How Much Should Painters Charge in NZ?

NZ painters should charge $45–$75 per hour or $25–$80 per m² in 2026. Your charge-out rate must cover your wage, overheads (vehicle, insurance, ACC), materials, and profit margin. Most successful painting businesses target a 15–30% net profit margin on top of all costs. NZ painter pricing data — updated April 2026.

Prices last updated: April 2026

Recommended Charge-Out Rates

Sole Trader
$50–$75/hr
Inc. all overheads
With Employees
$55–$85/hr
Per painter billed
Day Rate
$400–$600
8-hour day
Target Margin
15–30%
Net profit

What Your Charge-Out Rate Should Cover

Cost ComponentSole TraderWith 1 EmployeeWith 3 Employees
Your wage$30–$45/hr$35–$50/hr$40–$55/hr
Employee wagesN/A$25–$32/hr$25–$32/hr × 3
ACC levies$2–$3/hr$4–$6/hr$8–$12/hr
Vehicle & fuel$3–$6/hr$4–$8/hr$6–$12/hr
Insurance$1–$2/hr$2–$4/hr$3–$6/hr
Tools & equipment$1–$2/hr$2–$3/hr$3–$5/hr
Admin & accounting$2–$3/hr$3–$5/hr$4–$7/hr
Profit margin$8–$15/hr$10–$20/hr$15–$30/hr
Minimum charge-out$47–$76/hr$85–$128/hr$104–$159/hr

Calculating Your Minimum Rate

Follow this formula to find your minimum charge-out rate:

  1. Annual costs — Add up: your desired wage + all overheads (vehicle, insurance, ACC, tools, admin) (per Stats NZ). For a sole trader, this is $70,000–$120,000/year.
  2. Billable hours — Realistically 1,400–1,600 hours/year. You won't bill 40 hours every week — account for quoting, travel, rain days, holidays, and admin.
  3. Break-even rate = Annual costs ÷ billable hours. Example: $90,000 ÷ 1,500 = $60/hr.
  4. Charge-out rate = Break-even × 1.2 to 1.3 (add 20–30% profit margin). See our profit margin guide for more on setting healthy margins.

Hourly vs Per m² vs Fixed Price

Each pricing method has its place:

  • Hourly ($45–$75/hr) — Best for small or uncertain-scope jobs. Client pays for actual time. Risk: slow painters earn more. See our hourly rate breakdown for what this should cover.
  • Per m² ($25–$80/m²) — Best for experienced painters who know their production rates. Rewards efficiency. See our cost-per-m² guide for current rate benchmarks. Use for internal calculations even when presenting fixed prices.
  • Fixed price — Preferred by most NZ homeowners. Calculated from your m² rates × measured area. Gives the client budget certainty and rewards you for working efficiently.

Most successful NZ painters use m² rates internally and present fixed-price quotes to clients.

When to Charge More

  • Difficult access — Multi-storey, steep sites, confined spaces. Add 20–40%.
  • Poor condition — Extensive prep required. Add 30–50% for heavily deteriorated surfaces.
  • Urgent timelines — Rush jobs deserve a premium. Add 15–25%.
  • Specialist work — Heritage, decorative, spray finishing. Charge $70–$100+/hr.
  • Peak season — Summer demand allows slightly higher rates.

Apply This to Your Own Jobs

Use our calculator to estimate your pricing based on your costs, hourly rate, and margin — and see what you should actually be charging.

Signs You're Charging Too Little

  • You're winning more than 60% of your quotes.
  • You're working long hours but not earning enough.
  • You can't afford to take holidays or sick days.
  • You're not covering vehicle maintenance, tool replacement, or insurance properly.
  • You're stressed about cash flow between jobs.

If any of these apply, increase your rates by 10–15%. You'll lose some price-sensitive clients but keep the ones who value quality. For current market benchmarks to compare against, see our guide to painting costs in NZ.

Data References

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should a painter charge per hour in NZ?

A qualified NZ painter should charge $45–$75/hr as a sole trader, or $55–$85/hr if they have employees. This covers wages, overheads, and a healthy profit margin. Below $45/hr is unsustainable for most painting businesses.

How do I know if my painting rates are right?

Track your quote win rate. 30–50% is healthy — you're competitive but not underpriced. If you're winning too many quotes, raise your rates. If you're winning too few, check whether your quotes are clear and professional before assuming price is the issue.

Should I charge the same rate for interior and exterior?

No. Exterior work should be charged at a higher per-m² rate (30–50% more) due to harder prep, weather-grade paint, access requirements, and weather delays. Your hourly rate stays the same, but production is slower on exterior work.

How do I raise my painting rates without losing clients?

Increase rates by 5–10% for new clients first. Give existing clients 30 days' notice. Focus on the value you provide (quality, reliability, warranty). Most good clients expect annual price increases.

Apply This to Your Own Jobs

Use our calculator to estimate your pricing based on your costs, hourly rate, and margin — and see what you should actually be charging.