Spring Decorating Cornwall

After a typically wet Cornish winter, spring arrives and suddenly everything looks possible again. It’s also, genuinely, the best time of year to repaint — both inside and out. Here’s why the timing matters, what to prioritise, and the colours making an impact in 2026.

Why Spring Is the Ideal Window for Decorating

For exterior work, timing is everything. Spring’s mild temperatures, drying breezes, and enough dry days to prepare, prime, and apply two coats make it the ideal season. Indoors, longer daylight hours provide better natural light for spotting patchiness before paint dries — and open windows make ventilation simple rather than a balancing act.

Start Outside: Assess Winter’s Damage First

Before committing to interior decoration, walk around the outside of your property and note what the season has done. Look for:

  • Peeling or blistering paint on rendered walls, especially north and west-facing elevations
  • Cracking render around window and door frames
  • Timber window frames or sills that have lifted, bubbled, or gone bare at the edges
  • Green algae growth on walls, soffits, or fencing
  • Rust spots on metalwork pushing through existing paint

Catching these in spring means you address them before another year’s weather compounds them.

Holiday Let Owners

If you rent your Cornwall property as a holiday let, spring is your window. Most letting calendars fill from Easter onwards — getting painting done in March and early April avoids disrupting your peak income period and presents guests with a freshly decorated property.

Interior Spring Refresh: Where to Focus

After months of closed windows and central heating, the rooms that typically need attention first are:

  • Hallways and stairwells — high-traffic areas that absorb scuffs and marks through the winter
  • Kitchens and bathrooms — most likely to develop surface mould or peeling at joins
  • North-facing rooms — lower temperatures mean more likely to have developed damp patches over winter
  • Ceilings — yellow staining, watermarks, or general greying are very visible in bright spring light

Colour Trends for Cornwall Homes in 2026

Cornwall’s coastal light makes colours read differently here. These are the tones we’re seeing chosen most often on current jobs:

Warm Stone Works with natural materials; suits Cornish stone cottages
Sea Glass Coastal reference without being obvious — great for bedrooms
Bleached Sand Reflects Cornwall’s natural palette; very liveable neutral
Slate Feature walls; pairs well with white woodwork and natural wood
Tidewater Clay Warm earthy orange-red; growing in popularity for living spaces
Whitewash Classic Cornish exterior — crisp and bright in coastal light

The trend is away from cool greys (which can look flat in lower Cornish light) towards warmer tones: sandy neutrals, pale terracottas, and soft blue-greens that reference the landscape without being a cliché.

Book Early — Spring Books Up Fast

Spring is the busiest period for painters across Cornwall, and good decorators tend to book up quickly. If you’re thinking of work between April and June, March is the time to start getting quotes and dates in the diary.

Ready to freshen up your Cornwall home this spring?

Get in touch to lock in your slot before the spring rush. We cover all of Cornwall — Truro, Falmouth, St Ives, Penzance, Newquay and beyond.

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