How Much Does Interior Painting Cost? — Haarlem, North Holland
Detailed pricing and cost information for Haarlem, North Holland.
Interior Painting cost in Haarlem: typically €15–35 as of 2026. The exact price depends on job scope, materials, urgency (emergency and after-hours work costs more), and local demand. Compare verified local pros and request free, no-obligation quotes for real prices on your job.
Cost of Living & Pricing
Haarlem is a historic, affluent city just west of Amsterdam, and its proximity to the capital combined with a protected medieval core makes it one of the more expensive markets in North Holland. Apartment prices average €5,000–€6,000 per square meter — approaching Amsterdam levels — propelled by commuter wealth as professionals priced out of the capital but unwilling to leave its orbit settle in Haarlem. The premium runs straight into the rates skilled tradespeople command. The old city is dense with 17th-century and older canal-house stock built on wooden-pile foundations, so pile rot and foundation settlement are recurring, high-value structural concerns. Strict monument rules across the protected centre constrain materials and methods, raising both cost and the premium for specialists who can work within heritage requirements. Haarlem's closeness to the coast and the dunes adds salt-laden air and wind-blown dune sand to the maintenance burden on facades, metalwork, and exterior finishes.
Licensing & Regulations
Haarlem follows the standard Dutch contractor framework — KVK registration, Techniek Nederland quality marks, and Gastec QA certification for gas work. Building permits (omgevingsvergunning) are issued by the Gemeente Haarlem for structural modifications, facade changes, and most exterior work. The defining regulatory constraint is heritage: the medieval centre is a protected cityscape (beschermd stadsgezicht) dense with national and municipal monuments, so work on the canal-front houses and the 17th-century stock requires monument-office approval, sympathetic materials, and methods that preserve historic fabric — a significant factor for facade, roofing, carpentry, and painting work. The wooden-pile foundations beneath much of the old city bring foundation work under specific structural-engineering scrutiny, often coordinated with the municipality and water authority. As elsewhere in the Netherlands, BENG energy standards apply to new build and EPC labels are required on transfer, but in the protected centre the gas-to-heat-pump transition must be reconciled with monument constraints that limit visible exterior plant.
Seasonal Demand
Haarlem's demand profile blends affluent owner-occupier renovation with the recurring structural burdens of a protected historic core near the coast. The wealthy commuter population invests heavily in high-specification renovation — heritage-sensitive kitchens, bathrooms, and interior fit-outs — concentrated in the national spring–summer peak (April–August) that tracks the housing market. The old city's wooden-pile foundations generate a steady stream of high-value foundation and structural work as pile rot and settlement surface over time, often paired with the masonry and carpentry needed to repair the consequences. Damp-related work on the canal-front houses peaks after the wet autumn (October–December). Coastal exposure adds a year-round maintenance undercurrent: salt air and wind-blown dune sand accelerate corrosion and weathering on facades, metalwork, and exterior finishes, keeping painters, roofers, and facade specialists busy across seasons. Monument constraints concentrate this work among specialists, sustaining premium rates for heritage-capable trades.
Interior painting costs depend on the size of the space, wall condition, paint quality, and labor rates in your area. In the US, expect $2–$6 per square foot of wall area, or $300–$800 per room. A full interior (average 3-bedroom home) runs $3,000–$8,000. In Poland, expect PLN 15–40/m² and in the Netherlands €15–€35/m².
Average costs by project
- Single room (walls only): $300–$800
- Single room (walls + ceiling + trim): $500–$1,200
- Full interior (3-bed house): $3,000–$8,000
- Kitchen or bathroom (prep-intensive): $500–$1,500
- Accent/feature wall: $100–$300
- Cabinet painting (kitchen): $1,200–$4,000
- Trim and baseboards only: $500–$2,000 whole house
- Ceiling painting (per room): $150–$500
- Stairwell/high-ceiling room: $500–$1,500+
What affects the cost?
- Wall condition — cracked plaster, peeling paint, or water damage requires extensive prep that can double labor costs
- Ceiling height — rooms above 9 feet require scaffolding or ladders, increasing time and risk
- Trim and doors — painting trim, baseboards, and door frames adds 30–50% to a walls-only quote
- Paint quality — premium paints (Benjamin Moore Aura, Sherwin-Williams Emerald) cost $50–$80/gallon vs $25–$40 for standard
- Number of colors — each color change requires cleaning equipment and additional masking
- Furniture moving — pros charge $50–$200 extra for moving and covering furniture in occupied rooms
- Primer needed — dark-to-light color changes or new drywall require separate primer coats
Costs in the United States
US interior painters charge $2–$6 per square foot of wall area or $25–$75 per hour. Most quote per room or per project. A standard 12×12 bedroom costs $300–$700 for walls only. High-cost cities (NYC, SF, Boston) run 30–50% above national averages. Southern and Midwest states tend to be 20–30% below.
When comparing quotes, confirm what is included: some painters include paint in their price, others quote labor only. Always ask about prep work (patching, sanding, priming) — cheap quotes often skip proper prep, leading to a finish that peels within a year. Licensed and insured painters cost more but provide warranties and liability coverage.
Costs in Poland
Interior painting in Poland costs PLN 15–40 per m² depending on the city and wall condition. In Warsaw and Kraków, expect PLN 25–40/m². Smaller cities average PLN 15–25/m². A standard 2-room apartment (50 m²) costs PLN 2,000–5,000 for complete painting including ceilings. Decorative techniques (stucco, venetian plaster) command PLN 50–120/m².
Polish painters typically quote per square meter of wall surface, not floor area. Materials are usually charged separately at cost. Get a detailed kosztorys listing each room, surface area, and number of coats before signing. Check references and ask to see recent work.
Costs in the Netherlands
Dutch interior painters charge €15–€35 per m² including BTW (21%). A standard apartment repaint costs €1,500–€4,000. High-end work with premium paints runs €3,000–€7,000 for a typical Dutch row house. Labor rates are €35–€55 per hour. Historic properties with ornate mouldings and plasterwork cost significantly more due to the precision required.
Many Dutch painters offer a free inspection and quote (gratis offerte). The Netherlands has strict regulations about lead paint in pre-1978 buildings — removal must follow safety protocols and can add €500–€2,000 to the project. Certified painters (schildersbedrijf met keurmerk) guarantee their work for 3–6 years.
How to save
- Do your own prep — clearing rooms, removing switch plates, and filling small nail holes can save $200–$500
- Combine rooms — painters give better rates for whole-house jobs vs single rooms
- Use one color throughout — fewer color changes means less time and material waste
- Schedule off-peak — winter months (Nov–Feb) are slow for painters; negotiate 10–20% discounts
- Buy paint yourself — painters mark up paint 20–40%; buying direct saves money
- Skip the ceiling — if the ceiling is in good shape, painting walls only cuts cost by 20–30%
Frequently asked questions
How many gallons of paint for one room?
A standard 12'×12' bedroom (480 sq ft of wall) needs 1.5 gallons for two coats. Add 0.5 gallons if painting trim and ceiling. Calculator: divide square footage by 350 (single coat coverage) and round up. Always buy a quart extra for touch-ups.
How long does interior painting take?
A single bedroom takes 4–8 hours for a pro (1–2 days DIY). A whole house (8–10 rooms) takes 3–5 days for a 2-person pro crew, or 2–3 weeks DIY. Drying time between coats (2–4 hours) doesn't extend total project time if work flows between rooms.
Should I prime before painting?
Always for: new drywall, dramatic color changes (light to dark or vice versa), repairs and patches, stained surfaces, and glossy finishes. Optional for: same-color recoats, low-traffic rooms with previous quality paint. Skipping primer when needed shows through within months.