Cracked or Fading Stucco: What It Means and How to Fix It Right
In This Article
Stucco is the most common exterior finish on homes across the Phoenix metro, and it holds up remarkably well for a cement-based material. But it is not invincible. Over time, it cracks. It fades. And in a climate as demanding as Phoenix, it tends to do both faster than homeowners expect.
The good news: cracked and fading stucco is a manageable problem. Understanding what caused the damage — and making sure it gets properly addressed before the next coat of paint — is the difference between a result that lasts and one that peels within a few years.
Watch: Our team covers what cracked and fading stucco looks like and how we address it during the prep process.
Why Stucco Cracks and Fades
Stucco is composed of three primary ingredients — Portland cement, lime, and water — applied wet over a metal wire framework called a lath. Once it cures, it forms a hard, durable exterior shell. But because it is cement-based, some degree of cracking is built into the material’s nature.
As stucco cures and as the structure beneath it shifts with temperature, moisture, and settling, small cracks develop. This is normal. The concern is not whether cracking occurs — it will — but rather the type of cracking, its severity, and whether water is getting in.
Fading is a different issue. Stucco itself does not really “fade” the way paint does, but the paint or color coat applied over it absolutely does. In Phoenix, that process accelerates significantly due to UV intensity and heat.
How to Read the Crack Patterns
Not all stucco cracks are the same, and the pattern they form can tell you a lot about what is happening beneath the surface. Before repainting, it is worth knowing what you are looking at.
Hairline Cracks
Thin cracks — roughly one-sixteenth of an inch or less — are standard in any cement-based material. They are typically cosmetic and can be sealed with a fresh coat of paint applied over properly primed stucco. On their own, they are not a structural concern.
Diagonal Cracks
Diagonal cracking, especially around window and door corners, usually indicates house settling or movement in the foundation. This type of crack warrants a closer look before painting. Patching without addressing the underlying movement may mean the crack reopens.
Horizontal or Vertical Grid Patterns
A regular pattern of horizontal and vertical cracks typically points to a problem with the metal lath beneath the stucco. This is a more involved repair and may require re-dashing — re-applying stucco — over the affected area.
Spider Cracking
Random clusters of cracks radiating outward from a central point — often called spider cracking or map cracking — typically indicate that the base coat did not cure properly when the stucco was first applied. This pattern is more common on newer homes where construction materials and methods have shifted.
⚠ Do not paint over unrepaired cracks
Fading Stucco in the Phoenix Climate
Stucco fading is not as structurally significant as cracking, but it is one of the most visible signs that a home needs attention. In the Phoenix metro, the color coat on stucco breaks down faster than in nearly any other region of the country, for a few compounding reasons.
UV exposure: Phoenix averages over 300 sunny days per year. Paint pigments and binders break down under sustained UV radiation. Products not specifically formulated for high-UV desert climates will fade noticeably faster.
Heat cycling: Summer temperatures regularly exceed 110°F. The expansion and contraction of the stucco surface under that kind of daily thermal stress causes the paint film to degrade faster, losing sheen and color depth even when structurally intact.
Staining from ground splash: When it does rain — especially during monsoon season — water splashes off the ground and drives dust and debris up onto the lower portions of the exterior walls. Over time, this leaves staining that looks like fading but is actually surface contamination. Pressure washing can address this when done as part of a prep process, but it needs to happen before paint goes on — not after.
The warranty Crash of Rhinos Painting stands behind on exterior paint work — well above Arizona’s 2-year legal minimum, and backed by a prep process that addresses stucco damage before any paint is applied.
What Phoenix Weather Does to Your Exterior
The combination of forces stucco faces in the Phoenix metro is genuinely demanding. It is useful to understand the full cycle, because each season introduces different stress on the exterior.
June through September — peak heat: Sustained temperatures above 100°F bake the stucco surface daily. This causes thermal expansion and contraction, which widens existing hairline cracks and stresses any area where paint is not fully bonded. This is not the right time to repaint — the conditions work against proper adhesion and curing.
Monsoon season (July–September): Arizona’s monsoons bring fast, intense moisture after a long dry stretch. Any unsealed cracks absorb that water. When temperatures spike again, the trapped moisture expands, causing stucco to crack further and paint to lift. Woodpecker holes, common on Phoenix-area homes, are especially vulnerable — they provide a direct path for water behind the surface.
Winter and spring: These months offer more moderate conditions and are generally the better window for exterior painting projects. Temperatures are manageable and humidity is lower, both of which support proper paint adhesion and curing time.
What a Proper Stucco Repair Looks Like
When homeowners call us about cracked or fading stucco, the conversation usually starts with the paint. But the paint is the last step. Everything before it — the prep — is what determines how long the result will last.
Here is what the prep process at Crash of Rhinos actually involves on a stucco home:
Pull back rocks and landscaping
Full access to the stem wall requires clearing landscaping rocks away from the base of the home. This also protects the landscaping during the painting process.
Pressure wash the entire exterior
A professional-grade pressure wash removes surface dirt, chalk from degraded paint, and biological growth. Paint will not bond to a contaminated surface — this step cannot be skipped. The surface must be fully dry before any further work proceeds.
Repair all stucco damage
Every crack, hole, and area of damage gets patched and texture-matched. Our stucco repair work includes hairline cracks, larger structural cracks, and woodpecker holes — which are common on homes throughout the Phoenix metro. Getting the texture match right matters: patched areas that look obviously different from the surrounding stucco will be visible through the paint.
Scrape, sand, and treat the stem wall
The stem wall — the concrete base of the home at ground level — takes the most abuse from ground moisture, especially during monsoon season. Our team scrapes old peeling paint, sands the surface smooth, and applies DRYLOK to waterproof it before paint goes on.
Mask windows, doors, and fixtures
Everything that is not being painted gets covered with plastic sheeting and tape. Light fixtures that can be removed are taken off the wall. Clean masking lines are what separate professional results from sloppy ones.
Prime before paint
Primer is the bonding layer between the stucco and the finish coat. On a repaired surface, it is especially critical — it seals the patched areas and creates a uniform surface for the paint to adhere to. Skipping or rushing priming is one of the most common causes of early paint failure on stucco homes.
For a full walkthrough of the painting process that follows these steps, see our house painting process page.
The best time to address stucco damage is when you are already having the exterior repainted. Combining stucco repair with a repaint is more efficient than doing them separately, and it ensures the repairs are properly primed and finished — not left as raw patches on a painted wall.
When to Address It
There is no specific number of years after which every stucco home needs to be repainted. The right time depends on what you are seeing. Here are the signs that the timing is right:
If you are seeing more than one or two of these, a free proposal walkthrough is the right next step. Our team will inspect the exterior, identify all areas that need repair, and give you an honest, upfront scope of work before any commitment is made.
Crash of Rhinos serves homeowners across Phoenix, Mesa, Tempe, Chandler, Gilbert, Peoria, Glendale, Scottsdale, Surprise, Sun City, Goodyear, and Queen Creek. See our full service area coverage, or take a look at completed projects to see what the results look like.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is cracked stucco a serious structural problem?
It depends on the type and pattern of cracking. Hairline cracks up to about one-sixteenth of an inch are common in any cement-based material and are generally cosmetic. Wider cracks, diagonal cracks, or a pattern of spider cracking can indicate settling, lath issues, or improper curing and should be evaluated by a professional before repainting.
What do different crack patterns in stucco mean?
Diagonal cracks typically indicate house settling or seismic movement. A regular horizontal or vertical grid pattern usually points to an issue with the metal lath beneath the stucco. Spider cracking — random clusters of cracks radiating outward — often indicates that the base coat did not cure properly when the stucco was originally applied.
Why does stucco fade so quickly in Phoenix?
Phoenix receives intense UV exposure year-round and summer temperatures regularly exceed 110 degrees. That combination breaks down the pigments and binders in exterior paint faster than in most other climates. Paint products not specifically formulated for desert UV exposure will fade significantly faster than those designed for Arizona conditions.
Can I paint over cracked stucco without repairing it first?
No. Painting over unrepaired cracks traps the underlying damage and gives the appearance of a fix without actually addressing it. Cracks that let moisture in will continue to do so beneath the new paint, and that moisture can cause the new coat to bubble, peel, or fail early. Proper stucco repair must happen before primer and paint are applied.
How do Phoenix monsoons affect stucco?
Monsoon storms bring intense, sudden moisture after months of extreme dryness. Any cracks or gaps in the stucco allow that water to penetrate the surface. When the sun returns and temperatures spike, that trapped moisture expands and can cause stucco to crack further, paint to peel, and in severe cases, underlying structure to deteriorate.
What is involved in a professional stucco repair before repainting?
A thorough stucco repair process includes pulling back landscaping rocks for full access, pressure washing the exterior, patching all cracks and holes with texture-matched stucco material, scraping and treating the stem wall, masking windows and fixtures, priming the repaired surface, and then applying finish coats of paint. Skipping any of these steps compromises the longevity of the finished job.
When is the best time to repaint a stucco home in Phoenix?
Fall and spring are the best windows. Moderate temperatures and lower humidity allow paint to adhere and cure correctly. Painting during peak summer months (June through September) is not recommended due to extreme heat and monsoon moisture, both of which can interfere with proper bonding and drying.
Does Crash of Rhinos Painting handle stucco repairs as part of an exterior paint job?
Yes. Stucco repair is built into the standard prep process at Crash of Rhinos Painting. Their crews patch cracks, fill woodpecker holes, match stucco textures, scrape and treat stem walls, and apply DRYLOK waterproofing before primer and paint go on. They offer a 7-year warranty on their exterior paint work, which reflects confidence in that process.
Cracked or Fading Stucco? Let’s Take a Look.
We offer free proposals for homeowners across the Phoenix metro. Our team will walk your exterior, identify what needs to be repaired, and give you an honest scope of work — no pressure, no shortcuts.
Request Your Free Proposal