£950
- Focused essentials
- Practical finishes

Estimates derived from UK trade benchmark data and regional labour indices, updated May 2026. Methodology →
Painting and Decorating in South West England can swing with access, season, and how busy good contractors are — especially near the coast. We anchor everything in our UK guide, then fold in that regional reality.
In South West England, coastal access and seasonal demand can push contractor lead times and pricing. For the full UK-wide baseline, compare with Painting & Decorating Cost UK.
Pick the path that fits where you are — running early numbers, or pressure-testing a quote you've already got.
Three planning tiers for painting and decorating in South West England, with scope and a representative figure for each. Run your own numbers in the calculator for a tailored range.
£950
£2,100
£4,550
| Item | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Single room (walls & ceiling) | £200 – £950 |
| Hallway, stairs & landing | £400 – £1,600 |
| Full house (3-bed) | £1,600 – £6,300 |
| Exterior painting (front) | £550 – £3,150 |
| Wallpapering (per room) | £150 – £850 |
Three quick inputs and we'll email you an indicative range. Run the full calculator for a postcode-adjusted estimate.
Use this checklist to spot missing scope before you sign — each item names what should be priced and what to ask for if it isn't.
Prep IS the value of professional painting. A fair quote itemises the prep approach: sanding glossy surfaces, filling nail holes and cracks, caulking gaps where walls meet ceilings/skirting, masking. Vague 'preparation' lines hide thin work that shows up in the finish.
Fair UK range: £60–£150 per room for standard prep; double for heavily damaged surfaces.
Ask: Can you walk me through the specific prep steps for each surface type, and is filler/caulk specified?
A fair quote names the paint brand (Dulux Trade, Crown Trade, Farrow & Ball, Little Greene), the finish (matt/silk/eggshell), and the number of coats per surface (typically 1 mist coat + 2 topcoats on new plaster; 2 coats on previously painted). Generic 'premium emulsion' with no brand means you're getting whatever's cheapest.
Fair UK range: £25–£45/litre for trade emulsion; £45–£90/litre for premium designer paints. Coverage ~10m²/litre.
Ask: Which brand and exact product range are you quoting, and how many coats per surface?
Skirting boards, architraves, doors, and window frames need different paint (eggshell or satin, often oil-based or modern water-based) and a proper sequence: knot blocker → primer → undercoat → 2 topcoats. Cheap quotes skip the primer or do single-coat topcoat.
Fair UK range: £40–£80 per door for full-process painting; £4–£8 per linear metre for skirting/architrave.
Ask: What's the woodwork process — knot blocker, primer, undercoat, topcoats — and how many coats?
If wallpaper needs removing, it's a separate job from painting: steaming, scraping, washing residue, then making good (often re-skimming patches where the paper has pulled plaster). Should never be hidden in 'preparation'.
Fair UK range: £8–£20 per m² for wallpaper removal; £15–£30 per m² for skim repairs to damaged plaster.
Ask: Is wallpaper removal itemised, and is plaster repair after removal included?
A reputable decorator masks floors, covers furniture, masks switches and sockets, and removes all waste at the end. Cheap quotes often leave you with paint splashes on your carpets, paint drops on switches, and packaging waste in the garden.
Fair UK range: Usually included in labour; should be explicitly mentioned in quote scope.
Ask: How do you protect floors, furniture, and fittings — and is end-of-job clean-up included?
Want this run on your actual painting quote? Upload it and our AI Quote Checker flags missing line items, overcharges and the questions worth asking.
UK-specific signals — each red flag explains why it matters and the question that surfaces the truth.
Why it matters: For a defined number of rooms with agreed prep and paint spec, a fair decorator quotes a fixed total. Day rates with no cap shift overrun risk to you — the decorator can extend the job to whatever the bank account allows.
Ask: Can you give a fixed price for the agreed scope, with a stated allowance for unforeseen issues?
Why it matters: There's a 3x price gap between cheap retail emulsion (Dulux Easycare £15/L) and trade-grade paint (Dulux Trade Diamond £45/L). Without spec, you can't compare quotes — and you may be paying premium prices for B&Q value paint.
Ask: Can you name the exact brand and product range for walls, ceilings, and woodwork?
Why it matters: Fresh plaster needs a mist coat (watered-down emulsion) plus 2 topcoats minimum — total 3 coats. Woodwork needs primer + undercoat + 2 topcoats minimum — total 4 coats. Single coats look thin, don't last, and need recoating in 1–2 years.
Ask: How many coats per surface, and how do you handle fresh plaster — mist coat included?
Why it matters: Properties built before 1980 may have lead paint on existing woodwork. Sanding lead paint releases toxic dust — illegal under HSE rules, and a real health risk. A reputable decorator will test or assume lead and use appropriate methods (HEPA-filtered sanders, full PPE).
Ask: Have you tested or assumed lead paint on existing woodwork? What's your method for handling it?
Why it matters: 'Making good' often hides patch plastering, filler work, woodwork repairs — each potentially £50–£300. A clean quote names what's being made good and prices each item. Vague 'minor repairs' means you'll see line-item extras at invoice time.
Ask: Can you list specifically what 'making good' covers and break out the cost per item?
Why it matters: Does 'paint the kitchen' include the ceiling? The cupboards? Inside the cupboards? The radiator? A fair quote lists every surface explicitly. Ambiguity = arguments at the end.
Ask: Can we walk through the scope room by room — exactly which surfaces are in, and which aren't?
Why it matters: Professional decoration involves dust sheets, low-tack masking tape, protected floors and furniture. If the quote doesn't mention this, you'll likely get paint splatter on carpets and abandoned packaging.
Ask: What protection do you use for floors and furniture, and is end-of-job clean-up included?
Spot a couple of these on your painting quote? Upload it for a full red-flag scan and fair-rate comparison.
A simple framework, a verbatim script you can paste into an email or text, and the topic-specific levers that move the price.
I've had three quotes for this decorating job. Yours is competitive overall, but the labour line is £X above the median I've received from two other PDA-registered decorators, and the paint material cost is £Y above. The other quotes specify [brand/range] paint at £Z/litre. Can you walk me through what's included in your labour and material pricing that justifies the difference, or match the median if you're using comparable spec?
Want to know which line items on your painting quote are above market before you negotiate? Upload it for a fair-rate comparison.
Vet on competence, insurance, paperwork and process — not price alone. Each question spells out the answer you want and why.
Why it matters: PDA membership requires verified competence and a code of conduct. Not legally required, but it's the strongest UK trade body signal in decorating.
Why it matters: CSCS confirms basic on-site competence. CITB lead paint training is essential if working in pre-1980 properties — without it, the decorator can't legally remove old paint by sanding.
Why it matters: Recent work shows current quality (decorators sometimes get worse with age or under price pressure). Photos with close-ups of cut-ins, woodwork edges, and ceiling lines are the best quality signal.
Why it matters: A reputable decorator has strong opinions: Dulux Trade Diamond for high-traffic walls, Crown Trade Pure for ceilings, Mylands or Farrow & Ball for premium colours. Vague 'I use whatever you want' usually means cheapest available.
Why it matters: Reputable decorators wait 4–6 weeks for plaster to dry, then apply a mist coat (50/50 emulsion + water) followed by 2 topcoats. Skipping the mist coat causes peeling within 12 months.
Why it matters: Verbal quotes or 'rough estimates' are how decorators escape accountability. Written, itemised, fixed-price quotes are the industry norm — anything less is sub-standard.
Why it matters: Industry norm: 12 months on workmanship for issues like peeling, blistering, or runs. Written warranty matters because peeling typically appears 3–9 months in.
Why it matters: UK norm: small deposit (10–25%) for materials, balance on completion of each room or full job. More than 25% upfront for a small job is a structural risk.
Why it matters: VAT registration matters for warranty enforcement. Cash-only or no-invoice arrangements forfeit consumer protection.
Why it matters: UK norm: £1M minimum public liability for decorators (£2M for larger contractors). Damage to your floors, furniture, or fittings is what this covers. Ask to see the certificate.
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