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Interior Painting

House Painting Services

Interior Painting Done Right, Room by Room

True Pro Paint takes interiors seriously. Walls, ceilings, trim, doors, casings, and cabinetry all get the same attention to prep, color, and finish. We treat every room like the place you actually live in, because it is.

A real interior repaint starts with a walkthrough. We measure every wall, look closely at the surfaces under work lights, and write a plain estimate that lists every line item. A clear plan before the work starts.

When the crew shows up, your floors, furniture, and fixtures get covered. Patching, caulking, and sanding happen before any paint touches the wall. The result is a smooth, even finish that holds up to daily life.

Why Homeowners Pick True Pro Paint

A small list of things we do differently, every job, every room.

Real Prep, Every Time

Patching, sanding, caulking, and priming happen before paint touches the wall. The finish is only as smooth as what is under it.

Trained, Trusted Painters

The same crew leads finish your job that started it, with one point of contact the whole way through.

Color Help When You Want It

Bring a Pinterest board or none at all. We will put real swatches on your wall in the rooms they will live in, in the light they will live in.

Clean Site, Clean Finish

Floors covered, furniture wrapped, edges taped. When we leave, the only thing different about your home is the paint.

Brands We Trust

Quality paint selected for the surface and how the room is used.

A Plain-Language Estimate

Walls, ceilings, trim, doors, prep, and paint each get their own line. No bundled mystery, no surprise add-ons after we start.

What Interior Clients Say

R
Robert L.
Park Slope · Living Room Repaint
“Showed up exactly when they said they would and the trim work is the cleanest I have ever seen. Fair price too.”
J
John D.
Astoria · Cabinet Refinishing
“The kitchen cabinets look brand new. They masked everything in plastic, sprayed a perfect finish, and you would never know they were here besides the cabinets themselves.”
M
Maria S.
Forest Hills · Whole Interior
“Walked the whole house with me first, picked colors I would actually live with, and every wall is dead-flat smooth. Highly recommend.”

Interior Painting FAQs

What does an interior repaint typically include?

Walls, ceilings, trim, doors, casings, and any patching or skim-coat repair the surfaces need before paint goes on. Color consultation and on-wall swatches are part of the walkthrough.

Do I have to move all my furniture out?

No. We move the heavy stuff into the center of the room and cover it. We just ask that you take down small items, art, and breakables, and that you give us a working strip along painted walls.

How do you handle prep?

Patches and skim coats first, then sanding and caulking. Floors and furniture are covered, switch plates come off, and edges are taped before any color goes on.

How do you choose paint?

Quality paint selected for the surface and how the room is used.

Will the smell stop us from staying in the house?

Most interior work uses lower-odor paint, so most clients stay in the home. We ventilate active rooms and keep dust contained. If you are sensitive, we can schedule rooms in stages.

How do you handle issues after the project?

If something is not right when we wrap, we want to hear about it. The goal is for you to be happy with the work when we leave.

Interior Painting in Your Home

True Pro Paint works inside brownstones, prewar walk-ups, suburban colonials, and modern open-plan condos. The work is the same anywhere: walk every room, prep every surface, paint clean lines, and walk it again at the end. The tools and the prep change with the home. The standard does not.

Most clients come to us for one or two rooms and end up booking the rest of the floor once they see the difference between a careful interior repaint and the spray-and-go work that is everywhere else. We are happy to start with a single room. We are also set up to handle a whole interior in a single planned sequence so the household can keep using the rest of the home while we work.

Picking the Right Interior Finish

Every room asks for a different sheen. Bedrooms and living rooms read best in matte or eggshell, where the surface absorbs light evenly and downplays small wall imperfections. Hallways, kitchens, and bathrooms benefit from satin or a soft semi-gloss, which is more washable and stands up to scuffs and steam. Trim, doors, and casings get a hard semi-gloss enamel for sharp edges and a finish you can wipe clean.

The right finish is also a question of light. South-facing rooms with a lot of daylight forgive flatter sheens; rooms that lean on lamps and recessed lighting often need a touch more reflectivity to come alive. We talk this through during the walkthrough and put real swatches on the walls before any paint is purchased.

When It Is Time to Repaint Inside

Interior paint usually shows its age in small ways before it shows in big ones. The most common signals we hear from clients:

  • Dingy edges around switch plates, doorways, and around the stove or sink.
  • Sun-faded patches on south-facing walls or behind framed art that has moved.
  • Hairline cracks above doorways, in corners, or where ceiling meets wall.
  • Trim that is yellowing, chipping at the bottom, or showing brush marks from the last repaint.
  • A color that no longer matches the furniture, the lighting, or the way you actually use the room.

None of those signals are urgent on their own. They simply mean the surface has done its job and is ready for a refresh, ideally before the underlying drywall and trim start showing real wear.

What Makes an Interior Paint Job Last

The visible part of an interior repaint is color and finish. The invisible part is everything underneath: how thoroughly the walls were patched, how completely the trim was caulked, how carefully the prime coat was matched to the substrate, and how clean the cut lines were before color went on. That hidden work is where corner-cutters save hours and where True Pro Paint spends them.

We use Quality paint selected for the surface and how the room is used. The brand matters less than the system: the right primer for the surface, the right finish coat for the room, and a real eye on dry time between coats so the finish actually cures the way it is meant to.

Working Around Your Schedule

Most interior projects can be staged so the household keeps using the rest of the home while we work. We typically start in low-use rooms and move forward as we finish. Furniture stays put under covers in the center of each room until we are done; floors stay protected from the moment we walk in until the final walk-through.

For families with young kids, pets, or anyone sensitive to paint smell, we work almost exclusively in lower-odor paint and ventilate active rooms. We can also schedule rooms in stages so the rest of the home stays paint-free while a single room cures.

Walkthrough and Estimate

Every interior project starts with an in-home walkthrough. We measure every wall, look at the trim under work lights, talk through finish options room by room, and write a plain-language line-item estimate before any commitment is made.

Plan Your Interior Project

Tell us which rooms you are painting and where you are. A real person will read it and follow up to schedule a walkthrough.

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