In This Guide
Why Humidity Matters for Exterior Paint
Latex (water-based) paint dries primarily through water evaporation. The rate at which water evaporates from fresh paint depends heavily on how much moisture is already in the surrounding air โ which is exactly what relative humidity (RH) measures. When the air is saturated with moisture, it has less capacity to absorb more, and drying slows dramatically.
Oil-based paints are less humidity-sensitive since they dry through oxidation rather than evaporation. However, very high humidity (above 85%) can still cause problems with oil-based finishes, particularly in terms of blush (a milky haze in the film) and extended cure times.
The 70% Humidity Threshold Explained
Most major paint manufacturers โ Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, PPG, Behr โ recommend not painting exterior latex when relative humidity exceeds 70%. This isn't an arbitrary number. At 70% RH, drying times are already noticeably extended compared to the label's stated conditions (which assume 50% RH). Above 70%, the risk of surface defects increases significantly.
| Relative Humidity | Effect on Latex Paint | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Below 30% | Very fast drying โ lap mark risk | Work small sections, keep wet edge |
| 30โ50% | Faster than label โ ideal | Best conditions |
| 50โ70% | Near label conditions | Safe to paint |
| 70โ80% | Noticeably slower drying | Caution โ watch for issues |
| 80โ85% | Significantly extended tack time | High risk โ reconsider |
| Above 85% | Severe drying delays, blistering risk | Do not paint |
Dew Point โ The Check That Matters More Than RH
Relative humidity is a useful guideline, but it has a critical flaw: it changes with temperature. The same amount of moisture in the air reads as 80% RH at 60ยฐF and only 50% RH at 80ยฐF. This means RH alone doesn't tell you whether the surface you're about to paint is actually dry.
Dew point is the temperature at which moisture in the air will condense on surfaces. It's an absolute measure of how much water vapor is in the air, regardless of temperature. For exterior painting, the rule is:
The surface temperature must be at least 5ยฐF (3ยฐC) above the dew point before painting. If the surface is at or below the dew point, there is invisible moisture on the surface โ and paint applied to a wet substrate will fail.
Dew Pt: 48ยฐF
Gap: 20ยฐF
Dew Pt: 56ยฐF
Gap: 4ยฐF
Dew Pt: 63ยฐF
Gap: โ1ยฐF
You can find the dew point in most weather apps, or our Contractor Weather tool calculates it automatically alongside the safety score.
What High Humidity Does to Paint
Blistering
Blistering is one of the most common and visible signs of painting in high humidity. When moisture is trapped beneath or within the paint film โ either from a damp substrate or from condensation during drying โ it creates pressure that forms bubbles. These blisters may appear during application or days later as temperatures rise.
Mildew Growth
High humidity extending the wet phase of drying creates ideal conditions for mildew spores to colonize the paint surface. Paint manufacturers address this with mildewcide additives, but these are less effective when paint stays wet for extended periods due to high humidity.
Lap Marks and Color Irregularities
Slower drying means the wet edge stays workable longer โ which sounds helpful, but it also means the overlapping areas between brush passes dry at different rates, creating visible lap marks and sheen variations that show up once the paint cures.
Poor Adhesion to Substrate
Invisible surface moisture โ water below the dew point that has condensed on siding, wood, or masonry โ prevents proper adhesion between paint and substrate. The paint may seem to go on fine but will peel prematurely, often in large sheets, within months of application.
Low Humidity Problems
While high humidity gets most of the attention, very low humidity (below 30%) creates its own set of problems for exterior painting:
- Lap marks from rapid drying โ the paint dries so quickly that overlapping passes don't blend properly
- Brush drag โ paint starts to set on the brush before it reaches the wall, creating streaks
- Reduced open time โ very little time to work the paint before it starts to skin
In very dry conditions, adding a paint conditioner (like Floetrol for latex or Penetrol for oil-based) helps extend open time and improve leveling without compromising the paint formulation.
Best Time of Day to Paint
Humidity follows a predictable daily cycle in most climates. Understanding this cycle helps you plan your workday:
- Early morning (6โ9 AM) โ humidity is highest, dew point risk is real, surfaces may be damp from overnight cooling. Generally not ideal to start.
- Mid-morning (9โ11 AM) โ surfaces have warmed above dew point, humidity begins to drop. Often the best time to start.
- Midday to early afternoon (11 AM โ 2 PM) โ typically the lowest humidity of the day. Best window for most climates.
- Late afternoon (3โ5 PM) โ humidity starts to rise again, and fading light makes it harder to see coverage. Aim to finish by 3 PM to allow adequate drying before evening.
Paint should dry for at least 2 hours before sunset to avoid dew formation on fresh paint overnight. Work backwards from sunset to plan your last coat timing.
Tips for Painting in Humid Conditions
- Check dew point, not just RH โ our contractor weather tool shows both automatically.
- Test the surface โ run your hand across the surface before painting. Any coolness or dampness means condensation is present. Wait.
- Use a mildew-resistant exterior primer โ especially on the shady north side of buildings where moisture lingers longest.
- Avoid painting after rain โ even if surfaces look dry, porous wood and masonry can hold moisture for hours. Wait at least 24 hours after rain before painting wood substrates.
- Plan around weather fronts โ humidity spikes before rain arrives. If humidity has been rising through the day, a weather system is likely approaching.
- Use a quality exterior paint with a low MFFT โ paints engineered for high-humidity climates (common in the Southeast US) perform better in marginal conditions.
Check Humidity Conditions for Your City
Get real-time humidity, dew point, and a painting safety score for your location.
Check Painting Conditions โ