Painting a Brick House in Michigan: Cost, Pros, Cons, and What to Know First (2026)

a brick chimney on a roof

If you’re looking up the cost to paint brick house exteriors in Michigan, you’re probably weighing two things at once: the look (big curb appeal boost) and the risk (brick is not like siding). Both matter—especially with Michigan’s freeze-thaw weather.

This guide breaks down pricing, prep, and alternatives so you can decide if painting brick is the right move for your brick & masonry exterior—your brick house or brick home.

Cost to paint brick house in Michigan (2026 price ranges)

Most homeowners see total project pricing land in a few common ranges:

  • $3,500 to $10,500 depending on house size and project specifics
  • $4,000 to $12,000 is another common “average range” you’ll see for full exterior work
  • Many homeowners hear an “average” around $7,000 for a typical job

Why the spread? Brick is porous and prep-heavy. The details below explain what’s driving the number.

Cost To Paint A Brick House In Michigan
(Quick read: bars are illustrative — prep and size drive the spread.)
Common low–high$3,500–$10,500
Full-exterior range$4,000–$12,000
Typical “average”~$7,000
Brick is porous and prep-heavy — which is exactly why the range is so wide.

What changes the cost (and why brick isn’t a simple paint job)

Here are the biggest cost drivers for a painted brick exterior:

Home size, access, and stories

  • Larger homes require more paint and may increase labor costs due to accessibility issues.
  • Multi-story homes can increase labor costs by up to 50% due to scaffolding needs.

Prep work and repairs (often the real budget item)

  • Proper preparation can significantly increase labor costs for painting brick.
  • Prep work for painting brick can include cleaning, repairs, and caulking.
  • Brick often needs pressure washing and priming before painting.
  • Cleaning and power washing are essential for adhesion to brick surfaces.

Materials (primer and paint quality)

  • The cost of masonry primer ranges from $20 to $50 per gallon.
  • High-quality masonry paint costs more than standard exterior acrylics.
  • Masonry-specific primer and high-quality masonry paint are recommended for brick.

In other words, the “cheap” quote often cuts prep, primer, or both. That’s where problems start.

Three Things That Move A Brick Quote
(Quick read: where the money in a brick job actually goes.)
Size, access & stories
Scaffolding can add up to 50% in labor.
Prep & repairs
Usually the real budget item on brick.
Primer & paint quality
Masonry primer runs $20–$50 per gallon.

Should you paint a brick house? Pros and cons for Michigan homeowners

This is the big question: should you paint a brick house or leave it alone?

Pros of painting your brick

  • A major style upgrade (especially if you dislike the current color)
  • Better uniformity if your brick has stains, mismatched repairs, or patched spots
  • Big curb appeal change without rebuilding anything

Paint can be an excellent way to unify a patched or mismatched wall and give the overall aesthetic a clean, uniform look. Just remember paint hides the brick’s natural texture in a way stain and limewash don’t.
On the upside of the paint-brick debate

Cons (the ones that matter long-term)

Brick needs to breathe. If it can’t, moisture gets trapped.

  • Brick needs to breathe; painting seals moisture inside.
  • Painted brick can trap moisture, causing permanent damage.
  • Painted brick can deteriorate due to trapped moisture. (This is where you see blistering, peeling, and sometimes masonry damage.)

The core problem is physical: brick is porous but paint is not, so a painted surface can stop moisture in the wall from drying out — and that trapped water is “a prime source of mold and mildew,” the same moisture that later pushes the paint off in peeling sheets.
— Source: Bob Vila, “Why Painted Brick Is So Controversial”

And once brick is painted, it’s hard to go back:

  • Removing paint from brick is expensive and labor-intensive.
  • Removing paint from brick is extremely difficult and costly.

Maintenance is also real:

  • Painted brick requires repainting every 5 to 10 years.
  • You may also see notes like: painted brick typically lasts only 10-15 years before needing repainting.
  • Many painted brick homes need ongoing spot care: painted brick may require significant touch-ups each season or touch-ups every couple of years, especially on high-splash zones.

Meanwhile:

  • Unpainted brick requires minimal maintenance over decades.

If you love the natural look and your masonry is in good shape, leaving it unpainted is often the lowest-risk choice.

Painting Brick: The Honest Trade-Off
(Quick read: the upside is instant; the commitment is long.)
✓ Pros
Major style upgrade · hides stains and patched spots for a uniform look · big curb-appeal change with no rebuilding
⚠ Cons
Can trap moisture & cause damage · repaint every 5–10 years · seasonal touch-ups · removal is costly and near-impossible

When to paint exterior brick in Michigan (timing matters)

If you decide to paint, you’ll want the season on your side. So, when to paint exterior brick?

Aim for a stretch of mild, dry weather. Michigan’s spring and fall can be ideal when nights aren’t too cold and humidity is manageable. Avoid late fall cold snaps and early spring wet spells.

Freeze-thaw is the main concern. Moisture in the brick expands when it freezes. If the wall is sealed too tightly or painted when damp, you raise the odds of failure.

“In Michigan, snow and freeze-thaw make timing everything. Paint a damp wall in a cold snap and the first hard freeze can start lifting it — and trying to undo a bad brick coating later is close to impossible without spending serious money. The practical move is to build the schedule around a mild, dry stretch, not the calendar — and to treat the whole process, from drainage and roof runoff to the final coat, as one complete system rather than a job you revisit in a couple years.”

Before any painting begins, it’s also smart to confirm drainage:

  • It is important to ensure proper drainage around brick before painting. Gutters, downspouts, and grade issues can push water into the wall system.

Prep work checklist: what a pro should do before painting brick

Good prep work is what separates a paint job that lasts from one that flakes fast.

A solid prep list often includes:

The Brick Prep Sequence
(Quick read: five steps before a drop of color goes on.)
1Clean / pressure wash — remove dirt, mildew, and chalky residue for clean pores.
2Repairs — address cracked mortar, missing joints, and damaged brickwork first.
3Caulk where appropriate — seal gaps at trim and windows, but don’t caulk the wall shut.
4Prime with masonry primer — not optional; it evens suction and locks down dust.
5Two finish coats — typical for even color and better protection.
  • Cleaning / pressure wash. Remove dirt, mildew, and chalky residue. The goal is clean pores for bonding.
  • Repairs. Address cracked mortar, missing joints, and damaged brickwork first.
  • Caulking (where appropriate). Seal gaps around trim, windows, and transitions—but don’t “caulk the wall shut.” Brick still needs to manage moisture.
  • Prime with a masonry-specific primer. Primer is not optional on most exterior brick. It helps even out suction and lock down dust.
  • Two finish coats (typical). Many jobs require a second coat for even color and better protection.

Pros lean on the right tools as much as the right primer: a masonry primer gives the brick “a little breathing room,” and a thick-nap roller is used to work coating deep into the mortar joints — the same brush-and-roller detailing that separates a lasting finish from a quick one.
— Source: Bob Vila, “How to Paint Brick”

A quick note on historic masonry:

  • Painting historic brick can lead to spalling and deterioration.
  • Painting historic brick can cause permanent damage.

Older, softer brick and older mortar can be especially vulnerable. If your home is historic, get a pro who understands masonry—not just paint.

Paint vs brick stain vs limewash: alternatives to painting brick

Painting isn’t the only way to change the look.

Brick stain (often lower risk)

If you want color but also want breathability, consider brick stain:

  • Staining allows brick to breathe and prevents moisture damage.
  • Mineral-based stains bond with brick and never peel.
  • Brick staining can last 40 to 50 years with proper application.
  • Staining requires less maintenance than painted brick.
  • Stains can provide subtle or dramatic changes to brick appearance.

This is the practical difference that changes the whole calculation: mineral-based brick stains soak into the pores rather than forming a film, so the brick keeps breathing and the finish “will never peel” — a durability and value story paint simply can’t match on masonry.
— Source: Family Handyman, “Common Brick Stain Colors”

Limewash

Limewash gives a soft, aged look that many homeowners love:

  • Specialty finishes like limewashing can offer different aesthetics at varying price points.

The best option depends on your brick type, your goals, and your tolerance for maintenance.

Paint vs. Stain vs. Limewash
(Quick read: breathability and reversibility are the real dividing lines.)
Finish
Breathes?
Notes
Paint
No — forms a film
Bold color; repaint every 5–10 yrs; hard to reverse
Brick stain
Yes — soaks in
Never peels; can last 40–50 yrs; low maintenance
Limewash
Yes — mineral finish
Soft, aged, whitewashed look; varying price points

Is painting brick permanent?

It’s not “permanent” in the sense that you can repaint it, but it is a long-term commitment.

  • Repainting is expected every several years.
  • Getting back to bare brick is usually difficult and costly.
  • If moisture issues exist, paint can make them worse by creating trapped moisture behind the coating.

That’s why product choice and prep matter so much.

Treat painting brick like a long-term commitment, not a weekend refresh — you can change the color down the road, but getting back to bare brick is close to impossible without real money and effort.

DIY vs hiring a licensed pro (and why it matters on brick)

Brick is not forgiving. DIY can work on small areas like a porch wall, but full-house brick painting has more risk.

A licensed pro is more likely to:

  • Diagnose moisture and drainage problems
  • Choose correct masonry primer and coating system
  • Repair mortar and surface issues correctly
  • Use the right methods so paint bonds and cures well

And because prep is the big cost driver, pros also help prevent wasted spend—like painting over problems that will show up next season.

A brick fireplace or a small porch wall is a fair DIY project with a brush and a couple of hours — move the furniture, and go for it. A full two-story facade in Michigan’s freeze-thaw is a different job entirely; the stakes, and the cost of a mistake, are much higher, and knowing that difference is a good thing before you start.

So… should you paint your brick home in Michigan?

If your brick is modern and your home is dry and well-drained, painting can look fantastic. One helpful rule of thumb you’ll see:

  • Modern bricks made after 1940 are safer to paint.

If your home is older, already has moisture issues, or you want the lowest maintenance path, look hard at brick stain or limewash instead of traditional paint.

Either way, the best next step is an on-site evaluation.

“Painting brick is one of the few exterior decisions that’s genuinely hard to undo, so we’d personally rather have the conversation before the first coat than after. We look at the age of the brick, the mortar, the drainage, and whether new brick or a stone or concrete feature is in play — then we’ll tell you honestly whether paint, stain, or limewash gives you the best durability and value for your home. Sometimes the right answer is to leave beautiful brick alone.”
— The team at Elite Paint, Roseville, MI · serving Macomb & Oakland County

Get a free estimate (and ask about financing)

Brick projects are bigger-ticket jobs. Elite Paint offers a free estimate, and if budget timing is part of the decision, ask about Hearth financing options during your consultation.

That way, you can make a choice you feel good about—before you commit to painting your brick for the long haul.

Dillon Jonker
Author: Dillon Jonker

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