Licensed Painters Boston 3
3987 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional painting service with detailed prep work and quality finishes. We offer interior, exterior, and specialty coating options.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
Fully insured insured painting services near me contractors near you in Boston. Every 191 pro carries general liability and workers' comp — hire with zero financial risk.
Typical cost in Boston
$3–$8 / sq ft
191 contractors in Boston
3987 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional painting service with detailed prep work and quality finishes. We offer interior, exterior, and specialty coating options.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
8445 Main Street, Boston, MA
Quality painting services for your home. Experienced team uses top-brand paints and delivers flawless finishes on every project.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
3711 Main Street, Boston, MA
Full-service painting contractor with 15+ years of experience. Residential interior/exterior painting, staining, and pressure washing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
5239 Main Street, Boston, MA
Interior and exterior painting specialists using premium paints and proven techniques. Residential and commercial projects completed on t¦
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
3122 Main Street, Boston, MA
Licensed painter providing interior and exterior services. Eco-friendly paints available, meticulous craftsmanship, and competitive pricing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
2333 Main Street, Boston, MA
Full-service painting contractor with 15+ years of experience. Residential interior/exterior painting, staining, and pressure washing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
4697 Main Street, Boston, MA
Full-service painting contractor with 15+ years of experience. Residential interior/exterior painting, staining, and pressure washing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
2786 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional painting service with detailed prep work and quality finishes. We offer interior, exterior, and specialty coating options.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
7576 Main Street, Boston, MA
Licensed painter providing interior and exterior services. Eco-friendly paints available, meticulous craftsmanship, and competitive pricing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
1807 Main Street, Boston, MA
Full-service painting contractor with 15+ years of experience. Residential interior/exterior painting, staining, and pressure washing.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
2786 Main Street, Boston, MA
Professional painting service with detailed prep work and quality finishes. We offer interior, exterior, and specialty coating options.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
401 Main Street, Boston, MA
Quality painting services for your home. Experienced team uses top-brand paints and delivers flawless finishes on every project.
Serves: 02101, 02102, 02103, 02108 +28 more
Painting services in Boston rank among the most expensive in the Northeast — professional painters bill at $55–$95/hr in the greater Boston market, and project quotes reflect the city's high cost of labor, the prevalence of historic multi-story homes, and mandatory lead-paint compliance costs. Here's what Boston-area homeowners and landlords are actually paying in 2024–2025.
| Job | Typical Cost in Boston |
|---|---|
| Interior — single room (12×12) | $450–$800 |
| Interior — full 1-bedroom apartment | $1,800–$3,500 |
| Interior — full 3-bedroom triple-decker unit | $3,500–$7,000 |
| Interior — full house (colonial or Victorian) | $5,000–$15,000+ |
| Exterior — 2-story colonial (2,000 sq ft) | $5,000–$12,000 |
| Exterior — triple-decker (3 stories) | $7,500–$20,000 |
| Deck staining/painting | $800–$3,500 |
| Cabinet painting (kitchen) | $1,200–$4,000 |
| Trim and baseboard painting (per linear ft) | $2.50–$5.00 |
| Ceiling only (per room) | $300–$650 |
| Lead-paint encapsulation (per room) | $400–$1,200 |
| Lead-paint test (XRF, per surface) | $25–$50 per test |
Labor: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics for the Boston-Cambridge-Newton metro show painters (SOC 47-2141) earning a mean hourly wage of $34.70 in 2023 — among the highest of any metro in the country. Professional painting contractors bill $55–$95/hr to cover overhead, insurance, and materials markup. Boston's unionized painting trades (Painters and Allied Trades District Council 35) set wage floors that influence the non-union market as well.
Lead paint — the dominant cost factor in Boston's housing market: Boston's residential housing stock is predominantly pre-1940 — South End brownstones, Back Bay Victorian rowhouses, Dorchester and Jamaica Plain three-deckers. Virtually every home built before 1978 contains lead paint, and Massachusetts has the most stringent lead-paint laws in the country. Under Massachusetts Lead Law (MGL Chapter 111, Sections 189A–199B), any contractor disturbing surfaces in a pre-1978 home (sanding, scraping, stripping) must be certified under both EPA RRP rules AND Massachusetts CLPPP (Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program) regulations. Massachusetts training and certification requirements are more stringent than the federal EPA baseline. Lead-safe work practices add $300–$800 per project for containment, HEPA vacuuming, specialized disposal, and documentation.
Exterior painting — scale and access: Boston's three-deckers are 35–40 feet tall and require 40-foot extension ladders or scaffolding. Scaffolding for full exterior painting of a triple-decker runs $800–$2,500 extra and is mandatory for safe upper-story work. The city's density makes scaffolding permitting from Boston Transportation Department necessary for sidewalk scaffolding — add $150–$400 for permits and 1–2 weeks for approval.
Boston's historic districts: Portions of Back Bay, Beacon Hill, South End, Charlestown, and East Boston are designated Boston Landmarks Commission historic districts. Exterior color changes in these districts require advance approval from the Landmarks Commission — a process taking 4–8 weeks for a Certificate of Appropriateness. Your contractor cannot obtain this approval; it's the property owner's responsibility. Non-compliance fines can exceed $10,000 per violation.
Massachusetts HIC Registration: Massachusetts law requires all contractors performing home improvement work over $1,000 to be registered with the Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation (OCABR) as a Home Improvement Contractor (HIC). Painters performing work above this threshold must hold a valid HIC registration. Unregistered contractors cannot use the Massachusetts arbitration program for dispute resolution.
| Project Type | Boston Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Interior unit painting (1,000 sq ft, with lead compliance) | $3,500–$7,000 |
| Exterior triple-decker (full, with scaffolding) | $10,000–$22,000 |
| Deck staining + trim painting | $1,500–$4,000 |
| Cabinet refinishing (spray, full kitchen) | $1,500–$4,500 |
Boston's combination of historic housing, strict lead-paint laws, and high-stakes exterior work on multi-story structures makes contractor credentials more consequential here than in almost any other U.S. market.
Under Massachusetts General Law Chapter 142A, any contractor performing home improvement work valued over $1,000 must be registered with the Massachusetts Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation (OCABR). This applies to painters, and registration requires:
Verify HIC registration at OCABR's contractor lookup. Benefits of using a registered contractor: access to the Massachusetts arbitration program for dispute resolution, and the $10,000 Guarantee Fund for workmanship claims against registered contractors. Using an unregistered contractor explicitly waives these protections.
Massachusetts operates one of the strictest lead-paint regulatory programs in the country through its Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP). For painting work in pre-1978 homes in Boston:
Ask any painter you're considering:
Boston's union painting workforce is organized under District Council 35, representing commercial and some residential painters in the greater Boston area. Union contractors operate under negotiated wage floors and benefit structures that ensure worker training, safety practices, and quality standards. For large commercial or multi-family exterior projects, union contractors frequently dominate the market and provide the most reliable scale. For residential work, non-union independent contractors are common and competitive — but credentials remain equally important.
If your property is in a designated historic district (Beacon Hill, Back Bay, South End, Charlestown Navy Yard, among others), the Boston Landmarks Commission must approve exterior paint colors before work begins. Only a handful of base colors are permitted in some districts. Your contractor can advise, but approval must come from the property owner. Many Boston painters are experienced in this process and can flag likely issues before you submit your application.
Boston homeowners frequently consider DIY painting for interior spaces to offset the city's high professional rates. Here's the rigorous breakdown of what that decision involves — particularly given Boston's lead-paint landscape.
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Cost (labor) | $0 | $55–$95/hr |
| Materials (1,500 sq ft interior) | $350–$600 | Included in quote |
| Tool investment | $100–$300 (rollers, brushes, tape, drop cloths, ladder) | $0 |
| Time required | 3–5 weekends | 3–7 days (crew) |
| Lead-paint compliance (pre-1978 homes) | DIY exempt in owner-occupied SFH | EPA RRP + MA CLPPP required |
| Lead dust disposal | Your responsibility | Contractor handles EPA-compliant disposal |
| Exterior triple-decker work | Requires 40-ft ladder; extreme fall risk | Scaffolding, safety equipment |
| Massachusetts HIC registration | N/A | Required |
| Quality (cut lines, finish) | Variable | Consistent with experience |
| Historic district compliance | Same — your responsibility | Contractor can advise; approval is owner's |
| Warranty | None | 1–3 years labor typical |
| Resale inspection | DIY flaws visible to inspector | Professional finish |
| Budget project cost savings | $2,000–$8,000 (interior) | N/A |
Under Massachusetts and EPA rules, owner-occupants of pre-1978 single-family homes are exempt from RRP requirements when painting their own home. This is the good news for DIYers. The critical caveats:
For most Boston triple-decker landlords, DIY painting of tenant units is legally impractical — RRP compliance, lead documentation, and the risk of tenant lead illness claims make licensed professionals with proper certification the only viable option.
Boston three-deckers are 35–40 feet from ground to roofline. Working from a 40-foot extension ladder on an urban rowhouse with a 6-inch sidewalk, uneven brick, and no anchor points for a safety harness is high-risk work. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports falls as the leading cause of fatal occupational injuries in construction — these statistics apply to DIYers equally. For any exterior work above the first story on a Boston property, professional scaffolding is the correct safety choice.
The financial case for DIY interior painting in Boston is strongest for post-1978 homes, owner-occupied, with no HIC or lead-compliance obligation and interior-only scope. In that scenario, savings of $2,000–$5,000 are real. For the majority of Boston's pre-1940 housing stock, lead compliance obligations and exterior scale requirements make professional painters with proper credentials the pragmatic choice.
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