ᐅ Additional cost for exterior paint when changing from white to color?
Created on: 2 Feb 2023 10:47
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Fertighaus123
Hello,
Yesterday we had the selection appointment for our prefab house and chose a color (it had to be from the Caparol A1 color chart, for some reason). Today we were told the additional cost for this: more than 4,000€.
That really surprised us because we always thought that whether it’s white or color shouldn’t matter much, so where does the extra cost come from? Of course, that’s a bit naive and maybe simplistic, but we really didn’t expect over 4,000€.
Could you share your experiences? I’d be interested to know how much extra color options cost compared to white for you...
Best regards
Yesterday we had the selection appointment for our prefab house and chose a color (it had to be from the Caparol A1 color chart, for some reason). Today we were told the additional cost for this: more than 4,000€.
That really surprised us because we always thought that whether it’s white or color shouldn’t matter much, so where does the extra cost come from? Of course, that’s a bit naive and maybe simplistic, but we really didn’t expect over 4,000€.
Could you share your experiences? I’d be interested to know how much extra color options cost compared to white for you...
Best regards
First of all, we did not build with a general contractor.
We had already planned to add some color to the house, so we had the freedom to choose from the color palette. The desired color was then mixed directly into the plaster and applied in one go, which worked well.
In our case, the applicator went to the building material supplier and said, “Plaster mixed in color XYZ” for an area of xx m2 (xx sq ft), and that was it. Either their profit margin was already high enough that the extra cost for mixing was negligible, or it was minimal because it “barely” costs extra.
As mentioned before, this saves two work steps — at least twice the effort of painting over white plaster.
We had already planned to add some color to the house, so we had the freedom to choose from the color palette. The desired color was then mixed directly into the plaster and applied in one go, which worked well.
In our case, the applicator went to the building material supplier and said, “Plaster mixed in color XYZ” for an area of xx m2 (xx sq ft), and that was it. Either their profit margin was already high enough that the extra cost for mixing was negligible, or it was minimal because it “barely” costs extra.
As mentioned before, this saves two work steps — at least twice the effort of painting over white plaster.
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Fertighaus1232 Feb 2023 13:05Thank you all for your replies! That sounds really unpleasant, especially since mixing it yourself is actually supposed to be cheaper...
I have no idea what we should do now. We never wanted plain white anyway, but 4,000€ is definitely a lot!
I think once we’ve finished building, I'll write a book: "Pitfalls in Prefabricated Houses"....
We actually prepared well, but we didn’t expect tricks like these.
I have no idea what we should do now. We never wanted plain white anyway, but 4,000€ is definitely a lot!
I think once we’ve finished building, I'll write a book: "Pitfalls in Prefabricated Houses"....
We actually prepared well, but we didn’t expect tricks like these.
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WilderSueden2 Feb 2023 13:18Fertighaus123 schrieb:
We had actually prepared well, but we didn’t expect such tricks. But that is naive. Especially with prefab houses, but also with many general contractors for solid construction, the business model is based on earning money from customers’ extra requests. Like with cars ... you only get one color included, and if you want something different, you pay extra. Whether it is more complicated or not.
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