What is the best way to remove paint from wood?
Three common ways to strip paint from wood are heating, chemical stripping, or sanding. There are a handful of different products to choose from for each of these methods. To help you decide what approach to take, we’ve laid out options below. And, we’ve shared step by step instructions to guide you through each stage of the process.
Steps on How to Remove Paint From Wood
1. Find Out If the Wood Is Worth Exposing
“If you’re hoping to expose woodwork and finish it with a clear coat instead of paint, you need to determine whether it was originally varnished or painted,” says painting contractor and TOH contributor Rich O’Neil. He recommends finding a hidden spot, such as inside a drawer or closet, and using a scraper to shave a test patch through the various paint layers. If the bottom layer is paint, it’s a good sign that the wood is unworthy of stain. “If it’s worth exposing, it was originally varnished,” O’Neil says.
2. Decide if Whether to DIY or Bring in a Professional
It’s always better to determine beforehand that a job is too big, complicated, or dangerous to tackle yourself. In that case, you have a couple of options. Send it out If the pieces you want to strip are easily removable (such as doors, windows, or furniture) and feature intricate detailing (like mantel-pieces or stair parts), consider sending them out to a professional with a dip tank; pros use these special vats to soak entire pieces in liquid paint removers for faster, more thorough results. Hire in If you have a house’s worth of trim or siding that must be stripped bare quickly, or if you have lead-laden paint and can’t remove it safely, bring in a qualified pro to do it on-site. Visit the EPA’s website for certified lead-removal experts.
3. Select The Right Tools and Approach for the Project
Heaters
Heaters use high temperatures to soften varnishes or multiple layers of paint so that the gunk can easily be removed with a scraper. They minimize dust and can lift years of paint. Downsides: Fumes and the risk of charred wood.
Chemical Strippers
Chemical strippers are liquids, gels, or pastes that dissolve paint. No dust. No paint chips. They’re ideal for fine details, awkward shapes, and hitting spots you may have missed with a heat gun. Cons: They can be messy, smelly, and slow.
Sanders
Sanders, including power sanding disks and clapboard sanders, grind away paint. They’re great for large, flat exterior surfaces but, unless hooked up to a vacuum to capture dust, ill-advised for indoor work and anything with lead-based paint.
4. Weigh Your Paint Stripping Product Options
Keep in mind safety, ease of use, and cost when making your decision.
3 Tools to Melt Away Paint
- Heat Guns Heat is a tried-and-true method for softening thick layers of paint on flat surfaces or in tight spaces. The trick is to find the right temperature; too low and the job takes forever, too high and you could create harmful vapors, char the wood—or even set the house on fire. Heat guns look like high-powered hair dryers and blast hot, concentrated air through a nozzle to loosen paint. Most models have high and low settings, but burns and fires can result even on the lowest setting if you let the gun rest in one place for too long.
- Infrared Devices Infrared devices use infrared rays to heat up and loosen the bond between paint and its substrate without generating noise or dust. They work quickly; a 30-second blast can soften decades of paint. They also keep paint temperatures below 500°F, well under the point at which wood ignites. The heat draws moisture from the wood, improving its ability to hold new paint. But these tools are bulky (see example, above) and hard to use in tight spaces.
- Steam Strippers Steam strippers use water vapor to soften paint without heating it above 212 degrees F, eliminating fire risks. And the condensation minimizes dust and fumes. On the downside, the process can generate a lot of moisture and saturate wood. Tip: The Best Technique for Handling Heat Heat stripping is like a tango between the hand holding the heater and the one with the scraper. Hover the device over the surface. When the paint bubbles, slowly move the heater along and try to develop a rhythm so that you’re scraping and heating in unison. Keep a metal paint tray handy for when you take a break and need to set the device down.
3 Safer Options for Removing Paint With Gels and Pastes
If you’re going to use a chemical stripper, know that anything that eats paint is dangerous and that doing the job without methylene chloride (see above) will be safer but slower. These wood stripping products contain less toxic, less noxious ingredients and remove both latex and oil paints.
1. SmartStrip
SmartStrip: A paste with a frosting-like consistency that can be brushed, rolled, or sprayed on. Clings well to vertical surfaces. Active ingredient: Benzyl alcohol Strength: One coat removes up to 15 layers of paint. Dwell time: 3 to 24 hours Removal: Scrape off the paint, scrub off the residue with a wet nylon brush, and rinse with water. Cost: about $65 per gallon
2. Peel Away
Peel Away1: This paste works with a paper cover to control evaporation. Ideal for lead paint and masonry, but can stain furniture woods. Active ingredient: Lye Strength: Up to 30 layers of paint can come off as easily as stripping sheets off a bed. Dwell time: 12 to 24 hours Removal: Peel off the paper and scrub the surface with a wet brush; let dry thoroughly, then apply a neutralizing solution. Cost: about $45 per 1¼ gallons
3. Citristrip
Citristrip: This wood stripper is an orange gel, best on furniture details and flat surfaces since it is thin. Active ingredient: N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) Strength: A ⅛-inch coat removes up to seven layers of paint. Dwell time: 30 minutes to 24 hours Removal: Scrape off the paint with a plastic scraper, and use an abrasive pad and mineral spirits to remove any lingering residue. Cost: about $20 per half gallon Tip: DCM is The Paint Solvent Best Left Alone Years ago, if you needed a fast-acting chemical paint stripper, you chose a product that contained a seriously noxious chemical called methylene chloride (also called dichloromethane, or DCM), cranked up the fan, and got the job done quickly. Generally speaking, the faster a chemical eats through paint and finish, the more toxic it is, and DCM is fast—paint starts to bubble in minutes. But this paint stripper is also dangerous. Prolonged exposure to DCM, through the lungs or skin, has been linked to liver damage, cancer, and even death. The vapors can overwhelm air-purifying respirators, and just a few whiffs can leave you wheezing and dizzy. Europe banned it for residential use in 2010. While DCM-containing paint strippers are still widely sold in the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has tied the ingredient to 13 deaths in 10 states. Our advice: Check your labels and steer clear.
Paint Scrapers 101
No paint-stripping endeavor is complete without an arsenal of scrapers to usher away softened paint.
A 5-in-1 paint scraper—also known as the “painter’s tool” because the curved edge can be used to clean a paint roller—is the go-to tool for removing most types of paint. Metal pull scrapers come with replaceable blade profiles to match the surface you need to strip, offering more control than push scrapers in tight spots or on fine details. When your paint scraping results start to look sloppy, rotate the head on the metal scraper until you run out of fresh edges. After that, replace or resharpen the blades.
Pro Advice on Paint Scrapers
Carbide blades hold an edge much longer than steel, but resharpening requires a diamond stone and some skill. Steel blades dull quickly but can easily be resharpened with a mill file, a pocket stone, or even a piece of medium-grit sandpaper. When using push scrapers, choose plastic over metal, to avoid gouging; this is especially important with chemical strippers, which can soften wood.
3 Easy Ways to Test Paint for Lead
Nearly 90 percent of homes built before 1940 have some paint laden with this toxic metal. Although its use went into steep decline after 1950, lead-based paint wasn’t banned in the U.S. until 1978. Here’s how to detect it.
Get The Lead Out—Safely
Lead is nasty. Exposure can raise your blood pressure, stress your nervous system, and damage your memory, among other risks. It’s especially toxic to children, whose developing brains are more sensitive to its effects. If you want to remove lead-based paint yourself, in addition to the dress and prep steps (next), follow these precautions:
Use only heat or chemicals to avoid kicking up lead-laced chips and dust If you must sand, use equipment fitted with a shroud and a HEPA vacuum attachment. Wet-sand stripped surfaces to minimize dust. If working outdoors, cover the ground with 6-mil plastic, extending the sheeting 10 feet beyond the work area. Place debris in contractor bags; seal with duct tape. Find more useful tips at www2.epa.gov/lead.
Prepare to Strip Indoors in 3 Steps
Dust control: If working indoors, cover air vents in your workspace to keep dust and debris from circulating throughout the house.
How to Dress When Stripping Paint
Gear for handling fumes, paint chips, and caustic solvents Use a respirator with a P100 particulate filter when sanding or dry-scraping.
Tools for Detail Stripping Work
Some simple tools can help you remove paint from wood rails and other intricate details.
Dental picks make it easy to dig out the remaining specks of debris that hide in nooks and crannies. Sanding cords work like dental floss to remove residue from crevices in turned columns and spindles. Old credit cards or gift cards can be repurposed as custom scrapers by cutting them to match the surface you need to strip. Teaspoons and tablespoons are handy for scraping paint from concave or convex moldings.