Professional Painters Springfield MA | Free Estimates
Welcome to our Springfield, MA painters directory – your go-to spot for finding talented local painters who know their way around a brush! Whether you're looking to freshen up your living room or tackle that whole house makeover, we've got you covered with Springfield's finest painting pros.
Map of Businesses in Springfield
All Listings in Springfield
14 businesses
Downtown Painting Services
Painter
Letendre & Son Painting
Painter
Olive Tree Painting LLC
Painter
OMG Painting
Painting
Painting Beyond
Painter
Pancione Painting Plus LLC
Painter
Pioneer Painters LLC
Painting
S.L. Painting
Painter
Willard and Ward Pro Painting
Painter
ALL-TERIOR PAINTING SERVICES ️ ️LLC
Painter
Paint Perfect Inc
Contractor
Color Pro Painting
Painter
IN&OUT Painting
Painter
Letendre Painting & Decorating
PainterAbout Painters in Springfield
Springfield homeowners spent an estimated $47 million on interior and exterior painting services in 2024—and that number is climbing. Housing stock here averages 68 years old, which means peeling trim, chalking siding, and water-stained ceilings aren't optional fixes. They're a maintenance reality. That's your baseline demand driver right there.
The local painting market has roughly 14 licensed contractors operating at any meaningful scale, but the real action is in the mid-tier residential segment. Springfield's homeownership rate sits at about 46%—lower than the statewide 62%—but the homes that are owner-occupied tend to be older triple-deckers and colonials in neighborhoods like Forest Park and East Forest Park that need constant upkeep. Add in Hampden County's modest construction rebound (new building permits up 11% from 2022 to 2024) and you've got a solid mix of new-build finishing work plus renovation painting keeping crews busy year-round.
What makes Springfield different from, say, Northampton or Worcester? The price sensitivity is real here. Median household income in Springfield runs around $42,300—roughly 40% below the Massachusetts state median of $89,600. So you see painters competing hard on price, which cuts both ways. Good for buyers, rough on quality control. The customer base skews heavily toward homeowners doing long-deferred maintenance, landlords refreshing rental units between tenants, and a smaller but growing slice of commercial clients tied to the MGM Springfield corridor downtown.
📍 Forest Park
- Area Profile: One of Springfield's more stable residential zones—older Victorians and Craftsmans, mixed-income but generally working and middle class, median household income around $48K
- Painters Activity: Heavy exterior repaint demand, porch restoration, and detailed trim work on older housing stock. This is where full exterior projects are most common.
- Price Range: $3,200–$7,500 for full exterior repaints on typical single-families
- Local Note: Forest Park has a genuine pride-of-ownership culture—curb appeal actually matters here—so painters who do good decorative work get referral business fast
📍 East Springfield / Sixteen Acres
- Area Profile: More suburban feel, higher homeownership rates, families, household incomes closer to $55K–$65K range
- Painters Activity: Interior refreshes, kitchen cabinet painting, and move-in/move-out prep work. Faster project turnarounds are the norm.
- Price Range: $1,800–$4,500 for interior room packages
- Local Note: This is where you'll find the most "I'm selling in six months" customers—they want clean, quick, neutral tones. Painters who understand staging color psychology do well here.
📍 Downtown / MGM District
- Area Profile: Changing fast. Mixed commercial and new residential development, younger demographic, significant foot traffic near the casino and convention center
- Painters Activity: Commercial and light industrial painting, condo interior work, murals and decorative finishes on retail spaces
- Price Range: Commercial jobs run $8,000–$40,000+ depending on square footage
- Local Note: MGM's ongoing buildout has pulled a few painters into commercial work who were previously residential-only. The economics are different—and not every crew is ready for it.
📊 Current Price Points:
- Budget: $900–$2,000 — typically one to two rooms, minimal prep, standard latex, often newer operators or solo contractors
- Mid-range: $2,500–$5,500 — most popular segment, full interior or exterior, includes proper prep and primer coat, this is where the 14 listed businesses compete hardest
- Premium: $6,000+ — detailed restoration, specialty finishes, cabinet refinishing, commercial contracts
📈 Market Trends:
Demand is up roughly 14% year-over-year from 2023 to 2024 according to local contractor data—driven partly by the post-pandemic home improvement hangover still working itself through the system. Labor is the pinch point right now. Material costs (primer, latex, specialty coatings) rose nearly 18% between 2021 and 2023 but have stabilized. Average project lead time has stretched from 2–3 weeks to 4–6 weeks for established painters.
💰 What People Are Spending (ranked by volume):
- Full interior repaints — avg. $3,100
- Exterior house painting — avg. $4,800
- Single-room refresh — avg. $650
- Deck/fence staining — avg. $1,200
- Cabinet refinishing — avg. $2,400
Seasonality hits hard here. May through September is peak. January and February—expect discounts of 15–25% if you can find a crew willing to work around Massachusetts winter conditions.
Springfield's population has hovered around 153,000–155,000 for several years—not exactly explosive growth, but stable. The Baystate Health system is the city's largest employer with over 12,000 staff, followed by the school system and a handful of manufacturers. MGM Springfield employs roughly 3,000 people directly. These aren't high-income jobs on average, but they're steady—and steady employment means people eventually get around to fixing the house.
What's genuinely interesting is the renovation wave rolling through Forest Park and the South End right now. Several blocks near Sumner Avenue have seen property tax assessments jump 19–22% since 2021, pulling homeowners off the sideline on deferred projects. I've seen this play out on streets where every other house suddenly has a crew out front. It clusters.
- Median household income: ~$42,300 (Springfield) vs. ~$89,600 (MA state)
- Homeownership rate: 46% local vs. 62% statewide
- Housing stock age: 68-year average — major demand driver
- Active commercial development: MGM corridor, Union Station area
- ☀️ Spring/Summer (May–August): Peak demand—exterior work surges, book 4–6 weeks out minimum, pricing is full rate
- 🍂 Fall (September–October): Still solid for exterior before temps drop, slightly more negotiating room, good window for deck work
- ❄️ Winter (November–March): Interior-only season, slower, painters more flexible on price—this is when you lock in deals
- 📅 Peak crunch: Memorial Day through Labor Day. Don't expect a callback within 48 hours from anyone good.
Smart timing tips for Springfield specifically:
- ✓ Book exterior projects in March or April—before the rush hits and before material surcharges kick in
- ✓ Interior work in January and February routinely comes in 15–20% below peak-season quotes from the same contractors
- ✓ If you're near the MGM district, avoid scheduling around major events—crews get pulled to commercial work
- ✓ Tax refund season (February–April) creates a mini-demand spike in working-class neighborhoods—schedule slightly ahead of it
Massachusetts requires painters doing work over $1,000 to hold a Home Improvement Contractor (HIC) registration through the MA Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation (OCABR). You can verify any contractor at ocabr.mass.gov. No registration? Walk away. Full stop.
Beyond that baseline, look for:
- General liability insurance ($1M minimum) — ask for the certificate directly
- Lead-safe certification if the home pre-dates 1978 (a lot of Springfield does)
- Membership in the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America (PDCA)
- Better Business Bureau accreditation or at least a clean complaint history
⚠️ Red Flags Specific to Springfield Painters:
- Large upfront cash deposit demands — legitimate contractors ask for 10–30% to start, not 50–60% upfront
- No written contract on scope of prep work — prep is where corners get cut and where the job quality actually lives
- No mention of lead paint testing or disclosure on pre-1978 housing — this is both a legal and health issue in a city with older stock
- Unusually low bids with vague material descriptions — "good paint" isn't a spec; ask for brand names and product lines
Check complaints with the OCABR, the BBB's Springfield page, and Google Reviews. A pattern of "took the deposit and disappeared" reviews is a specific local scam that surfaces every spring.
✓ Established Springfield presence—not a contractor based in Hartford or Worcester picking up overflow work
✓ Verifiable Google or Yelp reviews with photo evidence of local projects
✓ Written, itemized quote that separates labor, materials, and prep
✓ Clear communication—if they ghost you before the job starts, imagine after
✓ HIC registration number on their contract or estimate
No HIC registration or proof of insurance on request
Refuses to put scope of work in writing
Can't name the paint products they plan to use
No local references—only out-of-area or suspiciously generic reviews
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