Plastering · Melbourne South East

Plastering Services in Melbourne: What Actually Goes Into a Good Job

By Best Rendering Group Cranbourne, VIC 2026
Tradesman smoothing fresh plaster onto an interior wall in Melbourne

Most people only think about their walls when something is already wrong with them. A crack that keeps coming back. A patch that never quite matches. Paint that bubbles no matter how many times you redo it. By the time Plastering Services in Melbourne cross your mind, it's usually because something underneath has been ignored for a while.

That's not a criticism — it's just how walls work. They're the part of a house nobody looks at twice until they have to. This piece walks through what goes into a proper plastering job, why so many fall short, and where Best Rendering Group draws the line between a wall that lasts and one that needs redoing in two years.


Plastering Is Not Just Patching a Hole

There's a habit a lot of homeowners fall into — calling a plasterer only when there's visible damage. A hole from moving furniture. A crack above a doorway. Water staining from an old leak. The job gets treated as a repair, full stop.

In reality, plastering is the layer everything else depends on. Paint sits on top of it. Wallpaper relies on it being flat. Even rendering on the outside of a home needs a properly prepared surface underneath. Rush the plaster, or work on a wall that wasn't checked properly first, and every finish that follows inherits the problem.

Hairline crack with flaking paint on a ceiling corner in an older Melbourne home

What a Properly Plastered Wall Actually Needs

Strip away the sales talk and a good plastering job comes down to a handful of things that either happen or don't. Here's what Best Rendering Group checks for on every property before calling a job finished.

A Sound Substrate

No hollow patches, no old loose material left behind. New plaster only ever performs as well as what it's bonded to.

Dry Conditions Underneath

Moisture trapped behind a wall will push through a new finish eventually. It has to be dealt with first, not covered over.

An Even Base Coat

This is where real flatness gets built. A rushed base coat means every later layer is fighting an uneven start.

Proper Curing Time

Painting too early on plaster that hasn't fully dried is one of the most common reasons finishes fail within a year.


Residential and Commercial Plastering Aren't the Same Job

A house and an office fit-out might both need plastering, but the priorities shift depending on what the space is used for. A home renovation is usually about getting a clean, comfortable finish that suits how a family lives day to day, with more flexibility on timing.

Commercial spaces are a different conversation entirely — offices, retail fit-outs, larger developments — where deadlines are usually tied to a lease or opening date. The plastering itself doesn't change dramatically, but the pace and the margin for error does.

Partially completed commercial office fit-out showing fresh plastering work

Residential vs Commercial: How the Job Actually Differs

The trade is the same, but what each setting demands of it isn't. Here's a rough comparison of how a residential plastering job typically runs against a commercial one.

Factor Residential Commercial
Typical timeline Flexible, often weeks Fixed, tied to lease or opening date
Main priority Finish quality and liveability Speed without sacrificing finish
Working hours Standard daytime access Often after-hours or staged around trade access
Surface scale Smaller, room-by-room Larger continuous runs, more crew coordination
Common pressure point Matching existing finishes Curing time clashing with handover dates

Swipe sideways to see the full table.

The Difference Between an Okay Wall and a Properly Plastered One

Here's something most people don't realise until they've lived with a bad plastering job for a while — a wall can look fine in daylight and still be uneven enough to bother you the moment the lights go on at night. Shadows fall differently across a lumpy surface, and paint sheen highlights every dip and ridge that natural light might have hidden.

A properly plastered wall is flat. Genuinely flat, not "flat enough that you won't notice unless you're looking for it." That consistency is the actual product you're paying for, which is why Best Rendering Group treats the finish coat as the step that defines the whole job, not just the last box to tick.

Comparison of an uneven plastered wall next to a smooth, properly finished wall

How a Plastering Job Should Actually Run

If you're getting quotes and want to know whether someone is going to do this properly, it helps to know what the right order of operations looks like.

1
The surface gets assessed first. Not glanced at — actually checked for hollow spots, moisture, and how level it currently is.
2
Anything loose or damaged comes off. Old plaster that isn't bonded properly gets removed rather than plastered over.
3
The base coat goes on. This builds up the surface and corrects any unevenness in the wall or ceiling underneath.
4
The finish coat is applied and smoothed. This is the layer that determines how the wall actually looks once it's painted.
5
It's left to cure properly before anything goes on top. Painting too early on plaster that hasn't fully dried is one of the more common reasons finishes fail early.

None of these steps are complicated on their own. The issue is when one gets skipped to save time, and it usually doesn't show up until weeks or months later — which is exactly why it's tempting to cut corners in the first place.


Questions Worth Asking Before You Hire Someone

Most people choosing a plasterer end up comparing quotes side by side and picking on price alone. That's understandable, but price tells you almost nothing about how the job will actually go. These are worth checking first.

  • Surface prep: what they'll actually check before any plaster goes on.
  • Local experience: whether they've worked on similar properties nearby.
  • Real examples: are they comfortable showing completed jobs in person, not just photos.
  • Curing time: do they build it into the schedule or rush straight to paint.
  • Moisture checks: a vague answer here is usually worth noting.
  • Matching finishes: can they tie new plaster into existing walls without a visible seam.

Where This Leaves You

Plastering isn't a glamorous part of any renovation or build, and it's easy to treat it as something to get through quickly so you can move on to paint colours and furniture. But it's the layer everything else sits on, quite literally. Getting it right the first time costs less in the long run than patching up a rushed job two or three years from now.

If you're in Melbourne's south eastern suburbs and want a straightforward look at what a job on your property would actually involve, Best Rendering Group is happy to come have a look and talk it through honestly — whether that's plastering on its own or alongside concrete finishing or Hebel installation elsewhere on the property.

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