Painting in Asheville.
Asheville sits at 2,134 feet. That matters when you paint here. South and west faces see real UV, and the 45 inches of annual rain plus pollen from March through May means we are not painting Florida and we are not painting Seattle. Repaint cycles run about five years on the sun-hit sides and seven on the shaded ones, and most homes we quote land somewhere in between.
We have painted the 1890s Queen Annes on Cumberland Avenue, the 1920s bungalows on Haywood Road, the Edwin Wiley Grove-era English Craftsmans on the Sunset Mountain slope, and the post-Helene rebuilds in Swannanoa Valley. Every ZIP in the city has its own quirks. We walk every project in person before we quote a number.
What we see on Asheville homes.
Common home styles
1890s Victorians and Queen Annes in Montford, 1900s–1920s craftsman bungalows across Five Points and West Asheville, 1910s English Derived Craftsmans in Grove Park, 1920s–1960s ranches and foursquares in North Asheville, Tudor revival in Biltmore Village, and post-Helene rebuilds across the eastern neighborhoods.
Popular projects
Lead-safe exterior repaints on pre-1978 homes, historic-district color-approval work, post-Helene siding primer and finish coats, deck refinishing, cabinet refinishing in original kitchens, and interior repaints after moisture remediation.
Climate & prep considerations
2,134-foot elevation means UV-driven fade on south and west exposures. Spring pollen coats every surface March through May, so we avoid exterior painting in that window. Helene moisture intrusion is still showing up in 2026 repaints, which is why we run moisture meters on every prep day.