Table of Contents
- Quick answer: the best paint brand for a condo
- What makes a paint good for a condo?
- How the major brands compare for condos
- Condo paint brand comparison table
- Where can you buy paint in Toronto?
- Why do pros pay more for premium paint?
- The honest verdict: DIY versus a whole condo
- Get a free condo painting quote
Quick answer: the best paint brand for a condo
For a whole-condo repaint or a pre-sale refresh, Benjamin Moore is our pick, and it is the brand we use on every Toronto job. Sherwin-Williams matches it closely; Behr is fine for a single DIY room. The best brand depends on your scope, not on hype.
Key Takeaways
- Benjamin Moore (Regal Select, Aura) and Sherwin-Williams (Duration, Emerald) are the two premium leaders; the quality gap between them is small.
- Premium paint is built for roughly 10 to 15 years of durability versus 5 to 7 for budget lines, and it often hides in fewer coats.
- Behr Marquee and Ultra are genuinely good DIY value at a Home Depot price, but less consistent across a whole condo over many coats.
- On a professional job, paint is a small slice of the bill, so saving on the can rarely pays off; labour and longevity dominate the math.
- We use Benjamin Moore exclusively and back it with a 5-year workmanship warranty, but this comparison is built to help you decide either way.
Choosing paint for a condo is not the same as choosing it for a house. You are working in a smaller, occupied, tightly ventilated space, and you want the job to last. If you want the full picture beyond just brands, start with our condo painting guide. Below, we break down what actually matters and compare the brands honestly.
What makes a paint good for a condo?
In our experience repainting hundreds of GTA condos, four qualities separate a paint that performs from one that disappoints: coverage, durability, low odour, and touch-up behaviour. Builder off-white walls, tight rooms, daily scuffs and shared air all stress paint differently than a detached home does. Get these four right and the brand debate mostly settles itself.
Coverage and hide
Coverage is how completely a paint hides what is underneath in each coat. Condo walls are usually a flat builder white, and a strong-hide premium paint often covers in one or two coats where a budget paint needs an extra one. That extra coat is pure labour cost on a professional job, which is why coverage, not price per gallon, drives the real economics.
Durability and washability (the actual measurement)
Condos are tight, so walls take a beating from luggage, furniture and pets in narrow hallways and entryways. The objective measurement of how well a paint stands up to that abuse is ASTM D2486 scrub-resistance testing, which counts cycles-to-failure under abrasive scrubbing. The industry rule of thumb: 1,400+ cycles = "very good" washability. Premium lines (Aura, Regal Select, Duration, Emerald) clear the threshold comfortably and pass thousands of cycles before burnishing; bargain builder-grade paints commonly fail between 100 and 300 cycles. That gap is why the same "two-coat" job produces dramatically different results five years in.
We generally expect 10 to 15 years of practical service from premium paint versus 5 to 7 from budget tiers in a busy home, which is the single biggest reason we pay more. Sheen plays a role here too, see the best paint finish for a condo.
Low-VOC for occupied units
You usually live in your condo while it dries, often with limited ventilation and shared building air. Low-VOC and zero-VOC formulas keep odour and off-gassing down, which matters in a sealed unit, since Health Canada notes that volatile organic compounds released indoors can affect air quality and comfort. Both Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams offer strong low-VOC premium options, and this is non-negotiable when families, pets or sensitive residents stay in the unit during the work.
Easy touch-ups
A small repair should vanish, not leave a flashed patch in a different sheen. Premium paints touch up far more cleanly, which we have confirmed across years of warranty call-backs. On budget lines we more often see touch-ups that flash under condo pot lights, forcing us to recoat a whole wall instead of dabbing a spot.
How the major brands compare for condos
Here is the honest brand-by-brand picture from our own Toronto purchasing and application experience in 2026. We favour Benjamin Moore, but every brand below can produce a good result in the right hands.
Benjamin Moore
We use Benjamin Moore exclusively, so this is the brand we know best. Three lines cover most of our condo work, and the differences between them are measurable, not marketing.
| Line | TDS specs | Coverage | Tier | When we use it |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultra Spec | Recoat ~1 hr at 77°F, 38% solids | 400-450 sq ft/gal | Commercial / budget | Rental turnovers, pre-listing units where coverage and efficiency matter most |
| Regal Select | Recoat ~1 hr at 77°F, ~40% solids | 400-450 sq ft/gal | Premium | Most owner-occupier walls — living areas, bedrooms, hallways |
| Aura | Recoat 1 hr at 77°F, 42% solids, zero-VOC, 4.3 mil wet film | 350-400 sq ft/gal | Ultra-premium | High-traffic areas, big colour changes (dark to light), sensitive households, feature walls |
Aura vs Regal Select is the real decision most owners face. Aura runs roughly 30% more per gallon (about $90 vs $70 at Toronto retail in 2026). The performance difference is real: Aura's Color Lock technology and 42% solids let it hide a dark-over-light colour change in two coats where Regal Select sometimes needs three; Aura also clears the ASTM D2486 scrub-resistance threshold (1,400 cycles = "very good") with more headroom than Regal Select, which matters in entryways and high-touch areas. For most rooms, Regal Select is the better value; for kitchens, hallways, kids' rooms, and any wall facing a big colour change, Aura pays back the price difference in one fewer coat of labour. We choose room by room rather than defaulting to one line across the whole unit.
It is sold through independent BM retailers, where we get consistent stock and dependable colour matching, batch after batch.

Sherwin-Williams
Sherwin-Williams is right alongside Benjamin Moore in quality. Duration, Emerald and Cashmere are all strong condo choices, with Emerald being a standout for hide and durability, and Sherwin-Williams' own finish guide lays out how each sheen suits different rooms. SW runs frequent contractor pricing that sharpens the working cost. The main GTA caveat is convenience: standalone SW stores are less common in parts of the region than independent BM dealers, which can matter for stock and last-minute matching.
Behr
Behr is the brand most worth a nuanced take. Marquee and Ultra, sold at Home Depot, are budget-friendly and have improved markedly. For a single DIY room where your labour is free, Behr is genuinely good value. Across a whole condo and many coats, though, we have found it less consistent for professional work: more flashing on touch-ups and the occasional extra coat to fully hide a colour change.
Dulux and PPG
Both are credible options in Canada. Dulux sells through its own national store network and offers solid mid-to-premium interior lines; PPG products reach Canadian buyers through various retail channels. We do not run them as our standard, only because our process, matching and warranty are built around Benjamin Moore. Do not dismiss a painter who specifies a good Dulux or PPG line; ask which line, sheen and coat count they plan.
Condo paint brand comparison table
A quick side-by-side of the brands we see most in Toronto condos, based on 2026 retail context.
| Brand | Flagship lines | Price tier | Where to buy in the GTA | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benjamin Moore | Regal Select, Aura, Ultra Spec | Premium (~$60-$80/gal Regal) | Independent BM retailers | Whole condos, resale, our standard |
| Sherwin-Williams | Duration, Emerald, Cashmere | Premium, frequent contractor pricing | SW stores (fewer in parts of GTA) | Whole condos where an SW store is close |
| Behr | Marquee, Ultra | Budget-friendly | Home Depot | DIY single rooms, tight budgets |
| Dulux / PPG | Various interior lines | Mid to premium | Dulux store network / select retail | Solid alternative if your painter specifies it |
Where can you buy paint in Toronto?
Where you buy shapes what you pay and how easily you get a colour matched. Benjamin Moore sells through independent retailers spread across the GTA rather than from big-box chains, so you will find BM dealers in midtown, the east end, North York, Mississauga and most surrounding suburbs. We buy from a handful of these stores because they keep our regular colours in stock and match consistently.
Behr lives at Home Depot, with locations dotted across the city, and RONA carries it too. That convenience is part of why Behr appeals to DIY painters downtown; you can grab a gallon and a roller in one trip. Sherwin-Williams runs its own standalone stores, which are common in some pockets of the region and sparse in others, so check what is near your unit before you commit to the brand.
Contractor pricing is the part most homeowners never see. Painters who buy regularly get a trade discount that a walk-in customer does not, which is one quiet reason letting your painter supply the paint often costs you less, not more. If you live in a downtown tower without a nearby BM dealer, getting a colour matched is still easy: any BM or SW store can scan a chip or an existing swatch and mix to it, and Home Depot does the same for Behr.
Pro tips for choosing condo paint
A few habits save money and headaches every single time.
- Buy the right tier for the room, not the cheapest can. A guest bedroom and a high-traffic entryway have different demands.
- Premium paint usually covers in fewer coats, so the higher can price often pays for itself in saved labour.
- Choose a low-VOC or zero-VOC line for a sealed condo you will be living in while it dries.
- Keep a labelled touch-up jar with the line, colour and sheen written on it, so a future scuff is a five-minute fix.
- Confirm the exact line and sheen on your written quote, not just the brand name, so there are no surprises.
On a CityPlace rental refresh, the owner supplied a contractor-grade builder paint to save money, and the dark feature wall needed three coats to hide cleanly. The extra labour cost more than premium paint would have, and we have never forgotten the lesson. On a King West loft soon after, Benjamin Moore Aura covered a deep charcoal wall in two coats flat, and the difference in our hours was obvious.
Why do pros pay more for premium paint?
It looks counterintuitive: why pay 60 to 80 dollars a gallon when a budget can is cheaper? Because on a professional job the paint is a small fraction of the total, while labour and longevity are the real costs. A premium paint that hides in one fewer coat saves hours of work, and a finish that lasts 10 to 15 years instead of 5 to 7 delays the next repaint by years.

We have repainted condos that were done in budget paint only three or four years earlier. The labour to redo a unit dwarfs whatever was saved on the original cans. Premium paint also touches up cleanly, so a scuffed wall gets a quick spot fix instead of a full recoat. For a deeper look at how the can you choose ripples into the bill, see how paint choice affects your total cost.
Across hundreds of Toronto condo projects, Condo Painters Pro standardised on Benjamin Moore Regal Select and Aura because premium paint typically covers in fewer coats and is engineered for roughly 10 to 15 years of durability versus 5 to 7 for budget tiers, cutting both labour hours and repaint frequency. (Condo Painters Pro, 2026)
The honest verdict: DIY versus a whole condo
Here is the balanced bottom line. For a single DIY room or an accent wall, Behr Marquee or Ultra is a smart, budget-friendly pick; you do not need premium paint to repaint one bedroom yourself. The savings are real and the result will look great.
Premium pays off most in the units that work hardest. A resale unit getting a pre-listing refresh needs to photograph clean and survive showings, and a high-traffic suite in a busy downtown tower scuffs faster than a quiet suburban one-bedroom. Those are exactly the jobs where fewer coats and a longer service life earn back the can price. A single DIY room in a low-traffic condo is the opposite case: the scope is small, your time is free, and a Behr gallon from the nearest Home Depot is a fair call. Access matters too. If you are downtown without a BM dealer close by, the big-box convenience of Behr can tip a small DIY job, while a painter supplying premium settles the question for a whole unit.
For a whole condo, a rental turnover, or a pre-sale refresh, premium Benjamin Moore or Sherwin-Williams pays back through fewer coats, cleaner touch-ups and a longer service life. Since you are paying for labour anyway, the small premium on the can is usually the cheaper path over time. Choosing the right sheen for each space matters just as much as the brand, so review matching the right finish to each room before you commit. We use Benjamin Moore on every job, but the principle holds whichever premium brand you choose.
Get a free condo painting quote
Still weighing brands, finishes and budget? We will walk your unit, recommend the right Benjamin Moore line and sheen for each room, and quote paint and labour together so you see the real trade-offs. Every project is backed by our 5-year workmanship warranty.
Get your free condo painting quote and we will help you choose with confidence. For everything else, from prep to colour, browse the complete condo painting guide.
Chad Saygili is co-owner of Condo Painters Pro, a Toronto condo painting specialist. He has spent years painting condos across Toronto and the GTA, works exclusively with Benjamin Moore, and backs every job with a 5-year workmanship warranty.
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