The Camaro wraps well. The aggressive body lines, long hood, and wide rear haunches look excellent in a color change, and the car’s coupe footprint keeps it cheaper to wrap than most sedans and SUVs. A full professional wrap runs $2,800 to $5,000 depending on generation, film choice, and installer.
- Quick summary
- Cost by generation
- Film type pricing
- Partial wrap options
- DIY vs professional
- Popular Camaro wrap colors
- FAQ
Cost by generation
For wrapping purposes the main split is fifth-gen vs sixth-gen. The sixth gen has sharper body lines and a more complex rear end that adds labor time.
| Camaro generation | Wrap cost range | Film needed |
|---|---|---|
| 5th gen (2010-2015) | $2,800 to $4,200 | 55 to 62 sq ft |
| 6th gen (2016-2024) | $3,000 to $5,000 | 58 to 68 sq ft |
The sixth-gen rear end has a pronounced haunch over the rear wheels that requires relief cuts and careful conforming to avoid bridging. Shops that charge more for sixth-gen work are accounting for this correctly.
Film type pricing
| Film type | Material cost | Installed cost |
|---|---|---|
| Budget (TeckWrap, VViViD) | $300 to $500 | $2,800 to $3,400 |
| Mid-tier (Avery SW900, 3M 1080) | $480 to $700 | $3,200 to $4,200 |
| Premium (KPMF, Avery ColorFlow) | $700 to $1,100 | $4,000 to $5,000 |
The Camaro’s sharp body creases stress film around the hood vents, side scoops, and rear quarter flares. Mid-tier and premium films have better elongation than budget options and hold shape at those stress points without silvering or lifting.
Partial wrap options
The Camaro separates naturally into distinct visual zones, which makes it a good candidate for partial wraps.
Racing stripes over the hood and roof are the most iconic Camaro partial wrap. That runs $300 to $700 depending on width and complexity. A two-tone hood and roof in a contrasting color costs $600 to $1,200 and completely changes the car’s look without the full vehicle price.
A hood wrap in clear or matte black as a stone chip protector is also popular on track day cars. That job runs $200 to $500.
DIY vs professional
The hood and roof are manageable for a DIYer. The rear quarter panels are where things get hard. The haunch is a focal point of the car and any imperfection there is immediately visible. The sixth-gen side scoops also need careful work.
DIY material cost runs $350 to $750. Start with the doors and roof to build confidence before tackling the rear quarters. Professional installation is the stronger recommendation for a full color change, especially in gloss black or satin white where every flaw shows.
Popular Camaro wrap colors
Gloss black is the most popular full wrap for a Camaro in 2026. Satin white contrasts sharply with the body lines. Matte gray is understated and purposeful. Rally stripes in white or silver over a dark base color are the top partial wrap option. Two-tone wraps with a darker lower body and lighter upper are gaining ground on the sixth gen.
FAQ
A full wrap costs $2,800 to $5,000 in 2026. Fifth-gen models run $2,800 to $4,200. Sixth-gen models with premium film reach $5,000.
The rear quarter panels are the tricky part. The haunch needs relief cuts and careful conforming. The sixth-gen side scoops add complexity. Hood, roof, and doors are straightforward.
Gloss black for a full wrap. Racing stripes in white or silver over a dark factory color for a partial wrap.
$300 to $700 depending on width, length, and complexity. Adding roof stripes to hood stripes pushes toward the top of that range.
5 to 7 years with Avery or 3M film. Film at panel edges and body line creases may show wear sooner on cars that sit in the sun regularly without cover.
Written by Chad Reynolds. Chad has covered automotive customization and vinyl wrap pricing for VinylWrapCalculator.com since 2023.
