How Long Does House Rendering Last Before It Needs Replacing?

One of the first questions homeowners ask after getting a rendering quote is: “How long will it actually last?” It’s a fair question — rendering is a significant investment, and knowing the realistic lifespan helps you weigh it against the alternatives.

Here’s an honest, nuanced answer — covering both render types, what makes rendering last longer, and what causes it to fail earlier than it should.

The Short Answer: It Depends on the Product and the Prep

The lifespan of house rendering in South-West Sydney varies considerably:

Render TypeExpected Lifespan (well-applied, good prep)
Acrylic render20–30+ years
Sand and cement render10–20 years
Acrylic texture coat (thin-coat over sound substrate)15–25 years

These ranges assume professional application, proper surface preparation, and regular maintenance of the painted topcoat. Skip the prep or use a budget product and you’ll see the lower end of these ranges, sometimes significantly lower.

The Painted Topcoat vs the Render Itself

This distinction is important and often confused.

House rendering creates a structural coating on the wall — a layer of cement or polymer compound that’s essentially part of the wall surface. This is what has the 20–30 year lifespan.

The painted topcoat over the render is a separate product with a shorter lifespan. In South-West Sydney’s UV and humidity conditions, quality exterior paint over render typically lasts 8–12 years before it needs refreshing.

What this means in practice:

  • You render once (lasting 20–30 years)
  • You repaint the render every 8–12 years as the topcoat ages
  • The underlying render stays in place throughout

This is very different from a render failure, which involves the render itself cracking, delaminating, or detaching from the wall. Paint fading or chalking is a maintenance issue. Render failure is a structural issue that requires re-rendering.

What Causes Rendering to Last Longer

Quality Preparation

The single biggest factor. Render applied to a properly prepared surface — clean, sound, with bonding agent where required, control joints installed, and all cracks repaired — bonds correctly and lasts decades. Render applied to a poorly prepared surface will fail early, regardless of product quality.

Acrylic vs Sand and Cement

As covered in detail in our comparison of acrylic vs sand and cement render, acrylic render’s flexibility gives it a significant longevity advantage in Sydney’s thermal cycling conditions. The western and south-western suburbs of Sydney — including Bankstown and surrounding areas — experience hot summers and cool winters that stress rigid cement-based coatings more than flexible acrylic systems.

Control Joints

Control joints (expansion joints installed in the render at regular intervals) allow thermal movement to occur at specific planned points rather than cracking randomly across the face. A rendering job with properly spaced control joints will show significantly less cracking over its lifespan than one without.

Regular Maintenance of the Topcoat

The painted topcoat over render does two jobs: it provides the colour and aesthetic finish, and it waterproofs the render surface. A topcoat that’s allowed to fail completely — chalking away, cracking, and exposing the render underneath — lets moisture into the render system. Moisture ingress is one of the main drivers of render deterioration.

Repainting the render every 8–12 years keeps the topcoat functioning and significantly extends the life of the underlying render.

Drainage and Moisture Management

Render that’s consistently exposed to moisture — from leaking gutters, blocked downpipes, garden beds against the wall, or poor drainage at the base of the wall — deteriorates faster. Keeping water away from rendered surfaces extends their lifespan significantly.

What Causes Rendering to Fail Early

Poor Preparation

The most common cause of premature failure in South-West Sydney rendered homes. Specifically:

  • Skipped bonding agent on smooth brick surfaces — causes delamination within 3–7 years
  • Rendering over hollow or failed existing render — the new render follows the hollow section down
  • Rendering over damp or wet walls — moisture trapped behind render causes blistering and cracking
  • No control joints — random cracking across the face as thermal movement has nowhere to go

Wrong Product for the Substrate

Using a rigid sand and cement render on a substrate with high thermal movement — or using a thin texture coat over a surface that needs a proper scratch coat — will produce premature cracking.

Structural Movement

If the underlying structure is settling or moving — subsidence, foundation issues, significant building movement — the render will crack regardless of how well it was applied. These situations need structural assessment before rendering is considered.

Rising Damp

Moisture moving up from the ground through the base of the wall (rising damp) will cause render at low levels to blister, crack, and eventually fall off. Rising damp needs to be treated (typically with a chemical damp-proof course) before rendering proceeds.

Signs Your Existing Render Is Failing

These are the indicators that render has moved from “needs a repaint” to “needs replacing”:

Hollow sections — tap the render across the wall. A dull, hollow sound indicates the render has lost adhesion to the substrate beneath. Hollow sections will eventually fall off and typically spread.

Cracking patterns:

  • Fine hairline cracks that don’t open significantly: monitor but not necessarily urgent
  • Cracks wider than 1–2mm, particularly if widening over time: needs assessment
  • Diagonal cracks from window corners: may indicate structural movement
  • Pattern cracking across large areas (map cracking or alligator cracking): often indicates render has lost adhesion overall or was applied over damp

Render falling off — any section that has completely detached indicates systemic failure in that area.

Persistent damp staining — staining that comes back quickly after rain, particularly at the base of walls, suggests moisture is penetrating through failed render.

When to Repaint vs When to Re-Render

Repaint (don’t re-render) when:

  • The render is structurally sound (no hollow sections, no significant cracking)
  • Paint is fading, chalking, or staining but the render underneath is intact
  • Some hairline cracks exist but are stable and can be filled before repainting

Re-render (or partially re-render) when:

  • Significant hollow sections exist across the wall
  • Render is falling off in sections
  • Pattern cracking indicates widespread adhesion failure
  • Rising damp or structural movement has compromised the existing render
  • The existing render is very old sand and cement with widespread deterioration

Partial re-render — replacing only the failed sections — is a cost-effective middle ground when failure is localised. However, matching new render to old render is challenging, particularly if the existing render is heavily weathered or an unusual texture. Full re-rendering avoids this problem.

How Icon Touch Assesses Rendering in Bankstown

At Icon Touch, when we assess a rendered Bankstown home, we physically test the render (tap test for hollow sections), look at the cracking pattern, assess moisture indicators, and give you an honest recommendation — repaint, partial repair and repaint, or full re-render.

We’re not going to recommend a full re-render if a repaint is what’s actually needed. That’s not how we build a reputation in this area.

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