Fair Price for a Detail? (Hand Wash, clay bar, Polish, Sealant)
#1
Fair Price for a Detail? (Hand Wash, clay bar, Polish, Sealant)
What would be a fair price to expect for a full detail (hand wash, clay, polish until there's no swirls/spiderwebbing, sealant, and other misc. stuff)
I got my car detailed back in July, but the spiderwebbing and swirls have already come back, probably failure on my part to properly maintain it.
I feel like the price I paid for the first time around was just too much. It neared the $400 mark.
Would it be better to just do it myself? Or should I just find a different detailer?
I got my car detailed back in July, but the spiderwebbing and swirls have already come back, probably failure on my part to properly maintain it.
I feel like the price I paid for the first time around was just too much. It neared the $400 mark.
Would it be better to just do it myself? Or should I just find a different detailer?
#5
Sam Rothstein
iTrader: (9)
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Riverside/San Diego, CA
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$400 isnt too bad IMO. Depending of course on how bad the paint's condition was and how much correction the detailer achieved. If you were happy with the results after he was done then why take a chance with a cheaper guy?
You definitely get what you pay for when it comes to a detailer Majority of the detailers out there will charge $100 for a "full detail" when they actually just hide the swirls and they end up showing up a month or 2 down the road =/
This time around be sure to practice proper washing/drying techniques and you're $400 will stretch A LOT further
You definitely get what you pay for when it comes to a detailer Majority of the detailers out there will charge $100 for a "full detail" when they actually just hide the swirls and they end up showing up a month or 2 down the road =/
This time around be sure to practice proper washing/drying techniques and you're $400 will stretch A LOT further
#6
Lexus Defector
iTrader: (60)
The price you paid is a fair one for quality work. It varies from one area and one detailer to the next, but for what you got the price wasn't expensive at all.
No amount of money in the world can stop it from getting screwed up again if you aren't maintaining it properly. You can buy the equipment and products and learn to do it yourself, but be prepared to do a lot of learning and spend a LOT of effort and hours doing it right. It is very labor intensive and requires quality tools and supplies to do a good job.
No amount of money in the world can stop it from getting screwed up again if you aren't maintaining it properly. You can buy the equipment and products and learn to do it yourself, but be prepared to do a lot of learning and spend a LOT of effort and hours doing it right. It is very labor intensive and requires quality tools and supplies to do a good job.
#7
$400 isnt too bad IMO. Depending of course on how bad the paint's condition was and how much correction the detailer achieved. If you were happy with the results after he was done then why take a chance with a cheaper guy?
You definitely get what you pay for when it comes to a detailer Majority of the detailers out there will charge $100 for a "full detail" when they actually just hide the swirls and they end up showing up a month or 2 down the road =/
This time around be sure to practice proper washing/drying techniques and you're $400 will stretch A LOT further
You definitely get what you pay for when it comes to a detailer Majority of the detailers out there will charge $100 for a "full detail" when they actually just hide the swirls and they end up showing up a month or 2 down the road =/
This time around be sure to practice proper washing/drying techniques and you're $400 will stretch A LOT further
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#10
Registered User
iTrader: (3)
Impossible to tell if that is fair price without seeing what they really did. Lots of detailers will say they polished...but for some reason that seems to be a subjective term depending on who you talk to.
I agree with gamedog and g35sedan5at though....if you got a true quality detail job, $400 sounds about right. To tell...pull your car into the sun, and see if there are any swirls, marring, etc. If not...you got a good detail. If yes...you got screwed.
I agree with gamedog and g35sedan5at though....if you got a true quality detail job, $400 sounds about right. To tell...pull your car into the sun, and see if there are any swirls, marring, etc. If not...you got a good detail. If yes...you got screwed.
#11
Registered User
It takes us about 8-10 hours to do a 1-2 step paint detail ($45-60 per hour) so depending on location / skill level / /reputation, to transform your vehicle back to ‘like-new condition’. A Professional using high quality products may spend over $40 in product use alone; so expect to pay a fair price for the amount of work involved.
Detailing
Exterior (8 hours)
• Wash and dry exterior paint – 1.5
• Detailer’s clay – 1.0
• Tyres and Wheel surfaces – 0.5
• Clean exterior glass – 0.5
• Clean and lightly polish paint – 1.5
• Wax or seal paint -1.0
• Clean and protect rubber seals – 0.5
• Exhaust, tyres and trim etc 1.5 hours
Interior (4.5 hours)
• Brush and Vacuum carpets – 0.5
• Shampoo mats – 0.5
• Shampoo / extract carpet – 1.0
• Clean upholstery – 1.0
• Apply protection to vinyl and leather – 0.5
• Clean interior glass -0.5
• Deodorize interior - 10 min
• Protect carpet and upholstery – 0.5
This level of detail on an average sized and condition vehicle would take approx 13 hours, a larger vehicle will obviously take more time, most professional detailers will charge between $400 and $550 to do this level of work. Depending on location / skill level / /reputation, to transform a vehicle back to ‘like-new condition’.
A Professional using high quality products may spend over $20 - 30 in product use alone; so expect to pay a fair price for the amount of work involved.
Detailing
Exterior (8 hours)
• Wash and dry exterior paint – 1.5
• Detailer’s clay – 1.0
• Tyres and Wheel surfaces – 0.5
• Clean exterior glass – 0.5
• Clean and lightly polish paint – 1.5
• Wax or seal paint -1.0
• Clean and protect rubber seals – 0.5
• Exhaust, tyres and trim etc 1.5 hours
Interior (4.5 hours)
• Brush and Vacuum carpets – 0.5
• Shampoo mats – 0.5
• Shampoo / extract carpet – 1.0
• Clean upholstery – 1.0
• Apply protection to vinyl and leather – 0.5
• Clean interior glass -0.5
• Deodorize interior - 10 min
• Protect carpet and upholstery – 0.5
This level of detail on an average sized and condition vehicle would take approx 13 hours, a larger vehicle will obviously take more time, most professional detailers will charge between $400 and $550 to do this level of work. Depending on location / skill level / /reputation, to transform a vehicle back to ‘like-new condition’.
A Professional using high quality products may spend over $20 - 30 in product use alone; so expect to pay a fair price for the amount of work involved.