Stucco Repair & Refinish in Ben Bolt, TX
Hot semi-arid South Texas climate.
For stucco repair & refinish, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Ben Bolt.
Common reasons to call
- Cracks running through an exterior stucco wall that keep coming back
- Chunks of stucco flaking, bubbling, or falling off near the foundation or windows
- Water stains and soft spots that point to moisture getting behind the stucco
- Old stucco color that is faded, chalky, or does not match after a patch
- Storm or impact damage that punched or chipped a section of wall
- Getting a home or building ready to sell or paint and wanting a clean, even finish
Typical work
- Sealing hairline and settling cracks so water stops getting in
- Patching a damaged section and blending the texture to match the rest of the wall
- Re-coating a full wall or the whole building with a fresh finish coat
- Replacing rusted metal lath and building paper before a new stucco system goes on
- Applying an elastomeric or acrylic finish to help the surface flex and shed water
- Color-matching and refinishing so patched areas do not stand out
Typical turnaround
Small crack sealing and patch work often wraps in one to two days. A full wall re-coat or a whole-building refinish usually runs several days to a couple of weeks, since each coat needs time to cure and coastal humidity can slow drying.
Materials and equipment
- Portland cement, sand, and lime stucco mix
- Metal lath or wire mesh
- Weather-resistant barrier (building paper or house wrap)
- Bonding agent for patch adhesion
- Elastomeric or acrylic finish coat
- Exterior sealant and caulk for joints and edges
- Color pigment or integral color for matching
- Masonry primer
Job sizes
Minor
A small job: sealing a few hairline cracks or patching one small area of a single wall.
Standard
A section repair or a single-wall re-coat with texture and color blended to match the rest of the surface.
Major
A large multi-wall job or whole-building refinish, often including lath and barrier replacement over the damaged areas.
Replacement
A full tear-off and new three-coat stucco system, or a complete refinish over the entire building.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro looks for the cause of a crack before sealing it, so the repair lasts instead of coming back
- ✓They check the weather barrier and metal lath behind damaged stucco, since hidden moisture is the real problem
- ✓They match texture by hand and can re-coat a full wall so a patch does not stand out
- ✓They confirm the right finish system for your wall so they do not trap moisture by mixing incompatible coatings
- ✓They carry general liability insurance and can show proof before work starts
- ✓They let each coat cure properly and plan around coastal humidity instead of rushing the finish
General liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage; manufacturer product training or certification for acrylic and elastomeric finish systems; membership in a plastering or exterior wall trade association
Common questions
Why does stucco keep cracking on my house?
Small cracks are common because stucco is a rigid surface over a building that moves a little with settling, temperature, and moisture. Hairline cracks are usually cosmetic and can be sealed. Wide, growing, or stair-step cracks can point to a bigger issue underneath, so a good pro will look at the cause before just filling the crack.
Can a stucco patch be matched to the rest of my wall?
In most cases yes. Texture is applied by hand and by tool, so a skilled pro can feather a patch into the surrounding wall and match the pattern. Color is trickier because sun and age fade the original finish. Many people choose to re-coat a full wall or the whole building so the color stays even instead of leaving a visible patch.
Does salt air near the coast hurt stucco?
The Coastal Bend brings salt, humidity, and wind-driven rain, and all of that puts extra stress on an exterior finish. Moisture getting behind the stucco is the main concern because it can rust the metal lath and cause the surface to bubble or fall off. Good flashing, sealed joints, and a sound weather barrier are what help stucco hold up here.
Do I need a permit to repair stucco?
A simple crack seal or patch usually does not need a permit. Larger work, structural repairs, or anything that changes the wall system may need one. Permits are handled by your local building department, so it is worth asking them or asking your contractor before a big job starts.
What is the difference between traditional stucco and a modern finish coat?
Traditional stucco is a cement, sand, and lime mix applied in coats over lath. Modern acrylic and elastomeric finishes are flexible coatings that go over the surface and can bridge small cracks and shed water. A pro can tell you which fits your wall, since mixing systems the wrong way can trap moisture.
How do I know if the damage is just the surface or something deeper?
Soft or spongy spots, staining, a hollow sound when tapped, or stucco that pulls away from the wall can mean moisture or lath damage underneath. Surface cracks alone are usually cosmetic. A pro will probe or open a small area to check the barrier and lath so the repair fixes the real problem, not just the look.
How long should I wait to paint new stucco?
Fresh traditional stucco needs time to cure before paint or a finish coat goes on, often a few weeks depending on weather and humidity. Painting too soon can trap moisture and cause peeling. A pro will tell you the cure time for your specific mix and the local conditions.