Coastal Home Painting in Maine: Protect Your Property From the Inside Out
A coastal home in Maine faces conditions that inland properties never encounter. Salt-laden air, intense UV exposure, persistent humidity, and a hundred or more freeze and thaw cycles every year combine to attack paint at a rate that is two to three times more aggressive than a standard inland environment. Standard exterior paint fails in two to three years on a coastal home. The right paint, applied correctly, lasts eight to twelve years.
Putnam Coastal Painting was built on coastal properties. Jordan Martinez has spent over a decade restoring and maintaining oceanfront and near-coastal homes across York County and Cumberland County, Maine. This is not a claimed specialty. It is the work we have done since the beginning.
Why Coastal Conditions Are Different
- Salt air: Airborne salt deposits on exterior surfaces and penetrates paint film at a molecular level, degrading adhesion and accelerating blistering and peeling. Invisible to the eye but consistently destructive.
- UV exposure: Coastal homes near open water receive elevated UV from both direct sunlight and reflection off the water surface. Standard exterior paints fade and chalk faster in these conditions.
- Persistent humidity: Maine’s coastal climate maintains high ambient humidity for much of the year. Humidity cycling expands and contracts paint film, accelerating adhesion failure.
- Freeze and thaw: York County experiences 100 or more freeze and thaw cycles per year. Moisture trapped under or within paint film expands when it freezes and contracts when it thaws, leading to blistering, cracking, and peeling over time.
- Wind-driven rain: Coastal properties face directional wind-driven rain that forces moisture into any gap, failed caulk joint, or compromised paint surface.
The Products We Specify for Coastal Properties
Product selection for a coastal property is not a preference, it is an engineering decision. We specify the following products for coastal exterior applications based on their documented performance in salt-air and high-moisture environments:
Sherwin Williams Duration: Sherwin Williams’ premium exterior line. Duration’s CrossLink Technology creates a crosslinked polymer barrier that resists moisture and salt penetration more effectively than standard acrylic products. It carries a lifetime limited warranty from Sherwin Williams.
Sherwin Williams Emerald Rain Refresh: Formulated specifically for high-moisture, high-UV environments with self-cleaning technology that resists dirt and chalk buildup.
Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior: Benjamin Moore’s top exterior grade with proprietary Color Lock technology. Rated for superior fade resistance and moisture resistance in demanding coastal conditions.
We do not use builder grade or standard exterior products on coastal properties. The price difference between a standard exterior paint and a coastal-rated product is modest. The performance difference is measured in years.
Our Coastal Prep Protocol
Prep for a coastal property goes further than standard exterior preparation. Salt residue accumulates on exterior surfaces and is invisible without testing. If paint is applied over salt-contaminated surfaces, adhesion fails from the inside out.
Our coastal prep sequence:
- Salt residue wash: We use a sodium hypochlorite solution followed by thorough water rinsing to remove salt deposits from all exterior surfaces before any other prep work begins
- Mildew treatment: Maine coastal properties commonly develop mildew on north and east-facing surfaces. We treat and kill mildew before washing to prevent regrowth under the new paint film
- Thorough scraping and sanding: All failing paint is removed to a stable substrate. No new paint over old failing paint, ever
- Caulking all penetrations: Wind-driven rain finds every gap. We caulk every joint, trim edge, window frame, and siding penetration with a high-quality paintable sealant
- Coastal-grade primer: Bare wood and repaired areas receive a primer specified for coastal adhesion before any topcoat is applied
Which Surfaces Are Most Vulnerable on a Coastal Home
- South and west facing walls receive maximum UV and afternoon sun exposure combined with prevailing wind-driven rain
- Low soffits and fascia trap moisture and are particularly vulnerable to mildew and paint failure
- Trim at grade level sits in the splash zone from rain runoff and is the most common early failure point
- Window and door frames where caulk failures allow moisture intrusion
- Cedar shingle siding which absorbs moisture and requires specific primer and topcoat selection for a lasting result
We identify and address every high-risk surface during your free coastal home assessment.
Our Promise to You
Every project ends with a final walkthrough. You do not sign off until you are completely satisfied. If something is not right, we fix it on the spot before we leave.
The quote we give you is the price you pay. Licensed and insured. PCA accredited. Over 10 years serving York County homeowners. We show up when we say we will, do what we say we will do, and leave your home cleaner than we found it.
“What we do in secret will always come to light.” That is the standard we hold ourselves to on every job.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should an exterior paint job last on a coastal Maine home?
Eight to twelve years with proper preparation and coastal-rated paint products. Standard paint on a coastal property may begin failing in two to three years. The difference is in product selection and salt residue removal before application.
What makes coastal paint products different from standard exterior paint?
Coastal-rated products like Sherwin Williams Duration and Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior use polymer technologies that create a more durable moisture and salt barrier than standard acrylic formulas. They also carry superior UV resistance ratings. The chemistry is different, not just the marketing.
How often does a coastal home need repainting?
With the right products and thorough prep, a well-painted coastal home should go eight to twelve years between exterior repaints. Homes painted with standard products in coastal conditions may need repainting every three to five years. The prep and product investment pays for itself in avoided repainting cycles.
Do you work on cedar shingle exteriors?
Yes. Cedar shingle siding is common in coastal Maine and requires specific product selection. We use penetrating primers designed for cedar and topcoats with the flexibility to handle cedar’s natural movement with moisture. Cedar treated and painted correctly holds its finish well. Improperly primed cedar fails quickly.
How do I request a coastal home painting assessment?
Call us at (207) 890-7305 or request a free coastal home assessment online. We evaluate your property, identify the highest-risk surfaces, discuss product options, and provide a detailed written estimate.







