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Palm Springs, FL

Painters in Palm Springs. Apartment turnovers, mid-century homes.

From the dense apartment complexes along Congress Avenue to the 1960s ranch homes of Crest Haven — Palm Springs has its own work mix. 25 years of brushwork in PBC's most diverse village.

I · Local context

Dense, diverse, and growing.

Palm Springs is a 4-square-mile village just west of Lake Worth Beach. About 28,000 residents, 65% Hispanic majority — the only municipality in Palm Beach County with a Hispanic majority. It was the fastest-growing village in PBC between 2010 and 2020 (+42% population). Founded in 1957 on the former Boutwell dairy farm, the village has its own character: working-class and middle-class, multigenerational households, family-oriented.

What that means for painters: the work mix here is different from the rest of PBC. About 37% of housing is in large apartment complexes — tenant turnover repaints are routine, not occasional. About 31% is single-family detached, mostly 1960s and 70s ranches. Duplexes and small apartment buildings make up another 16%. Less estate work, more apartment work, more bilingual coordination.

We've worked Palm Springs for years. Bilingual EN/ES is essential here, not optional. So is fair pricing — this is a working-class village, not Boca Raton, and we don't pretend otherwise. Same crew, same standards, prices that match the work.

II · Areas

Where we work in Palm Springs.

From Forest Hill Boulevard south to 10th Avenue, between Military Trail and Florida Mango Road.

Crest Haven

Affordable, family-friendly gated community. 1960s and 70s mid-century ranch construction. Standard repaint cycles, predictable failure modes.

Lakewood & the engineered lake chain

Original 1957 village townsite. Artificial north-to-south oriented lakes engineered for drainage. Surrounding mid-century housing, mature trees, established families. Lakewood now also has the 96-unit Lego-style RENCO USA recycled-block apartment complex.

Palm Springs Village center

The walkable core — library, police HQ, Village of Palm Springs Park all within walking distance. Mix of mid-century single-family and small apartment buildings. Small-town atmosphere despite the urbanization.

Congress Avenue corridor

The commercial spine. Large apartment complexes, mixed-use, retail centers. Most of the village's apartment housing concentrates here.

10th Avenue North

Older mid-century single-family on standard lots. Eclectic mix of homes, well-established families, mature landscaping.

Lake Worth Road corridor

Newer commercial and residential mix at the southern edge of the village. Some 2000s+ construction alongside older mid-century homes.

Apartment complexes — throughout

Palm Springs has 37% of housing in large apartment complexes. Tenant turnover repaints are routine. We work with property managers, on-site maintenance, and individual unit owners across the village.

Duplexes & small apartment buildings

16% of village housing. 2-unit and small multi-unit structures, often owner-occupied with one rental unit. Mid-century construction, regular interior turnover work.

III · Common projects here

What we typically do in Palm Springs.

More apartment and rental-turnover work than anywhere else in our service area.

Apartment turnover repaints

Single-unit interiors between tenants. 1–2 day turnaround. We work with property managers and individual landlords. Standard scope: walls, ceilings, trim, occasional cabinet refresh.

Bulk apartment-complex work

When property managers need multiple units painted at once — common during major lease cycles. Volume pricing, scheduled phases, coordinated logistics.

Mid-century single-family interiors

1960s and 70s ranch homes getting refreshed by long-term owners or new buyers. Plaster wall handling, original terrazzo floors to protect, often retaining the home's mid-century character.

Mid-century exterior repaints

Stucco-on-block construction, smaller homes than the suburban tracts further west, denser lots. 2–4 day jobs typical.

Duplex & small multi-unit

Owner-occupied with rental income. Different scopes for the owner's unit vs. the rental units. We coordinate so the rental side stays available for tenants during the work.

Bilingual EN/ES coordination

Most of our Palm Springs jobs involve some Spanish-language coordination — with property managers, with homeowners, with tenants. Standard for us, not an extra service.

IV · Palm Springs-specific

Different work mix, same crew.

Palm Springs has the most concentrated apartment-complex work in our service area. 37% of village housing is in large apartment complexes — well above the PBC average. That means our Palm Springs calendar has more single-unit turnover repaints, more bulk apartment work for property managers, and more coordination with on-site maintenance teams than other cities. We've built that part of our business around the village's housing mix.

Bilingual is essential, not optional. Palm Springs is the only municipality in PBC with a Hispanic majority. Many of our customers, tenants, and on-site contacts are more comfortable in Spanish. Omar is a native Spanish speaker; the whole crew is bilingual. We don't treat Spanish-speaking customers differently than English-speaking ones — same estimates, same crew, same standards.

Pricing matches the work. Palm Springs is a working-class village. Median home value is $282K, well below Boca Raton or Palm Beach Gardens. We don't quote estate-tier prices for cottage-tier homes. A typical apartment turnover repaint is $700–$1,500. A mid-century single-family interior runs $2,500–$4,500. A whole-house exterior is $3,500–$6,500. Predictable, fair, and the same standards we apply everywhere else.

VI · FAQ

Common questions from Palm Springs homeowners and landlords.

Do you work with property managers and landlords on apartment turnover?

Yes — it's a major part of our Palm Springs work. Single-unit turnovers (1–2 day jobs), bulk apartment-complex work, and coordination with on-site maintenance teams. We invoice landlords directly and work around tenant move-in schedules.

How much does an apartment turnover repaint cost in Palm Springs?

Standard 1–2 bedroom apartment turnover runs $700–$1,500 depending on size, prep needs, and whether cabinets or popcorn ceilings are involved. Volume pricing available for property managers doing multiple units. Flat written estimate after walking the unit.

Mid-century single-family home repaint cost?

Interior whole-house typically $2,500–$4,500 for an average Palm Springs home. Exterior repaint $3,500–$6,500. Cabinet refinishing or popcorn ceiling removal adds to that. Flat written estimate after walking the job.

¿Hablan español?

Sí — Omar es hablante nativo de español y todo el equipo es bilingüe. Atendemos en inglés y español con cotizaciones, contratos, y coordinación con inquilinos. La mitad de nuestro trabajo en Palm Springs ocurre en español.

Are you fully insured for apartment-complex work?

Yes — general liability coverage with certificates available on request. We meet property management insurance requirements for most Palm Springs apartment complexes.

Do you handle pre-1980 popcorn ceiling work?

The Palm Springs housing stock is mostly 1960s and 70s, so pre-1980 asbestos testing applies to many homes here. We test before any popcorn removal. If asbestos is present, we coordinate with a licensed abatement contractor before our work begins. Safety first.

Ready to start?

Same crew. Same standards. Your Palm Springs unit next.

Free walk-through. No deposit. No pressure. Call or text and we'll be by.