This is one of the most common questions we get during estimates — and it's a fair one. The short answer is yes, painting contractors typically do get better pricing on paint than retail customers. But what a contractor does with that pricing difference varies a lot, and it's worth understanding before you sign anything.
The Contractor Pricing Reality
Painting contractors who work regularly with suppliers like Sherwin-Williams build relationships over time. Those relationships come with contractor accounts that carry meaningful discounts — sometimes 30 to 50 percent or more off retail pricing, depending on the product line and volume.
That's a real difference. A gallon of Sherwin-Williams Emerald that retails for $80+ can cost a contractor significantly less. On a whole-home job using 15 to 20 gallons, that adds up fast.
What Some Contractors Do With That Discount
Here's where it gets murky. Different contractors handle paint pricing in very different ways:
- Some pass the savings to you — charging materials at or near contractor cost, keeping their margin on labor where it belongs.
- Some mark materials up — billing you at retail or above while paying contractor pricing, effectively double-dipping.
- Some add a handling and transport fee — sometimes up to 30 percent of material cost — on top of the paint price, which can partially cover the cost of additional paint needed mid-job.
- Some don't disclose any of this — you just see a lump-sum number and have no way to know what the materials actually cost.
A good painting contractor is clear about how they handle materials. If you ask and they can't give you a straight answer, that tells you something.
What We Do at PSQP
We work with Sherwin-Williams and have solid relationships with our reps and store managers. We know the products well and we get contractor pricing. We're transparent about our estimates — if you want to know what materials cost on your job, ask us and we'll tell you.
We don't use old or compromised paint regardless of price. Paint has a shelf life, and cutting corners on materials is one of the fastest ways to end up with a finish that fails ahead of schedule. The savings aren't worth it.
What You Should Ask Any Contractor
- Are materials broken out separately in your estimate or bundled into a total?
- What brand and product line are you planning to use?
- Is there a markup on materials or a handling fee?
- What happens if additional paint is needed mid-job?
A contractor who can answer all of those clearly and confidently is one who runs a clean business. That should be a baseline expectation, not a bonus.
If you're getting quotes for a job in Pierce County and want a straight answer on how we handle it, give us a call at (253) 228-7273 or request a free estimate below.