How Much Does a Color Change Wrap Cost?

Changing your car’s color with vinyl wrap costs $2,500 to $5,500 for a full professional job on most vehicles. That’s a wide range, and where you land inside it comes down to three things: the size of your car, the finish you choose, and whether your paint is in good enough shape to wrap cleanly without prep work.

Most people searching for color change wrap costs are comparing it against a fresh paint job. That comparison is worth making carefully. A mid-quality paint job and a quality color change wrap are often priced within $500 to $800 of each other. They are completely different products with different strengths. This guide breaks down what you will actually pay, what drives the price in either direction, and one specific cost that most shops do not mention until you are already booked.

Color change wrap cost at a glance

Compact / Sedan
$2,500
Starting price
SUV / Crossover
$3,500
Starting price
Truck / Van
$4,200
Starting price
Door jambs added
+$400
Average extra
Specialty finish
+$800
Avg premium
vs quality paint job
40% less
Typical saving

Color Change Wrap Cost by Vehicle Size

Color change wraps cover every painted exterior panel, which means the price scales directly with how much surface area your vehicle has. The numbers below assume quality mid-grade cast vinyl, professional installation, and no door jamb coverage.

Vehicle TypeExamplesFull Color Change CostVinyl Needed
SubcompactMini Cooper, Honda Fit, Toyota Yaris$2,200 to $3,00050 to 55 lin ft
Compact sedanCivic, Corolla, Golf$2,500 to $3,40055 to 62 lin ft
Mid-size sedanCamry, Accord, Model 3$2,800 to $3,80058 to 65 lin ft
Coupe / SportsMustang, Charger, BRZ, WRX$2,600 to $3,60055 to 63 lin ft
Compact SUVRAV4, CR-V, Tucson, Escape$3,200 to $4,40065 to 75 lin ft
Full-size SUVTahoe, Expedition, Suburban$4,200 to $5,80078 to 95 lin ft
Pickup truckF-150, Silverado, RAM 1500$3,800 to $5,50075 to 92 lin ft
Cargo van / SprinterTransit, ProMaster, Sprinter$4,500 to $6,50090 to 120 lin ft
Why coupes often cost less than sedans of similar size: A coupe roofline drops steeply after the B-pillar, which means the rear section has less wrappable surface area than a sedan with a full trunk lid and longer rear deck. Ask your installer to measure your specific car before accepting a quote based purely on vehicle class.

Cost by Finish Type for a Full Color Change

The finish is the second biggest price driver after vehicle size. These are the real cost differences on a mid-size sedan in 2026.

Finish TypeCost on Mid-Size SedanWhat Makes It More ExpensiveLifespan
Gloss solid color$2,500 to $3,400Easiest to install, most available4 to 6 yrs
Matte solid color$2,800 to $3,800Requires more care during install, shows errors5 to 7 yrs
Satin$2,900 to $3,900Premium film cost, tighter margins for errors5 to 7 yrs
Metallic gloss$3,200 to $4,300Film cost higher, alignment-sensitive4 to 6 yrs
Color-shift / chameleon$3,800 to $5,200Premium film, directional install required5 to 7 yrs
Brushed metal / textured$3,600 to $5,000Direction-sensitive, complex seam matching4 to 5 yrs
Chrome$5,500 to $8,500Film costs 4x standard, zero error tolerance2 to 3 yrs
Matte and satin finishes show installer skill more than gloss does. A gloss wrap hides minor imperfections under its reflective surface. Matte has nowhere to hide. Any slight stretch mark, uneven edge, or micro-bubble reads clearly in flat light. This is why experienced shops charge more for matte full wraps even when the film cost is similar. Ask to see examples of the shop’s full matte jobs before committing.

The Door Jamb Question Nobody Asks Upfront

This is the one thing most shops do not bring up in the initial quote, and it catches people off guard when they pick up the car.

A standard color change wrap covers every visible exterior panel. But the door jambs, the painted surface inside the door frame that shows when you open a door, stay in the original factory color. If you wrap a red car in gloss white and open the door, you see red jambs. On some combinations this is barely noticeable. On others, like dark-to-light changes or metallic-to-matte, it looks unfinished.

OptionExtra CostWhat You GetWorth It?
No jamb coverage (standard)Included in base priceExterior panels only, jambs stay factory colorFine for similar color changes
Jamb edges only (partial)+$150 to $250Just the visible edge when door is openGood compromise
Full door jamb coverage+$300 to $600Complete inside frame wrapped, seamless lookWorth it for dramatic color changes

Make sure to ask your installer about jamb coverage before the job starts. Get confirmation in writing on what is and is not included. The shops that deliver the cleanest full color change results factor jamb coverage into the quote automatically. If a shop does not mention it at all, ask why.

Calculate Your Color Change Wrap Cost →

Wrapping Dark Cars in Light Colors Costs More

Few installers advertise this upfront, but dark-to-light color changes are genuinely harder and more expensive than same-family changes.

When you wrap a black car in white or light grey, the dark base color can bleed through thin sections of light vinyl, particularly around stretched areas on bumpers and door edges. Quality installers compensate by using thicker film, double-layering critical areas, or using film engineered for opacity over dark bases. All of this adds cost.

Color Change TypeDifficultyCost ImpactNotes
White to black or darkStandardBase priceDark covers light easily, no opacity issues
Silver to any colorStandardBase priceNeutral base, most films work cleanly
Red to dark (black, navy)StandardBase priceDark finish hides warm base tones
Black to white or lightHardAdd $200 to $500Opacity is the problem. Dark bleeds through light film
Dark to light metallicHardAdd $300 to $600Metallic films are thinner, dark base shows more
Any color to chromeExpert onlyAdd $1,000 to $2,000Chrome shows every imperfection in the base surface
Ask this one question before booking a dark-to-light color change: “What film do you use for this specific base color, and does your pricing account for opacity coverage?” Any experienced installer will know exactly what you mean. A shop that pauses or gives a vague answer on this is worth being cautious about.

Color Change Wrap vs Paint Job: Real Cost Comparison

Most comparisons online oversimplify this. Here is a practical breakdown by quality tier so you can compare like for like.

Quality TierPaint Job CostWrap Cost (equivalent)Key Difference
Budget / Express$500 to $1,500$1,800 to $2,500Budget paint degrades fast. Wrap wins on durability at this tier
Mid quality$3,000 to $5,000$2,500 to $3,800Wrap is cheaper, reversible, protects original paint
Premium quality$6,000 to $10,000$4,000 to $6,500Paint lasts longer. Wrap wins on flexibility and resale value
Custom / specialty$10,000 to $25,000+$5,500 to $9,000Wrap is dramatically cheaper for same visual result

The case for a wrap over paint gets strongest in the mid-quality tier. A $3,500 to $4,500 mid-quality respray uses standard automotive paint that shows wear after 4 to 5 years. A $3,000 to $3,800 quality cast vinyl wrap lasts 5 to 7 years, comes off clean when you sell, and leaves factory paint underneath untouched. Our Wrap vs Paint Calculator runs this comparison for your specific vehicle if you want the exact numbers side by side.

What Prep Work Costs When Your Paint Is Not Ready

A color change wrap applies directly to your existing paint. The vinyl conforms to whatever surface is underneath it, which means dents, scratches, chips, and peeling clear coat all show through. Shops that do quality work will not wrap over damaged paint without prep, and that prep costs money.

Paint Condition IssuePrep RequiredAdded Cost
Clean paint, minor swirlsSurface decontamination and wipe-down onlyIncluded in most quotes
Rock chips and light scratchesSpot fill or color-match touch-up$100 to $300
Peeling clear coat (small area)Clear coat stabilization or panel repair$200 to $500
Peeling clear coat (large area)Panel respray before wrapping$400 to $900 per panel
Dents and dingsPDR (paintless dent repair) before wrapping$100 to $300 per dent
Previous wrap removalFull wrap strip and adhesive clean$500 to $1,200
Watch for this when getting quotes
  • A suspiciously low quote on a car with damaged paint usually means they plan to wrap over the damage. The wrap looks fine for 6 to 12 months and then starts lifting at every chip and scratch edge. Always ask the shop to inspect the paint before finalizing the price.
  • Previous wrap removal is a hidden cost that surprises most people. If your car already has vinyl on it, factor in $500 to $1,200 for removal and adhesive cleanup before the new wrap can go on.

Get Your Exact Color Change Cost

The ranges above cover most common scenarios but your actual quote shifts based on your specific vehicle, the finish you want, and your paint condition going in. Use our free Vinyl Wrap Calculator for a panel-by-panel breakdown built around your exact make and model. For model-specific pricing, see the Toyota Camry wrap cost guide or the complete car wrap cost guide. If you are still weighing wrap against paint, the Wrap vs Paint Calculator does the math directly for your budget.

Use the Free Vinyl Wrap Calculator →

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a color change wrap cost?
A full color change wrap costs $2,500 to $5,500 on most vehicles. Compact sedans start around $2,500, full-size SUVs run $4,200 to $5,800, and specialty finishes like color-shift or chrome push the price significantly higher.
Is a color change wrap cheaper than a paint job?
In the mid-quality range, yes. A quality wrap at $3,000 to $3,800 beats a mid-quality respray at $3,500 to $5,000 on both price and reversibility. The wrap also protects the original paint underneath, which matters at resale time.
Does a color change wrap include the door jambs?
Most standard quotes do not include door jambs. Full jamb coverage adds $300 to $600 to the job. For dramatic color changes, dark to light especially, it is worth asking for and worth paying for.
How long does a color change wrap last?
A quality cast vinyl color change wrap lasts 5 to 7 years with proper care. Budget calendered vinyl lasts 2 to 3 years before it starts fading and lifting at the edges. For a full color change, always use cast vinyl.
Can you color change wrap a car yourself?
Technically yes, but a full color change is not a beginner project. Bumpers, door jambs, and complex curved panels require real experience. DIY material cost runs $600 to $1,200 for a full car, but factor in the risk of wasted film if sections go wrong.
Will a color change wrap hide paint defects?
No. Vinyl conforms to whatever is underneath it, which means dents, scratches, and peeling clear coat all show through the wrap. A wrap is not a way to hide a car’s cosmetic problems.
What is the most popular color change wrap in 2026?
Matte black remains the most requested color change by a wide margin. Satin grey, gloss white, and satin military green are next. Color-shift chameleon wraps have grown significantly in 2025 and 2026, particularly on sports sedans and performance SUVs.
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