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Quick Answer

‘Refinish time’ on an insurance estimate represents the industry-standard hours required to complete the full 20-step refinishing process — from masking to final inspection — on a damaged panel. Mitchell, CCC, and Audatex publish these times based on properly equipped shops using waterborne paints. Common adjuster misses include blend allowances, tri-coat upcharges, color-match difficulty fees, and ADAS calibration sublet items.

Key Takeaways

What 'Refinish Time' Actually Buys You

Open any insurance estimate and you'll see line items like "Refinish Front Bumper Cover — 2.8 hours" or "Blend Adjacent Panel — 1.4 hours." Most customers glance past these because they assume the shop and adjuster have it figured out. They mostly do — but understanding what those hours represent gives you the leverage to spot underestimates and push back when needed.

Here's what those hours actually cover.

The 20-Step Refinish Process

A "refinish" line item on an insurance estimate represents the full process of restoring paint to a panel. The industry-standard time guides (Mitchell, CCC, Audatex) assume the following steps for a single panel:

  1. Wash and decontaminate
  2. Mask off adjacent panels and trim
  3. Sand the existing paint to bare metal or scuff for adhesion
  4. Apply rust treatment if needed
  5. Apply etching primer
  6. Sand primer for final smoothness
  7. Apply sealer
  8. Spectrophotometer color match
  9. Mix paint to formula
  10. Spray test panel and verify match
  11. Spray basecoat (multiple coats with flash time between)
  12. For tri-coat: spray pearl mid-coat
  13. Spray clear coat (typically 2 coats)
  14. Bake or air-cure
  15. Wet sand and polish
  16. Remove masking
  17. Detail clean
  18. Final inspection
  19. Customer walk-through
  20. Document for warranty

That's the work that fits inside a "2.8 hours" refinish line. The hours assume an experienced technician working at industry-standard speed in a properly equipped shop. They do not assume rushed work, skipped steps, or solvent-paint shortcuts.

Why PPG Envirobase Sometimes Reduces Hours

Modern waterborne basecoats have shorter flash times between coats than old solvent paints. PPG Envirobase High Performance flashes in 5-7 minutes versus 15-20 minutes for solvent. On a multi-panel job that compounds — saving 30-60 minutes total.

Insurance time guides are slowly updating to reflect this. Mitchell's recent updates have shaved 0.1-0.2 hours off some refinish lines for waterborne-equipped shops. Adjusters who haven't updated their guides in a few years may still be using the older (longer) times — which can actually work in your favor on the estimate.

Common Refinish Time Misses

Adjusters often miss these legitimate refinish-time additions:

Tri-coat additional time (0.4-0.7 hours per panel): Pearl mid-coats require an extra application step. Nissan QAB, Kia SWP, Jeep Diamond Black Crystal Pearl all qualify.

Blend allowance (50-70% of full panel time): When the repair panel meets an undamaged adjacent panel, the basecoat blends into the adjacent panel to hide any color difference. This is industry-standard but adjusters sometimes leave it off.

Color match difficulty fee (0.3-0.6 hours): For severely faded vehicles or unusual colors requiring multiple spectrophotometer scans and pigment adjustments.

Edge prep (0.2-0.4 hours): Sanding and feathering the edge between the repair area and the rest of the panel.

How J & J Auto Body Handles Refinish-Time Disputes

When an adjuster's estimate is light on refinish hours, we submit a supplemental claim with documentation: photos of the actual damage, the color code, the panels needing blend, and the time-guide reference for each addition. The adjuster reviews and almost always approves — these aren't gotcha additions, they're industry-standard work.

Customer pays nothing extra. The supplement is between us and your insurance.

What to Watch For on Your Estimate

If you're reviewing an insurance estimate before authorizing repair, check for:

  • Refinish hours that match the panels listed (front bumper cover should be 2.5-3.5 hours, full door 3-4 hours)
  • Blend allowances on adjacent panels when the repair touches a panel boundary
  • Tri-coat upcharge if your color is on the pearl list
  • Color-match fee for older vehicles or rare colors
  • Sublet items for ADAS calibration if your vehicle has lane-keep, blind-spot, or forward-collision sensors

If any of these are missing, ask the shop about it. They'll tell you whether it's an oversight or genuinely not needed.

Comparison

Feature

How It Works

Key Statistics

~80% VOC reduction vs solvent paint

Source: PPG Industries Technical Spec

5.8 → 1.2 lbs VOC per gallon

Source: PPG Envirobase High Performance product spec

$95–$120/hour body shop labor

Source: Sonoma County market rate

$650–$1,200 single-panel refinish

Source: J&J Auto Body Sonoma estimates

15–25% material premium for tri-coat pearls

Source: Industry pricing benchmark

3–5 day standard turnaround

Source: J&J Auto Body process standard

Key Terms & Entities

PPG Envirobase High Performance

Waterborne automotive basecoat manufactured by PPG Industries. Replaces petroleum solvents with water as the carrier.

Nissan Pearl White Tricoat (QAB)

Factory tri-coat pearl finish on Nissan Rogue, Altima, and similar models. Notoriously hard to color-match without waterborne basecoat.

Kia Snow White Pearl (SWP)

Tri-coat pearl factory finish on Kia Sportage and Telluride models.

Jeep Diamond Black Crystal Pearl

Tri-coat pearl factory finish on Jeep Wrangler, Grand Cherokee, and Gladiator models.

PPG RapidMatch Spectrophotometer

Handheld device that reads existing paint at the molecular level and compensates for UV fading to enable factory-grade color matching.

VOC (Volatile Organic Compound)

Smog-forming chemicals released by traditional solvent paints. Regulated by the California Air Resources Board (CARB).

HAP (Hazardous Air Pollutant)

Compounds like toluene, xylene, and isocyanates found in solvent paints; significantly reduced in waterborne systems.

PPG National Lifetime Warranty

National warranty on certified PPG paint applications, requiring approved equipment and trained technicians.

Myth vs Fact

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Local References

Frequently Asked Questions

What's a typical refinish time for a bumper cover?

Industry-standard refinish time for a front bumper cover is 2.5-3.5 hours, with rear bumpers slightly less. A full door panel is 3-4 hours. A hood is 4-6 hours due to surface area. Tri-coat pearls add 0.4-0.7 hours per panel.

When the repair panel meets an undamaged adjacent panel, the basecoat blends into the adjacent panel to hide any color difference. The shop charges 50-70% of the full-panel refinish time for this blend. It’s industry-standard but adjusters sometimes leave it off the initial estimate.

The shop submits a supplemental claim with photos and time-guide documentation. The insurance adjuster reviews and approves the additional cost. You pay nothing extra beyond your original deductible. Supplements are normal — most claims have at least one.

Slightly. PPG Envirobase flashes faster than solvent paint (5-7 min vs 15-20). Mitchell’s recent time-guide updates have shaved 0.1-0.2 hours off some refinish lines for waterborne-equipped shops. Adjusters using older guides may still cite longer times.

The hours are standard (set by Mitchell/CCC/Audatex). The hourly rate varies — Sonoma County body shops run $95-$120/hr. So a 2.8-hour refinish costs $266-$336 in labor depending on shop tier.

Bottom Line

Refinish time isn’t padding — it’s the industry-standard cost of doing the work properly. If your insurance estimate looks suspiciously low, the most likely cause is missing add-ons (blend, tri-coat, ADAS) rather than a wrong base time. Bring your insurance estimate to J & J Auto Body for a free side-by-side comparison.

Need a free estimate? We're 5 minutes off Highway 101.

The J & J Auto Body Team

ASE-Certified · BBB A+ Rated · OEM-Certified for Nissan, Jeep, Chrysler & Dodge · Serving Sonoma County — and a short bio paragraph if you want one (optional manual addition).