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Brick & Masonry Painting

Professional Brick & Masonry Painting — The Right Products, Applied the Right Way

Brick and masonry painting near you, done by certified, vetted painting professionals who understand what masonry surfaces actually need. The wrong paint on brick or stucco fails fast — the right system protects for a decade.

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Brick & Concrete Block Painting

Painting brick is a big decision — it’s largely permanent and requires ongoing maintenance. When done right with masonry-specific primer and breathable topcoat, it can transform a home’s look and protect deteriorating brick for years. Done wrong, it blisters, peels, and traps moisture inside the wall.

  • Pressure wash and full surface cleaning
  • Efflorescence treatment and removal
  • Mortar joint repair and crack filling
  • Masonry bonding primer — brush applied into brick texture
  • Two coats of breathable acrylic masonry topcoat
  • Limewash application for a soft, mineral finish
  • Concrete block painting with block filler primer
  • Accent brick columns, chimneys, and feature walls

Stucco & Concrete Painting

Stucco and concrete are porous, textured, and subject to cracking — which means they need a paint system that can flex with the surface, breathe, and bridge minor cracks. Elastomeric coatings are the professional standard for stucco. Standard exterior latex simply doesn’t hold up.

  • Stucco cleaning and mildew treatment
  • Hairline crack repair and caulking
  • Elastomeric masonry primer application
  • Elastomeric topcoat — bridges cracks up to 1/16″
  • Smooth and textured stucco finishes
  • Concrete foundation and retaining wall painting
  • Concrete porch and step painting
  • Waterproof sealant coats for below-grade surfaces

Masonry Surface Types

Every Masonry Surface Has Different Paint Requirements

Brick, block, stucco, and concrete are all masonry — but they have different porosity levels, moisture behaviors, and surface textures that demand different primer and topcoat systems. Using the wrong product on any of them leads to rapid failure.

Brick

Fired Clay Brick

Brick is porous and naturally breathes moisture. A breathable, 100% acrylic masonry paint is essential — any film-forming product that seals the surface traps moisture inside and causes spalling. Mortar joints must be sound before painting. Limewash is an excellent low-permanence alternative to full paint on brick.

Concrete Block

CMU & Concrete Block

Concrete block has a highly porous, open surface that absorbs paint rapidly. A block-fill masonry primer is required to seal the surface before topcoat — without it, the topcoat soaks in unevenly, loses coverage dramatically, and requires far more product than estimated. Two coats of masonry-grade topcoat after priming.

Stucco

Traditional & Synthetic Stucco

Stucco moves — it expands, contracts, and develops hairline cracks over time. Elastomeric paint is the correct product because it stays flexible after curing, bridges minor cracks, and remains waterproof through surface movement. Standard latex film-forms too rigidly and cracks with the stucco beneath it.

Concrete

Poured & Precast Concrete

Concrete surfaces — foundations, retaining walls, steps, and poured walls — need a masonry bonding primer for adhesion, followed by a masonry-grade acrylic topcoat. Below-grade and water-exposed concrete surfaces require a waterproof coating or hydraulic cement treatment before any paint system goes on.

Warning Signs

Signs Your Brick or Masonry Needs Attention

Masonry problems left untreated before painting will continue to worsen underneath the paint film — and eventually push it off the surface entirely.

Efflorescence — White Mineral Deposits

White, chalky staining on brick or block is efflorescence — soluble salts carried to the surface by water. It must be chemically treated and removed before painting. Painting over it causes rapid delamination as the salts continue to migrate outward.

Blistering & Peeling Existing Paint

Paint blistering on masonry is almost always a moisture problem — water vapor trying to escape through the wall is lifting the paint film from inside. The source of moisture must be identified and addressed before repainting, not just scraped and repainted.

Cracked or Deteriorating Mortar Joints

Failed mortar joints are direct water entry points into the brick cavity. Repointing damaged joints before painting is essential — painting over cracked mortar seals in the damage while water continues to work behind the surface.

Stucco Cracking

Hairline cracks in stucco are normal and manageable with elastomeric coatings. Wide or structural cracks need repair before painting — elastomeric can bridge hairlines but can’t compensate for active movement or underlying structural issues.

Mold & Mildew on Masonry

Dark staining on shaded or north-facing masonry is typically mildew. It must be treated with a mildewcide and killed before painting — coating over mildew seals in moisture and the staining bleeds through new paint within months.

Spalling Brick Faces

Brick faces that are flaking or popping off have been subjected to freeze-thaw moisture cycles or were previously painted with a non-breathable product. Spalling brick is a structural concern — severely spalled sections may need replacement before any coating work proceeds.

Brick & Masonry Painting Cost

What Affects the Cost of Brick & Masonry Painting?

Masonry painting requires more prep labor and more product than standard siding painting. These are the variables our professionals assess before providing any estimate.

Surface Area & Texture

Rough, textured masonry surfaces absorb significantly more paint than smooth siding — a brick wall requires more product per square foot than fiber cement. Surface area and texture together determine both labor time and material cost.

Prep Work Required

Efflorescence treatment, mortar joint repair, crack filling, and mildew remediation all add to the prep scope. A clean, well-maintained masonry surface costs less to paint than one needing extensive treatment before any primer goes on.

Coating System Selected

Elastomeric coatings cost more than standard masonry paint but provide superior protection for stucco and problem surfaces. Limewash on brick is a separate product category with different labor requirements. We walk you through options and tradeoffs before any work begins.

The Prep Standard

Why Masonry Paint Jobs Fail — And What We Do Differently

Masonry painting failures are almost always product or prep failures — not paint quality failures. Using the right system on a properly prepared surface is the entire game on brick and stucco.

Wrong Paint — No Breathability

Standard exterior latex on brick seals the surface and traps moisture inside the masonry. When that moisture tries to escape as vapor, it blisters and pushes the paint off. Only breathable, masonry-specific products allow vapor transmission without film failure.

Skipping Block Fill Primer on CMU

Concrete block is so porous that a standard coat of paint disappears into the surface. Without a block-fill primer to seal the porosity first, coverage is inconsistent and the topcoat is consumed at two to three times the expected rate — with poor results.

Painting Over Efflorescence

Soluble salts that have migrated to the masonry surface will continue to migrate after painting. The salt crystals grow beneath the paint film and physically push it off the substrate. Chemical treatment and removal is the only correct approach before painting.

Skipping Elastomeric on Stucco

Standard exterior latex cures to a rigid film. Stucco moves. The result is predictable — the paint cracks wherever the stucco cracks, which is everywhere. Elastomeric coatings remain flexible after curing and accommodate surface movement without cracking.

Painting Over Active Moisture Intrusion

If water is actively entering the masonry through failed mortar joints, cracks, or grade-level contact, no paint system will hold. The moisture source has to be addressed first — paint is a finish coating, not a waterproofing solution for active intrusion.

One Coat on Highly Porous Surfaces

Brick and block absorb the first coat heavily. One coat on unprepared masonry rarely achieves full coverage — thin spots are visible in raking light and provide inadequate protection. Two coats after proper priming is the minimum professional standard.

Customer Reviews

What Homeowners Say About NorTech Masonry Painting

4.8

Based on 1,000+ verified ratings

“Was skeptical about painting the brick but they walked me through the breathable product they’d use and exactly why it matters. Six months in — no cracking, no blistering, no moisture issues. The house looks completely updated.”

Reginald O.

“Stucco exterior had a lot of hairline cracks and the previous paint was bubbling. They treated the surface properly, used elastomeric coating throughout, and it looks smooth and clean. Took two days but they did it right.”

Valentina C.

“Had significant efflorescence on my block retaining wall. They treated it, primed with block filler, and painted it. Wall looks clean and sealed. They explained every step — didn’t just show up and start painting.”

Olusegun A.

“Used limewash on the brick and it’s exactly the look I wanted — not a solid painted look, just a soft, washed tone that still shows the brick character underneath. Beautiful result and the crew knew the product well.”

Brigitta H.

“Concrete block garage that needed painting inside and out. They block-filled the interior first which made a huge difference in coverage. Exterior got two coats of masonry paint and looks solid. Solid job overall.”

Przemek W.

“Brick porch columns and foundation — both painted in the same visit to match the new house color. Clean, consistent coverage on both surfaces. No drips on the siding, no mess on the landscaping. Professional from start to finish.”

Chiamaka F.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions — Brick & Masonry Painting

Straight answers to what homeowners ask before booking a brick or masonry painting service.

Painting brick is a significant, largely irreversible decision — once painted, the brick requires ongoing maintenance and repainting every 5–10 years. That said, painted brick can dramatically modernize a home’s appearance and protect deteriorating or stained brick that is difficult to restore. The key is using the correct breathable, masonry-specific paint system so moisture can escape without causing blistering or spalling.

Masonry-specific paint is required — standard exterior latex applied directly to unprepared brick traps moisture and fails rapidly. The correct system is a masonry bonding primer followed by a 100% acrylic elastomeric or masonry-grade topcoat that is breathable, flexible, and water-resistant. Elastomeric coatings bridge hairline cracks and provide superior moisture protection on stucco and concrete block.

Brick house painting cost depends on the square footage of masonry surface, surface condition, whether efflorescence or staining needs treatment, number of coats, and the coating product selected. Masonry painting typically requires more prep labor than siding painting due to surface porosity and texture. NorTech provides upfront itemized estimates — request a free quote for accurate pricing on your specific home.

Yes. Stucco is one of the most paintable masonry surfaces when the correct product is used. Elastomeric paint is the professional standard for stucco — it’s flexible enough to bridge hairline cracks, breathable enough to allow moisture vapor escape, and provides excellent waterproofing. Standard exterior latex on stucco blisters and peels because it can’t accommodate the surface movement stucco experiences.

Efflorescence is the white, chalky mineral deposit that appears on brick and masonry surfaces when water carries soluble salts to the surface as it evaporates. It must be treated and removed before painting — painting over efflorescence causes rapid paint failure as the salts continue to migrate and push the paint film off the surface.

Professionally painted brick using quality masonry primer and elastomeric or acrylic topcoat lasts 5–10 years before needing repainting. Longevity depends heavily on prep quality, product selection, and the number of coats applied. Painted brick on south-facing, sun-exposed walls will need attention sooner than shaded elevations.

Limewash is a mineral-based finish made from slaked lime that creates a soft, matte, textured appearance on brick. Unlike paint, limewash penetrates into the brick rather than forming a surface film, so it won’t peel. It fades gradually and can be reapplied over time. It’s an excellent option for homeowners who want to soften brick color without the permanence of full paint — and it’s fully breathable by nature.

Yes. All NorTech brick and masonry painting services are backed by a 1-year labor warranty covering workmanship defects. Masonry coating products from professional manufacturers also carry their own warranties when properly applied. If something isn’t right, we come back and make it right.

Service Territory

Brick & Masonry Painting Near You

NorTech dispatches certified masonry painting professionals across 30+ states. From brick homes in Atlanta and Charlotte to stucco exteriors in Phoenix, Las Vegas, and San Antonio — we have vetted professionals in your market.

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