Car painting in Dubai covers a range from a single panel after a scrape to a full vehicle colour change. The quality of the result depends almost entirely on the preparation, the paint system, and the spray environment. Paint applied over poorly prepared metal or in an open workshop looks wrong within months. Paint applied correctly over a properly prepared surface matches the factory finish and lasts years in Dubai's climate.
This guide explains how car painting works at our Al Quoz body shop, which paint systems we use, when a panel respray is appropriate versus a full respray, and what to expect from the process. For a breakdown of specific prices by vehicle size and paint type, see our car painting cost guide.
What Does Car Painting in Dubai Actually Involve?
Car painting is not just spraying colour. A professional paint job has four distinct stages, each of which affects the final result.
Surface preparation is where most of the work happens. The panel is sanded to remove the old paint down to bare metal or a sound primer layer. Any corrosion is treated. Dents and low spots are filled and levelled. The surface is wiped with solvent to remove any contamination before paint is applied. Skipping or rushing this stage is the reason most poor paint jobs fail.
Priming seals the bare metal and creates an adhesion layer for the basecoat. We use high-build primer for panels with previous filler work, and sealer primer for panels being repainted over existing sound paint.
Basecoat application requires a spray booth. The colour coat is applied in two to three passes, depending on coverage. Metallic and pearl colours require careful attention to spray angle and distance because the flake orientation determines how the colour shifts in different lighting. We use PPG refinish products and BASF Glasurit waterborne basecoats exclusively. These are the same paint systems used by Mercedes, BMW, and Porsche factory repair networks.
Clearcoat is the final layer. It protects the basecoat from UV, abrasion, and chemical attack. High-solid clearcoats provide better UV resistance, which matters in Dubai where paint sits in 45 to 50 degree heat and direct sun for months at a time. After 24 to 48 hours of cure, the clearcoat is wet-sanded and machine polished to remove any surface texture and produce a factory gloss level.
Why a Downdraft Spray Booth Matters
A downdraft spray booth is a sealed, temperature-controlled enclosure where filtered air flows from ceiling to floor, continuously removing overspray and airborne particles from the work area. Paint applied in an open workshop or a basic curtained enclosure will always contain dust inclusions: small bumps in the clearcoat where particles landed on wet paint.
Dust inclusions are not always visible in daylight but become obvious under sharp light or when you run your hand across the panel. They also create a weak point in the clearcoat where moisture can penetrate over time.
Our booth maintains a controlled temperature of 20 to 22 degrees Celsius during application and bakes the clearcoat at 60 degrees Celsius during the cure cycle. The bake cycle accelerates clearcoat crosslinking, producing a harder final film that polishes to a higher gloss and resists stone chips better than air-dried clearcoat.
For metallic and pearl colours, booth temperature consistency also affects how the metallic flake orients. Inconsistent temperatures produce banding, where sections of the panel look darker or lighter. Controlled temperature eliminates this.
The I-CAR collision repair training programme sets the technical standards for professional refinishing that our technicians are trained against, including booth operation, paint mixing, and colour verification.
Colour Matching for Car Painting in Dubai
Colour matching is the part of car painting that separates workshops. Every car's paint has aged since it left the factory. White cars become slightly warmer. Black cars develop a slightly lighter cast in direct sun. Metallic colours shift as the flake population changes with weathering.
Painting to the factory code produces a noticeable mismatch on any car more than two to three years old. The panel looks new next to panels that have aged. Professional colour matching uses a spectrophotometer, a device that reads the actual reflected colour values of your car's existing paint, not the factory formula.
We scan each panel before mixing the paint. The spectrophotometer reading feeds into the paint system database, which adjusts the formula to account for your specific car's current colour state. On metallic and pearl colours, we also verify flake size and orientation before spraying.
Blending is the second technique for achieving invisible repairs. Even with perfect colour match, a repainted panel edge seen edge-on can show a line if the new paint does not fade seamlessly into the adjacent panel. Blending means feathering the new paint into the adjacent panel, so there is no edge. This is standard practice on any professional single-panel respray.
For colour changes, the door jambs, under-bonnet areas, boot surrounds, and pillar interiors all need to be painted in the new colour. Opening a door to reveal the original colour in the door jamb reads as amateur work. We paint every interior surface visible when doors and boot are open as standard on full colour changes.
Panel Respray vs Full Car Respray: Which Do You Need?
A panel respray is the right choice when the damage is confined to one or two panels. A door with a deep scratch, a bonnet with paint damage after a flying stone, or a bumper that has been scraped. The panel is refinished and blended into the adjacent panels.
A full car respray makes sense in three situations. The paint has faded, oxidised, or developed widespread orange peel across the entire car, and a panel-by-panel approach would cost more than one complete job. You want to change the car's colour. Or the car has sustained multi-panel damage from a collision or hail event.
For cars with existing factory paint in good condition on most panels, a targeted panel respray preserves the original finish on the unaffected panels. Factory paint is worth preserving where possible, particularly on vehicles where original paint is a positive in the used car market.
For older cars where the paint is uniformly degraded, a full respray restores the car to a condition close to new. A full respray on a standard colour sedan typically takes 5 to 7 working days. An SUV or a vehicle requiring a colour change takes 7 to 10 days.
For detailed pricing by vehicle size and paint finish type, see our car painting cost breakdown. For information on whether your damage needs paint at all, our PDR vs traditional repair guide covers when each method is appropriate.
Warranty and What to Expect After Car Painting
Professional paintwork carries a 12-month warranty covering peeling, premature fading, colour mismatch, and clearcoat failure. These are quality failures, not wear from normal driving. Stone chips, scratches, and kerb damage after the car leaves the workshop are not covered under warranty.
After pickup, avoid washing the car for 7 to 10 days. The clearcoat is fully cured from the bake cycle, but car wash chemicals can still affect the surface in the first week. Hand washing with a pH-neutral shampoo is fine after 3 days. Avoid high-pressure jet washes directed at fresh panel edges for the first month.
Do not apply any wax or polish within 30 days of a fresh respray. The clearcoat needs time to fully outgas. Early wax application can trap solvents and cause clouding or softness. After 30 days, apply a quality carnauba wax or ceramic coating for long-term protection.
For lease return vehicles, our paint work is undetectable by paint depth gauges when the panel has been properly prepared and painted to the correct film build. We provide completion documentation for insurance claims and lease return purposes including pre-repair photographs, paint thickness readings, and itemised repair costs.
Getting an Accurate Quote for Car Painting in Dubai
Send us clear photos on WhatsApp and we will respond with a fixed price within 30 minutes during working hours. For a single panel respray, we need a full shot of the panel showing the damage in context, two to three close-ups of the specific damage, and a photo of the paint code sticker on your car (usually inside the driver's door jamb or under the bonnet).
For a full respray or colour change, we need photos of all four sides of the car and a clear photo of the paint code sticker. If you want to change colour, let us know the target colour so we can check availability and cost in the paint system.
For complex jobs, especially older vehicles with previous repairs or non-standard finishes, we prefer a physical inspection before quoting. This takes 30 minutes at our Al Quoz workshop and costs nothing. A physical inspection eliminates any possibility of the price changing after we start work.
DentGuy is located in Al Quoz Industrial Area 3, Dubai. Working hours are Monday to Saturday, 8 AM to 6 PM. WhatsApp quotes are available at +971 52 315 1530.