After siding repair or full restoration, a fresh exterior coat ties everything back together. Red Hawk handles full-home exterior painting with high-grade Sherwin-Williams and Benjamin Moore products warranted for Colorado's UV and freeze-thaw cycles.
Exterior Painting in Lone Tree, Colorado often involves restoring exterior paint after storm damage — trim, soffit, and fascia that took hail or wind-driven debris, frequently rolled into the same claim as roof and gutter work. Red Hawk Roofing has documented 5 hail events in Lone Tree since 2021 — the largest being 1.75-inch hail on June 9, 2024 — which is enough to scuff and chip painted soffit and fascia on the same windward elevations the roof takes damage.
Our nearest crew to Lone Tree works out of our Highlands Ranch service area. We dispatch Highlands Ranch field teams from there for Lone Tree projects — same crew, same warranty.
Lone Tree is mostly 1990s-2010s build-out with steeper pitches and Class 4 upgrade penetration above the metro average. We work directly with every major Colorado carrier — including State Farm, USAA, Allstate, Farmers, American Family, and Liberty Mutual — and handle the adjuster process end to end on Lone Tree claims. City of Lone Tree permits residential roofing through Douglas County; we handle the application and HOA submission where applicable.
For exterior painting in Lone Tree, expect: free roof inspection, adjuster-grade photo documentation, written scope of work, insurance liaison if applicable, and full prep with pressure-wash, scrape, prime, and two finish coats of Sherwin-Williams Duration or Benjamin Moore Aura on trim, soffit, fascia, and accent surfaces. Most exterior painting projects in Lone Tree complete within 3–7 days for full exterior repaint, 1–3 days for partial trim and accent work.
Full prep, prime, and 2-coat finishSherwin-Williams + Benjamin MooreColor consultation includedCoordinates with siding & roof projects
Common Questions: Exterior Painting in Lone Tree
Late May through early October is the optimal exterior painting window in Colorado, when daytime temperatures stay between 50°F and 85°F and overnight temperatures stay above 35°F. Spring (May–June) and early fall (September) are ideal — moderate temps, low UV, and low precipitation risk. Avoid painting in July/August midday heat (paint dries too fast and adheres poorly) and avoid painting after September 30 in foothills locations (overnight freezes ruin paint cure). Red Hawk schedules paint projects for the right thermal window per location.
Exterior painting in metro Denver costs $2.50–$5.00 per square foot of wall area, putting a typical 2,000 sqft Front Range home at $4,500–$9,000 for a full repaint. Pricing factors: prep work scope (sanding, priming, caulking), paint grade (mid-tier vs premium), trim and door count, height (two-story adds 10–20%), and current condition. Heavy prep on neglected homes can double the labor cost. Red Hawk's free estimates itemize prep and paint separately so homeowners see exactly where money goes.
Sherwin-Williams Duration Exterior, Sherwin-Williams Emerald, and Benjamin Moore Aura Exterior are the top three exterior paints for Colorado climate. All carry lifetime limited warranties (when properly applied), use 100% acrylic resin for UV resistance and elasticity through freeze-thaw cycles, and resist mildew, fading, and chalking for 12–15 years. Behr and Valspar from big-box stores cost 30–40% less but typically last 5–8 years on Colorado exposures. Red Hawk only specifies premium Sherwin-Williams and Benjamin Moore on exterior work.
Lone Tree asphalt roof replacements typically run $15,000 to $25,000. Custom homes in RidgeGate and Lone Tree Golf Club run $17,000–$32,000. Red Hawk provides free written estimates with line-item pricing.
The City of Lone Tree issues building permits through Community Development at 9220 Kimmer Dr. Lone Tree contracts with Safebuilt for permit review, with fees running $90–$260 and 5–10 business day turnaround. Code requires synthetic underlayment, ice-and-water shield, and proper drip edge. Red Hawk pulls all permits and handles the post-install inspection.
Yes — Lone Tree sits on the south-metro supercell track. The ground record shows 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of the city between 2021 and 2026, all confirmed by NWS storm spotters, the largest a 1.75-inch measurement on May 10, 2023 (14 ground reports). Lone Tree's elevation (~5,800 ft) means high UV and freeze-thaw exposure that compounds hail damage over time.
Hail History in Lone Tree
Lone Tree has 5 documented hail days within 10 miles of city center between 2021 and 2026 — 5 confirmed by NWS storm-spotter reports on the ground, the largest 1.75-inch hail measured on May 10, 2023 (14 reports), where NOAA radar indicated 3.0 inches — 1.25 inches above the measured size. Radar figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS), not measurements; ground figures are NWS Local Storm Reports.
Jun 9
2024
1.75"
Measured
5 reports
radar 2.25" (+0.50")
LSR+SWDI
May 30
2024
1.50"
Measured
9 reports
radar 2.50" (+1.00")
LSR+SWDI
Jul 8
2023
1.75"
Measured
13 reports
radar 2.25" (+0.50")
LSR+SWDI
Jun 22
2023
1.75"
Measured
12 reports
radar 2.75" (+1.00")
LSR+SWDI
May 10
2023
1.75"
Measured
14 reports
radar 3.00" (+1.25")
LSR+SWDI
Measured figures are NWS Local Storm Reports — human-observed, ground-confirmed hail. Radar-indicated figures are NOAA SWDI estimates (MEHS, a radar algorithm calibrated to a high-end bound) — not measurements, and they can run high versus paired ground reports. Events within ~10 miles of Lone Tree center, 2021–present, ≥1.0 inch.