On a paint job, the speed of your quote often makes or breaks the booking. Trade-survey data from the UK and France consistently shows the same pattern: a quote sent within 24 hours is roughly 3× more likely to be signed than one that arrives 72+ hours later. And yet the trade average sits around 4 days.

Good news: writing a fast painting quote takes no special talent. It's a 4-step method that fits in under 5 minutes once you've done it twice. Here it is, with a complete worked example at the bottom.

The 4 steps of a fast painting quote

1. Measure walls and identify the finish

While you walk the rooms, you count two things: m² of walls (ceiling height × perimeter, ignoring openings under 1 m²) and m² of ceilings. For each room you also note the desired finish (matte, satin, eggshell, scrubbable) and the surface state (filling, sanding, dust removal needed).

2. Price prep, primer and finish coats separately

A solid painting quote is built line by line, not as a flat lump-sum. Splitting prep / primer / 2 coats reassures the client and justifies your m² rate. Standard ratios used on French and UK sites:

  • Wall prep (filling, sanding, dust removal): €6–12 / m²
  • Acrylic primer: €5–8 / m² (materials + labour)
  • Acrylic matte paint, 2 coats: €12–18 / m²
  • Ceilings (primer + 2 coats): €10–14 / m²
  • Floor + furniture protection · cleanup: €80–150 lump

Multiply each line by the m² you measured. It's mechanical. This is also exactly the step where a remembered library of prices saves you the most minutes — you never re-key the same numbers.

3. Apply the right VAT

In France, dwellings older than 2 years used as primary or secondary residence qualify for reduced VAT at 10%. You attach the simplified VAT attestation to be signed by the client at the same time as the quote. In the UK, residential refurbishment generally falls under the standard 20% VAT rate, with reductions only on specific cases (listed buildings, energy-saving works).

4. Send and get an online signature

Sending a PDF by email is still the norm, but it's also where most quotes die. The client opens it, the PDF lingers in their inbox, they forget to reply. Instead use a WhatsApp or SMS link that opens the quote directly and lets them sign in two taps from their phone — the e-signature has the same legal weight as a hand signature in EU and UK jurisdictions.

Painting quote example: a complete worked case

Real-world example for a living room + kitchen refresh, 38 m² of walls, in a 5-year-old flat in Paris. Acrylic primer + 2 matte coats, ceilings included.

ItemQuantityUnit priceTotal
Wall prep (filling, sanding, dust removal)38 m²€8€304
Acrylic primer38 m²€6€228
Acrylic matte paint, 2 coats (off-white)38 m²€14€532
Ceilings — primer + 2 coats24 m²€12€288
Floor + furniture protection · cleanup1 lump€120€120
Painting quote — Ms. Lefèvre · Vincennes · living room + kitchen refresh

Subtotal: €1,472. VAT 10% (renovation): €147.20. Total inc. VAT: €1,619.20. Voice-captured on site in 47 seconds with invico, or 25 minutes on Excel at home in the evening — your pick.

5 mistakes that lose painting jobs

  1. Quote sent after 48 hours: the client already has two other quotes and made their pick.
  2. Lump-sum without itemisation: the client doesn't understand your price and negotiates the whole thing.
  3. Skipping the primer line: you priced 2 coats but the finish will be average — you'll come back for free.
  4. Standard 20% VAT applied by mistake: your quote looks more expensive than the competitor without reason.
  5. No priced variants: the client asks 'and with the ceiling?' and has to wait for a new quote.

Going faster: from 25 minutes to 60 seconds

If you still type quotes in Excel or Word, you spend 4–8 hours a week on it on average. That's the equivalent of a half-time job that doesn't pay you — and that costs you your evenings. A painter-focused quoting tool cuts that down to a few minutes per quote, by remembering your standard items and automating VAT and signature.