opportunities, but the real money's in maintenance. With homes averaging $1.6M, owners protect their investment. A $15K paint job on a million-dollar house? Easy decision. Plus all these older buildings need constant upkeep—the fog's relentless. The permit pipeline suggests steady work ahead. Each new high-rise means 200+ units needing interior work, plus retail spaces at street level.

**Weather Data:**

  • ☀️ Summer: Highs 65-75°F, morning fog clears by noon most days
  • ❄️ Winter: Lows 45-50°F, more rain but still workable temperatures
  • 🌧️ Annual rainfall: 24 inches (concentrated November-March)
  • 💨 Wind/storms: Consistent westerly winds 15-25 mph, occasional 40+ mph gusts

**Impact on Painters:** The fog's the real challenge. Morning moisture means you can't start until 11 AM half the year. But here's the upside—mild temperatures mean year-round work. No frozen pipes shutting down winter projects like Chicago. September-October are golden months: warm, dry, low wind. Seasonal patterns are shifting. Used to be March-September prime season, now it's February-November. Climate change pushed our dry season later—October's the new September for outdoor work. **Homeowner Tips:**

  • ✓ Schedule exterior work August-October for best weather windows
  • ✓ Expect delays during June's heavy fog season—don't plan parties right after paint jobs
  • ✓ Use moisture-resistant primers in Richmond/Sunset districts
  • ✓ Plan interior work during foggy months when exterior's impossible

**License Verification:** California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) requires C-33 painting contractor licenses for jobs over $500. Look up any license number at cslb.ca.gov—it shows violations, bond status, workers' comp coverage. Don't trust a business card. **Insurance Requirements:** - General liability minimum: $1 million (standard for residential work) - Workers' comp required if 3+ employees - Some HOAs require $2 million coverage—check your building requirements ⚠️ **Red Flags in San Francisco:**

  1. Door-to-door "we're in the neighborhood" pitches (classic scam, especially targeting seniors in Richmond/Sunset)
  2. Cash-only, no written estimate (tax dodging, no recourse)
  3. Pressure to sign today with "special pricing" (legitimate contractors book weeks ahead)
  4. No mention of lead-safe practices on pre-1978 homes (federal law violation)

**Where to Check Complaints:** CSLB complaint database shows formal violations. Better Business Bureau tracks patterns. SF Consumer Protection Unit handles local disputes—they've seen every scam twice.

✓ 5+ years SF experience (not just CA licensed—local knowledge matters)

✓ Photos of work on similar homes (Victorians need different skills than condos)

✓ References within 3 miles of your address

✓ Detailed written estimate breaking down labor, materials, timeline

✓ Payment schedule tied to completion milestones (never more than 10% upfront)

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Painting Cost Calculator

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I expect to pay for house painting in San Francisco? +
Look, San Francisco painting costs are no joke - you're looking at $3-6 per square foot for exterior work and $2-4 for interior, which means a typical SF house (1,500-2,000 sq ft) runs $8,000-15,000+ exterior. Interior rooms cost $800-2,500 each depending on size and prep work. The high costs reflect our insane labor rates, expensive permits, and the fact that most SF homes need serious prep work due to age and weather exposure.
Do painters need licenses in California and how do I check? +
Here's the thing - any painter doing work over $500 in California needs a contractor's license from the Contractors State License Board (CSLB). You can verify their license at cslb.ca.gov - just punch in their license number or company name. In San Francisco specifically, they also need a business license from the city. Don't hire anyone who can't show you both, because you'll have zero recourse if things go sideways.
When's the best time to hire painters in San Francisco? +
Spring and early fall are your sweet spots in San Francisco - April through June and September through October give you the most reliable dry weather. Avoid winter (too much rain and fog) and peak summer (July-August gets booked solid and prices spike). Pro tip: book your painter in February or March for spring work, because good contractors in SF get scheduled out 2-3 months during busy season.
What questions should I ask before hiring a painter? +
Ask these specific questions: 'What's your CSLB license number?' 'Do you carry workers comp and liability insurance in California?' 'How do you handle San Francisco's lead paint regulations?' (huge deal in our old housing stock). Also ask about their prep work process - any decent SF painter should mention sanding, priming, and dealing with our notorious exterior wood rot. Get everything in writing, including paint brands and number of coats.
How long does a typical paint job take in San Francisco? +
A standard San Francisco house exterior takes 5-10 days depending on size, prep work, and weather delays (fog can mess up your timeline). Interior jobs run 3-7 days for whole-house work. Here's the catch - SF's older homes often need extra prep time for lead-safe practices and wood repairs, so add 20-30% to any timeline. Good contractors will give you a realistic schedule that accounts for our unpredictable weather.
Do I need permits for painting my house in San Francisco? +
For basic repainting, you typically don't need permits in San Francisco. But if you're doing major prep work, structural repairs, or changing colors on a historic property, you might need permits from SF Planning. Lead paint work (anything pre-1978, which is most of SF) requires certified contractors following EPA RRP rules. When in doubt, check with SF's Department of Building Inspection - better safe than facing city fines later.
What are the biggest red flags when hiring painters in San Francisco? +
Run from door-to-door solicitors (super common in SF neighborhoods), anyone asking for large upfront payments, or contractors without proper California licensing. Big red flag: if they don't mention lead paint protocols for SF's old housing stock, they're not legit. Also avoid anyone who won't provide local references or seems unfamiliar with SF's permit requirements. Cash-only deals and verbal estimates are asking for trouble in our litigious city.
Why does it matter if my painter has San Francisco experience? +
San Francisco's housing is unique - we've got Victorian-era wood siding, crazy weather patterns, strict historic district rules, and lead paint in 90% of homes built before 1978. Local painters know how to handle our fog and wind, understand city permit quirks, and have relationships with inspectors. They also know which paint holds up to our salt air and temperature swings. An out-of-town contractor will likely underbid, then hit you with change orders when they discover SF's special challenges.
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Painting Services in San Francisco

Painter 3
Painting 3