Paint Peels for a Reason
Peeling and flaking paint is a symptom, not the disease. The usual causes are moisture getting behind the paint film, painting over a dirty, chalky or glossy surface that the new coat could not grip, incompatible paint systems layered on top of each other, or simply old paint at the end of its life. Scraping and repainting without finding the cause guarantees the new paint will lift again — often within months. Our Gordon's Bay painting team work out why it is failing before quoting a fix.
Stripping Back to a Sound Surface
Proper repair starts with removing all the loose and flaking material. We scrape and sand back to a firmly adhered edge, feather the edges so repairs do not show as ridges, and remove any powdery or chalky residue. Where whole areas have failed, we strip them right back to plaster or substrate. Cutting corners here — painting over edges that are still lifting — is the single most common reason a repaint fails, so we do not rush it.
Treating the Cause and Priming
If moisture is behind the peeling, the source has to be addressed — a leak, rising damp, or condensation — otherwise no amount of paint will hold. We treat damp-affected areas, allow them to dry, and apply the correct primer for the situation: a stabilising primer on chalky surfaces, a plaster primer on bare patches, or a stain and damp-resistant primer where moisture has been an issue. The primer is what gives the new paint something to bond to.
Repainting for a Lasting Finish
Once the surface is sound and primed, we apply two coats of a quality paint matched to the location — washable acrylic indoors, weatherproof exterior PVA outside. The result is a smooth, even finish that stays put rather than lifting again next season. We quote free after seeing the affected areas, and we will always tell you honestly if the real fix is damp treatment rather than just paint. WhatsApp 060 985 5047 to book an assessment.