Why It Matters

Painting Is the Most Photo-Driven Hiring Decision a Homeowner Makes

Homeowners don’t hire painters from a phone call. They hire from a photo gallery. Before anyone picks up the phone to schedule an estimate, they’ve scrolled through your project photos, compared them to two or three other painters, and decided in their head which crew they want in their house. Your website is the showroom — and if it looks like it was thrown together in an afternoon, the customer assumes your finishing work matches the presentation. The number-one reason painting companies lose bids they should win is bad photo presentation online.

Painting also has the highest visual cross-shopping rate in the trades. A homeowner deciding on $4,000 of interior paint or $8,000 of exterior is going to look at at least three companies’ portfolios before getting estimates. Your website is the gatekeeper to that estimate appointment. Showing up well visually puts you on the bid list. Showing up badly takes you off it before you ever knew you were on it.

And then there’s the cabinet refinishing market — one of the highest-margin painting categories there is and growing every year as homeowners delay full kitchen remodels in favor of refinishing existing cabinets at a quarter of the cost. The painters who built dedicated cabinet refinishing pages with strong before/after galleries are winning that entire category. The ones who haven’t are invisible for those searches.

What Happens When Your Painting Business Has No Real Website

  • You lose every bid where the customer compared photos online. Painting is visual. If your competitor has a clean website with 40 project photos and you have a Facebook page with 8 phone snaps, the customer hires the competitor without you ever knowing you were in the running.
  • You can’t prove finish quality. A polished exterior, crisp interior cut lines, hand-brushed cabinet doors — these only sell themselves with high-quality photos. A website displays them organized; a Facebook timeline buries them.
  • You miss cabinet refinishing entirely. The customer searching “cabinet refinishing near me” isn’t looking for a general painter — they’re looking for a specialist. Without a dedicated page, you don’t exist in that search.
  • Commercial accounts pass you over. Property managers, GCs, and HOAs hiring painters need to see commercial work, insurance, and project history. None of that fits on a Facebook page.
  • You can’t charge premium pricing. Without a website that visually communicates “professional, experienced, polished,” you’re forced to compete with handyman-painter pricing. A real site is what justifies $4-$6/sqft over $2/sqft.

What Customers Actually Want to See on a Painting Website

The painting customer is shopping with their eEvery element of the site has to either show off your work or make it easy to schedule the estimate. Here’s what every painting site should include:

Project Gallery, Organized by Job Type

Interior, exterior, cabinets, commercial, deck/fence, epoxy floors. Customers want to see their kind of project. We organize by category and within each by sub-style (modern interior, traditional interior, Victorian exterior, etc.).

Before/After Photo Pairs

Side-by-side before/after photos do more selling than any paragraph of copy. Cabinet refinishing especially — the visual transformation is the entire sales pitch.

Service Pages by Painting Type

Interior painting, exterior painting, cabinet refinishing, deck staining, fence painting, commercial painting, epoxy floor coating, wallpaper hang/removal. Each gets its own page targeting the actual search behind it.

Prep Work and Process Section

What separates a $4,000 paint job from a $1,500 paint job is prep. A page that walks through your process — cleaning, scraping, priming, caulking, two coats minimum — justifies your pricing and educates customers on what they should be looking for in any painter.

Color Consultation Information

If you offer color help (in-person or virtual), it gets its own section. Color anxiety is one of the biggest blockers for painting customers; offering help reduces it.

Estimate Form That Actually Qualifies

Address, rooms or square footage, interior or exterior, timeline, photos. Triggers a quick estimate-scheduling sequence. Painting estimates are usually free, and the page should say so.

Service Pages That Help You Rank for Searches That Actually Convert

Painting search splits between the head term (“painter near me”) and the specific job type (“cabinet refinishing,” “exterior house painter”). The specific pages are where independent local painters win because the competition is much narrower:

  • Interior painting [city]. Highest volume. Average job $1,500-$5,000. Page should cover prep level, paint brands you carry, and timeline expectations.
  • Exterior painting [city] / house painting [city]. Higher ticket ($3K-$10K), longer sales cycle. Customers research extensively. Page should cover prep depth, weather-window planning, and warranty.
  • Cabinet refinishing / cabinet painting [city]. The fastest-growing premium painting category. $1,500-$6,000 per kitchen. Customers actively researching — high-intent.
  • Deck staining / deck refinishing [city]. Seasonal but strong. Often $500-$2,000.
  • Fence staining / fence painting [city]. Lower ticket but high volume in single-family neighborhoods.
  • Commercial painting [city]. Property managers, retail, restaurants. Different audience, different copy.
  • HOA painting / multifamily painting. Specialty category with long sales cycles but big project values.
  • Epoxy floor coating / garage floor coating. Premium specialty service. $1,500-$5,000+. Visual transformation drives conversion.
  • Wallpaper installation / wallpaper removal. Often a separate skill set; worth its own page if you offer it.
  • Color consultation [city]. Lead-magnet page that often turns into a paint job.

Local SEO for Painting Companies: How We Set It Up

  • PaintingService + LocalBusiness schema. Tells Google your service area, hours, service list, and price range.
  • Service-specific title tags. “Cabinet Refinishing in [City] — Painter” instead of generic “Our Work.”
  • NAP consistency. Identical across the site, GBP, Yelp, BBB, Angi, and painter-specific directories like Paintzen, Painters of America.
  • Google Business Profile alignment. Service categories match (Painter, House painter, Commercial painter).
  • Image optimization. Project photos are compressed, alt-tagged with project type and location, and structured for Google Image search. This drives a non-trivial slice of total traffic for painters.
  • Service-area pages. One page per town or zip with real local detail.
  • Speed. Heavy photo galleries normally slow sites down; we lazy-load and compress to keep the page fast.

What a New Painting Website Is Actually Worth

Here’s a simple illustration (not a prediction — your results depend on your market, reviews, pricing, and many factors outside the website). The math on painting is straightforward but pleasant. If the website brings in one extra interior job per month at $3,000 and one extra exterior or cabinet job per quarter at $6,000, that’s $60,000 in incremental annual revenue. Add cross-sells (deck stain, fence paint, color consultation upgrades), and a polished site easily clears $80,000-$100,000 in additional yearly revenue for an established crew. The $100 build and $25/month maintenance is a rounding error against those numbers.

The biggest jobs — full exterior repaints, cabinet kitchens, commercial work — almost always come from the website. Customers spending $6,000+ on paint research thoroughly before calling. A polished site with strong photos is the entry ticket.

Why Most Web Designers Overcharge Painting Companies

Agency quotes for painting websites typically run $2,500 to $7,500 plus $75 to $200/month. The pricing reflects what painters can afford given their job sizes — not what the work costs. The actual website is the same kind of website any service business needs: clean homepage, photo gallery, service pages, contact form, local SEO.

We do it differently. $100 build, $25/month hosting and maintenance, month-to-month, no contract. Free homepage mockup before you pay anything. Heavy gallery work, project intake forms, and CRM integrations are quoted separately and only when you ask.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many project photos should be on the site?
More than you think. We aim for 30-60 project photos at launch, organized by category. Cabinet refinishing should have its own gallery, as should exterior and interior. Quality matters more than quantity, but quantity matters more than most painters assume — customers scroll deep before deciding.
How does the site target “cabinet refinishing near me” searches?
Cabinet refinishing tends to have less SEO competition right now because most established painting companies haven’t built dedicated pages for it. A focused cabinet refinishing page, strong before/after photos, and proper LocalBusiness schema give Google clean signals about that service — actual rankings still depend on competition, reviews, and factors outside the website.
Can the site explain my prep process to justify higher pricing?
That’s one of the most effective conversion moves a painting site can make. A page that walks through your prep (washing, scraping, sanding, priming, caulking, two coats minimum) educates customers and justifies the premium over discount painters who skip those steps.
How do you handle interior vs. exterior project photos?
Separate galleries with separate sub-styles. Interior breaks into modern, traditional, kids’ rooms, accent walls. Exterior breaks into colonial, ranch, Victorian, modern. Customers click straight to their style.
Can the site display the paint brands I carry?
Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, Behr, PPG, and Cabot all provide brand assets we can use. Brand recognition matters more than painters often realize; many customers Google specific brands and want to know who in their area carries them.
Will the site work for both residential and commercial?
We build separate sections for residential and commercial with different copy, photos, and proof points. Commercial decision-makers want different information than homeowners.
How long until the site produces leads?
Branded searches can drive direct visits from day one. Organic SEO traffic on competitive terms takes time to build and depends on many factors outside the website itself. Specialty pages (cabinets, epoxy floors, exterior in a specific town) often face less competition because the competition is narrower.

Get a Free Homepage Mockup

We’ll design a free homepage mockup for your painting business before you pay.

Get My Free Homepage Mockup See Pricing
$100
Starting build fee
$25
Monthly hosting & maintenance
1–2
Weeks to launch

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