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Wood Repair in Dallas

Rotted fascia, sills, and trim restored before painting — no shortcuts.

Exterior Prep

Wood Repair in Dallas, TX

Painting over wood rot is a waste of money. The paint will fail quickly and the underlying damage will get worse. We always address wood rot before any exterior painting project.

We remove deteriorated wood, treat with an epoxy consolidant to stabilize borderline areas, fill with two-part epoxy wood filler, shape, sand smooth, and prime before painting. In more severe cases we replace boards entirely. The result is solid, stable wood that will hold paint properly for years.

More Repair Services

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Learn more about our wood repair services

Interior and Exterior Wood Repair: Building the Right Foundation for a Lasting Paint Job

Wood is one of the most beautiful — and most demanding — surfaces a painting crew works with. Whether it's interior trim, baseboards, and built-ins or exteri

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Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have wood rot on my home?

Soft, spongy, or discolored wood — especially around window sills, fascia, and door frames — indicates rot. Probe with a screwdriver: if it sinks in easily, the wood is compromised.

Do you replace rotted wood or just fill it?

Depends on severity. Minor rot is treated with epoxy consolidant and two-part filler. Extensive rot requires board replacement — we do both as part of a complete paint prep service.

How do I know if my interior wood trim and doors need repair before painting, or if they can just be painted over as-is?

A quick hands-on inspection tells you most of what you need to know. Run your hand along baseboards, door casings, and window trim feeling for soft spots, sponginess, or areas where the wood flexes under light pressure — any of these indicate moisture damage or rot that needs to be addressed before painting. Visually, look for paint that's bubbling or separating from the wood surface, visible cracks or splits running along the grain, and areas where trim has pulled away from the wall creating gaps that caulk alone won't adequately bridge. Minor nail holes, small dents, and surface scuffs are straightforward prep items that don't require repair in the traditional sense — just filling and sanding before priming. The distinction that matters most is between surface imperfections that are cosmetic and structural issues where the wood itself has been compromised, since painting over the latter without repair produces a result that looks acceptable initially but deteriorates quickly.

Can epoxy wood filler really replicate the look and feel of real wood on interior trim after painting, or will the repair always be visible?

When applied and finished correctly, a quality two-part epoxy wood filler repair on interior trim is genuinely invisible after painting — and in some respects performs better than the surrounding wood over time. Epoxy fillers cure to a hard, stable material that doesn't shrink, crack, or expand and contract with seasonal humidity changes the way wood does, meaning a well-executed epoxy repair on a baseboard or door casing won't develop the hairline cracks along its edges that sometimes reappear in wood filler repairs after a season or two. The key to an invisible result is building the repair slightly proud of the surrounding surface, allowing it to fully cure, and then sanding it flush with careful attention to matching the surrounding profile before priming. Where epoxy repairs fall short of invisibility is on large sections with significant grain detail that the filler can't replicate — in those cases, replacing the affected section of trim entirely produces a more convincing result than attempting to rebuild extensive surface area with filler.

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