San Diego County · Since 2007
Commercial Painting
Hotels, hospitals, universities, warehouses, shopping centers, apartments, and HOAs. Night and weekend crews so your operation keeps running while we work.
Est. 2007
35+Years in the trade
35+Years in the trade35+
Years in the trade
4.9★
Across 200+ reviews
2 day
Quote turnaround
0
Subcontractors hired
What's included
Every job.
No exceptions.
No subcontractors. Joe or Alex quotes the job, runs the job, and does the walkthrough with you when it's done. Same crew, same standards, 35+ years of habits.
0Subcontractors ever
35+Years in San Diego
- 1After-hours + weekend crews
- 2HOAs, multi-family, hospitality
- 3Accurate proposals — on time, on budget
Commercial Painting by city
We cover all of San Diego County
Common questions
Commercial Painting in San Diego — FAQ
- How much does commercial painting cost in San Diego?
- Commercial interiors run about $1.50–$4.00 per square foot and exteriors $2.00–$6.00, depending on surface condition, product, and access. Specialty and themed surfaces are quoted per scope. We quote commercial work only after a walkthrough.
- Do you work nights and weekends?
- Yes. Night and weekend scheduling is standard for occupied commercial properties — offices, retail, hotels, and multi-family — so daytime operations are not disrupted. Low-odor finishes get the space back in service the next morning.
- Are you licensed and insured for commercial work?
- Yes. We hold California C-33 license #794402-C33 and carry commercial general liability and workers' compensation. Ask any commercial painter for the certificate, not just confirmation — an uninsured contractor's accident can become the owner's problem.
- Do you use subcontractors on commercial jobs?
- No. We have used zero subcontractors since 2007. The same accountable crew that starts your building finishes it, which is what keeps the finish consistent across a large or phased job.
Free, no-pressure estimate
Walk the job with Joe or Alex.
Tell us what you're thinking. We'll come look, point out what we'd do differently, and only quote what we'd paint in our own house.
