South Florida fascia takes a beating. Sun bakes the boards, rain pools at the drip edge, and salt air finds every unsealed end-cut. Paint that peels in a year is usually paint over wood that should have been replaced.
We pull the bad sections, replace with kiln-dried primed pine or PVC trim depending on your exposure, prime every cut end, caulk every seam, and finish to match your existing trim. The repair should disappear when the final coat is on.
If we open a section and find damage to the soffit, drip edge, or framing behind it, we tell you before we close it back up.
We probe every suspect section, mark what gets replaced, and walk you through it before any work begins.
Damaged boards pulled cleanly. Substrate and nailers checked. Nothing painted back over wood that is failing.
Kiln-dried primed pine for traditional match, PVC or composite trim for rot-proof long-term performance.
Every cut sealed with primer before installation. Seams caulked with paintable, mildew-resistant exterior sealant.
Two-coat exterior acrylic, matched to your existing trim color. Sherwin-Williams or Benjamin Moore specs.
Old boards, nails, and debris removed. Worksite swept. Gutters and landscaping protected throughout.
Soft or spongy wood, peeling paint that returns within a year, visible cracks at end-cuts, water staining on soffits, or daylight showing through the joint between fascia and roof edge are all signs of fascia damage that should be addressed before repainting.
Both. We use kiln-dried primed pine for matching original construction, and PVC or composite trim where the homeowner wants a rot-proof long-term solution. We will recommend the right material for your specific exposure and budget.
Yes. Fascia replacement is part of our exterior scope. End-cuts are primed, seams caulked, and the finish is matched to your existing trim color. The repair should be invisible once the final coat is on.
Yes. We inspect the soffit, drip edge, and adjacent trim while the fascia is open. If we find anything that should be addressed by a roofer or carpenter, we will tell you before we close the work up.
Most single-elevation fascia repairs take one to two days, including removal, replacement, priming, caulking, and finish paint. Whole-house fascia replacement takes longer depending on length and access.
South Florida weather is not gentle on wood trim. Let us catch it now and finish it right.