Painter & Decorator in Liverpool
Compare local painter pros in Liverpool and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: A$180–A$11,000
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Painter & Decorator prices in Liverpool
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single room (walls and ceiling) Standard bedroom, two coats, minor prep | A$280 | A$510 | A$830 |
| Whole interior (3-bed home) Walls throughout, standard prep, two coats | A$2,750 | A$5,050 | A$7,350 |
| Exterior repaint (single-storey house) Weatherboard or render, wash and prep, two coats | A$3,700 | A$6,450 | A$11,000 |
| Doors, trim, and skirting (per room) Enamel or water-based enamel woodwork | A$180 | A$370 | A$640 |
How to hire a painter & decorator pro in Australia
- Check state licensing: QLD requires a QBCC licence for painting work over $3,300; NSW requires a licence for residential painting over $5,000; VIC requires registration for larger domestic building work
- Ask for public liability insurance (AUD 5m+ is standard) and whether the price includes GST
- Get itemised quotes on hipages or direct: prep level, coats, and paint brand (e.g., Dulux/Taubmans trade lines)
- For pre-1970 homes, ask about lead-safe practices — Australian homes built before 1970 commonly contain lead paint
- For exteriors, confirm access equipment and season timing around your state's wet season
- Agree progress payments; QLD and NSW cap deposits on regulated jobs (typically 10%)
Australian painter licensing is state-based and threshold-triggered: Queensland's QBCC licenses painting work over $3,300, NSW Fair Trading licenses residential painting over $5,000, and Victoria requires registration for major domestic building work — always match the licence to the job size. Homes built before 1970 commonly contain lead paint, with government guidance requiring containment-based removal practices.
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Frequently asked questions
Can painters work room by room while we live in the house?
Yes — it's the normal mode for occupied homes. Agree the sequence, confirm low-VOC or quick-dry paints if fumes are a concern, and expect each room out of action for 1-2 days. Whole-house jobs go 20-30% faster in an empty house, which is why many people schedule painting between moving out and moving in.
What should a painting quote include?
In writing: which rooms and surfaces (walls, ceilings, woodwork), prep level, number of coats, paint brand and line (and who supplies it), protection of floors and furniture, cleanup and waste disposal, timeline, total price with tax status, and payment terms. For exteriors, add access equipment (ladders vs scaffold) and weather-delay terms. Missing detail is where disputes start.
What about lead paint in older homes?
Homes painted before the late 1970s-1980s (exact cutoff varies by country) may have lead-based layers under newer paint. The danger is sanding or scraping it into dust. If your home predates the local cutoff, ask the painter how they test for and handle lead — wet sanding, containment, or encapsulation rather than dry-sanding. Several countries legally require certified lead-safe practices for pre-cutoff homes.
Is it worth paying more for premium paint?
Usually yes for high-traffic areas and exteriors. Premium lines cover better (sometimes saving a coat), scrub clean without burnishing, and hold colour longer outdoors. On a professional job, labour dominates the price — upgrading paint might add a small percentage to the total while meaningfully extending repaint intervals. Save budget paint for low-traffic ceilings and rental refreshes.
Should I move furniture before the painters arrive?
Clear small items, valuables, and wall hangings yourself; painters typically move large furniture to the room centre and sheet it as part of the job. Confirm this when booking — some charge extra for furniture moving, and empty rooms are always cheaper and faster to paint. For whole-house jobs, discuss room sequencing so you can keep living around the work.
What licence should my painter have in Australia?
Depends on state and job size: in QLD any painting job over $3,300 requires a QBCC-licensed painter; in NSW residential painting over $5,000 requires a NSW Fair Trading licence. Check the licence number on the state register — unlicensed work at those values voids consumer protections and often insurance.
How much do painters charge in Australia?
Licensed painters typically charge $50-$100 per hour, with interior work at roughly $15-$45 per square metre. A standard room runs $300-$900, a full 3-bed interior $3,000-$8,000, and exterior repaints $4,000-$12,000 depending on cladding, height, and prep.
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