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How-To Guide 7 min read

How to Paint a Brick Fireplace (Modern Look, Safe Finish)

ZP
Founder, PaintPro Calculator · Last updated

A dated brick fireplace can drag down an entire living room, especially if the brick is orange, pink, or that greenish 1970s color that was popular for about 18 months and then universally regretted. Painting it is one of the highest impact projects you can do in a home: it modernizes the whole space for the cost of a gallon of paint and an afternoon of work.

The catch is that brick has specific prep needs and fireplaces introduce heat concerns. Here is how to paint a brick fireplace safely so the finish holds up for years.

Before You Commit

Painted brick is effectively permanent. Once paint soaks into the porous brick surface, getting it back out requires aggressive chemical stripping or sandblasting, both of which damage the brick. If there is any chance you will want bare brick again later, do not paint.

Also, painted brick needs maintenance. Unlike natural brick, which weathers gracefully for centuries, painted brick chips, fades, and gets scuffed by fireplace tools. Plan to touch up every few years.

If you are sure painting is the right call, move on to the project.

What to Paint and What Not to Paint

A fireplace has two distinct zones, and they need different treatment.

Exterior Surround

This is the brick you see from the room: the face, mantel, and hearth area. Standard fireplace use does not heat this area enough to damage regular paint. Use a quality masonry or latex paint here.

Interior Firebox

This is where the fire actually burns. Temperatures inside a firebox regularly exceed 500 degrees Fahrenheit and can spike to 1000 degrees or more. Standard paint will smoke, bubble, and release toxic fumes at these temperatures. You need a dedicated high-heat paint rated for 1200 degrees, and even that should only be applied to the interior brick behind the fire, not the firebrick that holds actual flames.

If you are uncertain whether a surface needs heat-rated paint, check with the fireplace manufacturer or skip that surface entirely. Many people paint only the exterior surround and leave the firebox natural.

Clean the Brick (The Most Important Step)

Brick that looks clean is almost always dirtier than it appears, especially near a used fireplace. Soot, creosote, dust, and grease all interfere with paint adhesion.

Step 1: Dry Dusting

Vacuum the entire brick surface with a brush attachment. Get into all the mortar joints and crevices. Wipe the mantel and hearth with a dry cloth to remove loose dust.

Step 2: Scrub With TSP

Mix trisodium phosphate (TSP) according to label directions (typically about 1/2 cup per gallon of warm water). Wear gloves and eye protection because TSP is caustic. Scrub the brick thoroughly with a stiff bristle brush, working the solution into the mortar joints. TSP cuts through soot and grease in a way that regular cleaners cannot.

If your local rules do not allow TSP, a sodium percarbonate cleaner or a strong dish soap solution works as a substitute, just less effectively.

Step 3: Rinse Thoroughly

Rinse with clean water and a sponge. Change the water often. Soap residue or TSP left in the brick will cause adhesion problems. Keep rinsing until the rinse water runs clear.

Step 4: Let It Dry

Brick holds water. A surface that feels dry may still have moisture trapped deep inside. Wait a full 24 hours before priming, preferably longer in humid weather. If you paint over damp brick, moisture escaping through the paint causes bubbles and peeling.

Prime the Brick

Do not skip priming. Unprimed brick absorbs paint unevenly, requires several topcoats to look uniform, and often telegraphs dark areas through the finish over time. A quality primer fixes all of these issues.

Choose the Right Primer

Avoid plain latex primer for a fireplace. The soot stains and tannins in brick often bleed through and you end up with yellow or brown spots ghosting through your clean white paint months later.

Apply the Primer

Use a brush to work primer into all mortar joints. The brick itself can be rolled with a thick nap roller (3/4 inch or 1 inch). Long naps are essential for brick because short naps skip over the rough surface and miss low areas. Work primer into every crevice. Plan on using more primer than you would expect because brick soaks it up.

Let the primer dry fully according to the label before topcoating.

Apply the Topcoat

Picking a Paint

For the exterior brick surround, a quality latex or acrylic masonry paint works well. Eggshell or satin finish is the most common choice because it is easy to clean without being glossy. Flat paint looks natural but is harder to wipe down. Semi-gloss is easier to clean but looks plasticky on brick.

For interior firebox areas, use a high-heat paint rated for at least 1200 degrees Fahrenheit. Rutland and Stove Bright are the most common brands. High-heat paints come in matte black, gray, and a few other neutral colors.

Rolling and Brushing

Same approach as priming: brush the mortar joints, then roll the brick faces with a long-nap roller. Work in sections and maintain a wet edge to avoid lap marks. Back-roll after applying to push paint into any missed spots.

Two Coats

Plan on two topcoats, maybe three if you are painting a dark brick a light color. Let each coat dry fully before the next. Brick tends to absorb color unevenly under the first coat, and the second coat is what gives you a clean uniform look.

Let It Cure Before Using the Fireplace

Fresh paint needs time to cure fully before exposure to fireplace heat. Wait at least 30 days before lighting a fire if you used standard masonry paint on the surround. High-heat paint in the firebox usually has a specific cure procedure (often a gradual heating process) printed on the can. Follow the directions exactly.

Maintenance

Painted brick needs occasional care:

Bottom Line

Painting a brick fireplace is straightforward if you clean thoroughly, prime with a stain-blocking masonry primer, and pick the right paint for each zone (standard masonry paint for the surround, high-heat paint for the firebox). Expect to use more paint than you think because brick is porous. Once painted, the look is committing, so pick a color you will still love in a decade.

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High-Heat Paint

Rutland 1200 degree heat resistant paint for the interior firebox area.

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Masonry Primer

Zinsser BIN or Loxon primer bonds to rough brick and blocks stains.

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TSP Cleaner

Trisodium phosphate cleans soot and grime from brick before painting.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is it safe to paint a working fireplace?
Yes, if you use the right paint in the right places. The exterior brick surround can be painted with regular latex masonry paint because it does not get hot enough to damage paint. The interior firebox requires high-heat paint rated for at least 1200 degrees Fahrenheit. Never use regular paint inside a firebox.
Will painting ruin my brick forever?
Once brick is painted, removing the paint is very difficult and often damages the brick in the process. It is essentially a permanent decision. Think carefully about color choice and whether you will still like the painted look in 10 years before committing.
How much paint do I need for a brick fireplace?
A typical brick fireplace surround uses about 1 gallon of primer and 1 gallon of topcoat. Brick is porous and absorbs much more paint than smooth drywall, so plan on using at least 50 percent more paint per square foot than you would on a regular wall.
What color should I paint a brick fireplace?
White is the most popular choice because it brightens the room and creates a clean modern look. Soft grays and warm off-whites are also common. Dark colors like charcoal or black create a dramatic contemporary look but can make the room feel smaller. Avoid trendy colors you will regret in a few years since repainting brick is hard.
ZP

About the author

Zack Pearson · Founder, PaintPro Calculator

Zack self-contracted his own home build in Ohio and started keeping a paint-buying spreadsheet after running out of paint mid-coat on a bedroom wall. That spreadsheet became this site. He writes every article here and verifies coverage rates and prices against manufacturer data sheets before publishing. Read more

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