What this template helps you avoid
- Missing prep work that destroys margin after the job starts
- Scope drift when clients assume trim, doors, or repairs were included
- Ambiguous material assumptions that create change-order arguments
- Weak payment language that slows deposits and final collection
Quick outline
- Business and client information
- Scope by room or surface
- Prep work and repairs
- Materials and finish schedule
- Exclusions, timeline, and payment terms
Keep this placement after the opening value section so it does not interrupt the printable block.
Painting Estimate
Your painting company name
PE-2026-001
Customer name, phone, and project address
Estimate issue date and validity period
Project scope
- Interior repaint of living room, hallway, and two bedrooms
- Walls, ceilings, baseboards, window trim, and six interior doors as listed below
- Furniture moved to center of room and protected before work begins
Prep work
- Fill minor nail holes and hairline cracks
- Spot-sand rough areas and glossy trim surfaces
- Caulk small trim gaps where needed
- Mask floors, fixtures, and built-ins before painting
Line items
2 coats premium interior paint
1 coat ceiling paint where color remains unchanged
Sand, prep, and 2 finish coats semi-gloss enamel
Materials schedule
- Paint line: specify manufacturer and product line
- Finish: eggshell on walls, flat on ceilings, semi-gloss on trim
- Color changes beyond listed rooms may require a revised quote
Exclusions
- Drywall replacement, major texture matching, water-damage repair, and lead remediation
- Moving oversized furniture, piano relocation, and wallpaper removal unless listed separately
How to make the estimate stronger
The fastest way to lose money on a painting job is to keep the proposal too vague. If you only write "paint two bedrooms and hallway," the client may assume trim, closet interiors, extra patching, color changes, and furniture moving are included. A stronger estimate separates scope into surfaces and states what level of prep is covered.
You do not need to overcomplicate this. Most of the value comes from spelling out surfaces, coats, prep, and exclusions. That makes your quote easier to compare internally and easier to defend when the client asks for added work without added budget.
Why a visitor may choose this over a software template page
Many template pages online give you a blank file and quickly pivot into a product trial. This guide goes further by showing the actual scope language, prep checklist, exclusions, and payment wording that reduce change-order disputes. It is designed to be useful even if the visitor never signs up for anything.
Sample pricing worksheet
Use these columns as a planning worksheet, not as universal pricing. Your labor rates, production speed, and travel costs should determine the final number.
| Category | How to calculate | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Labor | Estimated crew hours x target hourly recovery rate | Do not forget setup, cleanup, and material pickup time |
| Materials | Paint, primer, tape, plastic, patch, caulk, sandpaper, sundries | Account for extra coats and deep-base colors |
| Overhead | Insurance, vehicle cost, admin time, card fees, warranty reserve | Many small contractors skip this and wonder why profit disappears |
| Contingency | Small margin cushion for minor prep surprises | Keep separate from pure profit so you can explain revisions clearly |
Recommended wording for deposits and change orders
Include a short clause that says added prep, extra rooms, substrate repairs, and color or sheen changes outside the approved scope will be priced separately and confirmed before work proceeds. This one sentence prevents many preventable margin leaks.
Before you send the quote
- Confirm whether ceilings, closets, doors, and trim are included
- Write the exact paint line and sheen, not just "premium paint"
- State who supplies colors and by what deadline
- List what happens if hidden damage appears after prep begins
- Set a quote expiration date so old pricing does not stay open forever
Quick FAQ
Should an estimate include prep work?
Yes. Prep is one of the biggest margin variables in painting, so it should never stay implied.
Should paint brand and sheen be listed?
Yes. Those details shape cost, finish quality, and client expectations, so they belong in writing.
Useful after the final checklist and before related guides.
Related guides
Pressure Washing Pricing Guide
Good companion content if you also sell exterior cleaning before repaint projects.
Lawn Care Invoice Template
Another example of a service-specific billing page that expands the site's internal link graph.
If you want a better version, spot an issue, or want another service template added, email cschat2026@gmail.com. The button will prefill the page title and link automatically.