Painter & Decorator in Point Cook
Compare local painter pros in Point Cook 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 Point Cook
| 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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See the full breakdown of what drives painter & decorator prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
How do I judge a painter's quality before hiring?
Three checks: recent photos or addresses of comparable jobs (ask specifically for work 1-2 years old — fresh paint always looks good), reviews that mention prep and cleanliness rather than just price, and the quote itself — a detailed written scope with prep level, paint spec, and coat count signals a professional; a one-line price signals corner-cutting. Cutting-in lines around ceilings and trim are where skill shows.
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.
How are painting jobs priced?
Painters quote one of four ways: per room (most common for interiors), per square metre or square foot of wall area, a day rate for open-ended work, or a fixed price for a defined whole-house scope. A fixed quote against a written scope — rooms, surfaces, prep level, number of coats, and who supplies paint — protects you best. Day rates suit only small punch-list jobs where the scope genuinely can't be pinned down.
How much deposit is normal for a painting job?
For small interior jobs, many painters ask nothing up front or a token booking fee. For larger jobs, 10-30% deposit is typical, sometimes with a materials payment when paint is purchased. Be wary of demands for 50%+ before any work starts. Stage payments for multi-week jobs are fine; hold back the final payment until you've inspected the finished work in daylight.
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.
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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