“5-year warranty” on a brochure is white noise unless it spells out what’s covered, what’s excluded, and who’s liable. The four warranty layers, statutory, workmanship, manufacturer and HBC, and how to confuse them is how the cowboy avoids the callback.
“5-year warranty” on a painter’s brochure is white noise unless it spells out what’s covered, what’s
excluded, and who’s liable. There are actually four separate warranty layers behind a paint job,
and quietly confusing them is how a cowboy avoids the callback.
The four layers
Layer 01
Statutory consumer law
Under Australian Consumer Law the work must be done well and last a fair time. It always applies. No brochure needed, whatever a painter says.
Layer 02
Painter’s workmanship warranty
The operator’s own promise, typically 3–7 years. Should name what’s covered, peeling, blistering, lifting, fade, and what’s excluded, like physical damage or water ingress from elsewhere.
Layer 03
Paint manufacturer warranty
Dulux, Wattyl or Taubmans warranties run 5–25 years depending on the product. The painter is not the manufacturer. Read the PDF from the brand directly.
Layer 04
HBC / DBI (above thresholds)
Statutory building insurance only applies above each state’s dollar threshold. Painting often sits below. Confirm whether it applies to a job your size.
Where the confusion gets used against you
The common move is to wave the paint manufacturer’s long warranty, “Dulux back it for 15 years”,
while staying vague about the painter’s own workmanship cover. But the manufacturer warranty covers
the paint, not the application. If the topcoat lifts because the prep or primer was wrong, that’s a
workmanship problem, and only the painter’s warranty answers for it. Get both, in writing, with the
exclusions named.
The paint warranty and the workmanship warranty are not the same thing. The cowboy is counting on
you not knowing that.
Ask this, exactly
“Can you put both warranties in writing, the workmanship one and the paint maker’s? And say
what each one covers, and what it leaves out?”
A working painter can separate the two without flinching and put it in writing. If the answer blurs them together, that’s the answer.
What we put in writing
Brushline gives you a 7-year workmanship warranty against peeling, blistering, lifting and fade,
plus the Dulux product warranty, plus your statutory rights, all stated on the quote, with the
exclusions named. Three layers, no blur.
Common questions
What does a painting warranty actually cover?
It depends which of four layers you mean. Statutory consumer law covers reasonable workmanship and always applies. The painter’s own workmanship warranty (typically 3–7 years) should specify peeling, blistering, lifting and fade. The paint manufacturer’s warranty covers the product. And statutory building insurance applies only above state thresholds. A good painter spells out all four in writing.
Is a “5-year warranty” on a painter’s brochure meaningful?
Only if it states what’s covered, what’s excluded and who is liable. A bare “5-year warranty” is white noise, the detail is the warranty. Confusing the workmanship warranty with the paint manufacturer’s warranty is a common way the cost of a callback gets shifted onto the homeowner.
What does Brushline’s warranty cover?
A 7-year workmanship warranty against peeling, blistering, lifting and fade, plus the Dulux product warranty, plus your statutory rights under Australian Consumer Law, all provided in writing on the quote.