If you live in Asheville, you already know the window for exterior painting is shorter than most places in the country. Our spring season runs roughly from mid-April through June, and every year I watch homeowners either nail it or get caught flat-footed when the weather finally cooperates. The good news? A decent spring checklist takes about an hour to run, and it's the difference between a paint job that lasts 8 years and one that's peeling off a north-facing wall by next winter.

This is the spring exterior painting checklist I wish every Asheville homeowner had taped to their fridge before they called a painter. It's built around the stuff that actually matters in our climate: moisture, moss, weather windows, and the reality that most of us are competing for the same handful of dry weeks. If you're in Montford, Kenilworth, North Asheville, or anywhere else in Buncombe County, this applies to you.

Why Spring in Asheville Is Different From Anywhere Else

Asheville averages 36 inches of rain a year and somewhere around 75% humidity. That's not a catastrophic number on paper, but it's distributed in a way that wrecks exterior paint jobs if you don't respect it. October through January is basically a wash. February and March are hit or miss. Then around mid-April things start to dry out, and by late May we usually get our first real stretch of workable weather.

Most Asheville painters I know book out 4 to 8 weeks during peak season, which runs May through September. If you wait until the sun comes out to call, you're already behind. The homeowners who get their exterior painted in May and June are the ones who called in February or March. That's the game.

Step 1: Walk Your Exterior and Mark Every Problem Area

Before you call anyone, take 20 minutes and walk the perimeter of your house with your phone. Take photos of every spot that looks rough. You're looking for:

Peeling or bubbling paint, especially on south and west walls. Wood that's gone grey or soft to the touch. Cracks in trim or siding boards. Nail pops. Gutter stains running down the siding. Moss growing on north-facing walls or where the roofline drips. Mildew (looks like black speckles, usually in shaded areas). Caulk that's pulled away from window and door frames.

In Asheville, the worst offenders are usually the north walls under heavy tree cover. West Asheville, North Asheville, and Oakley homeowners will know exactly what I'm talking about. That shaded side of the house is where moisture sits and where paint fails first. Your photos become the scope of work when you talk to a painter, so don't skip this step.

Step 2: Deal With Moss and Mildew Before Anyone Quotes You

This one trips people up every year. Moss and mildew on siding aren't cosmetic. They're a prep problem, and they're the single biggest reason exterior paint fails early in our climate. If you've got visible moss on your siding or roofline, you need to handle it before painting, not during.

The standard Blue Ridge Mountains approach is a sodium hypochlorite solution (basically diluted bleach) applied with a pump sprayer, left to dwell for 15 to 20 minutes, then rinsed. Any reputable Asheville painter will include this in their prep, but some homeowners like to knock down the heavy stuff themselves a few weeks ahead of time. If you do, protect your plants. The runoff will kill them.

We cover the full moss and mildew approach in our Asheville exterior prep guide if you want the detailed protocol.

Step 3: Check Your Weather Window (Seriously, Do This)

Paint needs dry, stable conditions to cure properly. Most exterior acrylics need at least 24 hours of dry weather after application, and ideally temperatures between 50°F and 85°F. Asheville's spring weather is notoriously unstable, so a good painter will be watching the 10-day forecast obsessively.

The Asheville sweet spot for exterior painting is usually late May through early October. If you're pushing the shoulders of the season in April or November, your painter needs to be checking dew points, not just rain forecasts. Paint applied in the morning when the siding is still cold and damp with overnight dew will fail. It's that simple.

Don't pressure your contractor to paint in marginal conditions just because they're already booked. A rain-out day is a rain-out day. Good painters will reschedule. Sketchy painters will push through and you'll pay for it in 3 years.

Step 4: Power Wash (But Only When You're Ready to Paint)

Here's a mistake I see in Buncombe County every spring: homeowners power wash their house in March, feel productive, and then don't paint until June. By then the siding has collected a fresh layer of pollen, dust, and moisture, and the wash was basically a waste of time.

Pressure washing should happen within a week or two of painting, not months before. A good rule of thumb in Asheville is to wash on a dry day, let the siding fully dry for 48 to 72 hours (longer if it's cool), and then start priming and painting. If the weather turns on you during that window, you may need to re-wash.

Expect to spend $350 to $750 for a full house power wash in Asheville, depending on size and how much moss is involved. Our pressure washing cost guide breaks down what drives the price.

Step 5: Scrape, Sand, and Prime the Failure Points

Any spot where paint is peeling or cracking needs to come off. Your painter will scrape it down to sound substrate, feather-sand the edges, and spot-prime with a bonding primer before the topcoat goes on. On older Asheville homes (anything pre-1978), the EPA RRP rule kicks in because of lead paint, and certified contractors have to follow specific containment and cleanup procedures.

If you live in Five Points, Montford, West Asheville, or any other historic pocket, ask your painter if they're EPA Lead-Safe certified. This is not optional for pre-1978 homes. It's federal law. Any contractor who waves it off is someone you don't want on your property.

Step 6: Choose the Right Paint for the Blue Ridge Mountains

Not every exterior paint holds up in our climate. You want a 100% acrylic latex with strong mildew resistance and good flexibility. The brands that consistently perform well on Asheville homes are Sherwin-Williams Emerald, Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior, and PPG Timeless. These run $60 to $85 a gallon and will outlast cheaper paints by 3 to 5 years on our north walls.

Skip the $25-a-gallon big box stuff for a full exterior repaint. It'll look fine for two summers, then you'll be watching it peel. We did a full breakdown in our best exterior paint brands for Asheville post.

Step 7: Lock In Your Color Before the Crew Arrives

This is the step that delays more projects in Asheville than any other. A homeowner picks a color, the crew shows up, the first gallon goes on, and suddenly it looks nothing like the swatch in the showroom. Paint reads completely differently under our overcast grey skies than it does in a Sherwin-Williams store with fluorescent lighting.

Always get large sample boards (at least 2x2 feet) and look at them on the actual wall of your house, at different times of day, on an overcast day and a sunny day. The color you pick in March under grey skies will look different in July at 4pm. Kenilworth and Grove Park homeowners with strong slope reflection need to be especially careful. The light there shifts hard between seasons.

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One more thing before you finalize your color: if you live in Arden, Biltmore Forest, or a home on the historic register, your color choice needs approval before the crew arrives. Our Asheville HOA paint color rules guide covers the timelines and committees so you don't lose your painting slot waiting on paperwork.

If you're stuck, our paint color guide for Asheville's natural surroundings walks through how to pick colors that work with our light and our surroundings.

Step 8: Protect Your Landscaping and Outdoor Spaces

Asheville homeowners tend to have mature landscaping, especially around the older neighborhoods near Oakley and West Asheville. A good painter will tarp your beds, move your patio furniture, and cover your deck before any prep work starts. But you can save yourself some money and aggravation by doing some of this yourself.

Before the crew arrives: trim back any branches touching the house by at least 18 inches. Move deck furniture, grills, and anything valuable away from the walls. Cover delicate plants with breathable drop cloths (not plastic, which cooks them on sunny days). Clear gutters so nothing drips onto fresh paint.

If you have pets, plan for them to be inside or off-site during the work days. The smell isn't toxic with modern low-VOC paints, but it's strong, and curious dogs and cats are a hazard to themselves and the crew.

Step 9: Get a Detailed Written Estimate

This is where homeowners save or lose thousands of dollars. A proper Asheville exterior paint estimate should be itemized and include: square footage of the home, number of stories, siding type, scope of prep work (scraping, sanding, priming, moss treatment), specific paint product and finish, number of coats, trim and door counts, labor days, start and end dates, payment schedule, and warranty terms.

If a painter gives you a one-line quote on the back of a business card, walk away. Full exterior repaints in Asheville run $3,800 to $8,500 for most homes, and on that kind of money you deserve a written scope. Get at least 2 or 3 quotes. And always verify the contractor's license at the NCLBGC site before signing anything. Our license verification guide walks you through the lookup.

Step 10: Schedule Early and Confirm the Start Date

April and May are when good Asheville painters fill their books for the whole summer. If you're reading this in April, don't wait. Call today, get quotes this week, and lock in a slot. Waiting until June usually means you're painting in August or September, and by then the days are getting shorter and the dew points are climbing back up.

Once you've picked a contractor, confirm the start date in writing and ask what happens if weather delays the project. Good painters have a clear reschedule policy. You want that in your contract.

A Few Asheville-Specific Reminders

North-facing walls always need more prep than south-facing walls in our climate. Budget for it. Haw Creek and Arden homeowners should factor in extra mildew treatment because of the lake-effect moisture. Kenilworth and riverside properties need wind-driven rain considerations (elastomeric coatings on exposed west-facing walls aren't overkill). If your home is on one of the hills with heavy tree cover (Oakley, Grove Park, North Asheville near the Arb), plan to power wash more aggressively and expect the crew to spend extra time on prep.

And finally, don't try to save money by skipping primer on bare wood. In Asheville's climate, unprimed wood will wick moisture under the paint film within a season, and the job will fail. It's not the place to cut corners.

Ready to Book Your Spring Exterior Paint Job?

If you've worked through this checklist and you're ready to move forward, get a free painting quote in Asheville and we'll come walk your property, talk through the prep you need, and give you a detailed written estimate. Spring slots fill fast. The homeowners who call in April and May are the ones whose houses look great by July. The ones who wait are the ones painting in October under a tarp. Don't be that person.

If your Asheville home has cedar siding, our guide to painting cedar siding covers the prep, primer, and product decisions specific to our wet climate. Thinking about your fence too? Our fence staining cost guide breaks down what Buncombe County homeowners pay in 2026. And before you commit to a paint product, make sure you understand the difference between eggshell, satin, and semi-gloss in our Asheville paint sheen guide.

Don't forget your deck while you're prepping the rest of the exterior. Spring is the ideal time to restain a deck in Asheville before the summer sun hits. Our Asheville deck staining cost guide covers 2026 pricing, the best stain products for our climate, and how to bundle deck work with your exterior repaint for maximum savings.

When you are ready to start, Asheville Paint Pros handles spring exterior painting with weather-aware scheduling around our short dry window.

Spring power washing isn't just for curb appeal — it's the foundation of any successful Asheville exterior paint job. See our walk-through: pressure washing before painting in Asheville — covering pressure settings, surfactants, dwell time, and how long to wait before priming.