Interior Painting jobs in Los Angeles usually follow the same pattern: the low end is the clean, straight-through version of the work and the high end is the one with more prep, harder access, tighter finish expectations, or more total surface area. For interior painting, that means 1 room at $400 to $900, 2 rooms at $800 to $1,800, 3 rooms at $1,200 to $2,700, 4 rooms at $1,600 to $3,600, whole house at $2,500 to $6,500+. We price by the real surface condition in front of us, not by a vague phone guess that falls apart the minute we walk the job.
What moves the number is rarely the paint itself. It is the prep. When a project has failed caulk, rough patches, greasy surfaces, raw wood, moisture staining, or old repairs telegraphing through the finish, the labor climbs because there is more work between the old surface and the new coat. That is why we write quotes after a walkthrough, photograph problem areas, and spell out the steps instead of burying them in a single line item.
Clients usually call us after getting two bad versions of the same estimate. One is so low it clearly skips prep. The other is a round number with no explanation. Our quotes show what is included, which surfaces are in scope, how many coats are realistic, and when the higher range comes into play. That keeps the project grounded and makes the final invoice predictable.
- Typical surfaces in scope: walls, ceilings, baseboards, door casings, closets, hallways.
- Most common failure points we correct: patch scars telegraphing through flat paint, roller lap marks in long hallways, caulk gaps opening at baseboards, old touch-ups flashing through new color.
- The comparison that matters: vs. $15,000+ for a full renovation.