Stucco in NYC & Long Island: The Honest Overview
Stucco done right is a 50-year exterior cladding. Done wrong — without weather barrier, flashing, or proper expansion joints — it traps moisture and rots the wall behind it. The visible failures are always months behind the hidden ones.
Stucco sits at the intersection of building science, local code, and what your property actually needs over the next 20 years. Gotham Home Services has been doing this work across all five boroughs and both Long Island counties for years, and we've seen every failure mode the climate, the soil, and the previous contractor can deliver. That history is why we approach every stucco job the same way: figure out what the substrate, the structure, and the codebook all require, then deliver work that meets every one of those — not just the cheapest path through.
If you're reading this page you're probably weighing two or three contractors against each other, trying to figure out which one is being honest about scope and price. Our answer is straightforward: we tell you exactly what the job needs, we put it in writing with line items, and we don't change the number after the work starts. Below is the full picture of how we run stucco projects — the why, the materials, the steps, the mistakes other crews make, and what it actually costs in 2026.
Long Island Mediterranean and Tudor-style homes often have original stucco needing recoat or repair — we match texture and color to the existing finish so repairs blend.
- Stucco is one of the most fire-resistant exterior claddings available
- Traditional 3-coat stucco lasts 50+ years when detailed correctly
- EIFS (synthetic stucco) systems are fast and energy-efficient but unforgiving of detail mistakes
- Repair work is usually water-infiltration repair, not stucco repair
Materials, Specs, and Why They Matter
Material selection is where most stucco projects are won or lost. The wrong-grade material costs 10–15% less up front and fails in a fraction of the expected service life — that's not a hypothetical, it's the failure pattern we see every week when we get called in to fix someone else's recent work. The materials and specs we use on stucco jobs aren't the most expensive on the market, but they are the right grade for the loads, the climate, and the substrate they're going on.
Every stucco job we run uses the spec below as the baseline. When the site conditions call for an upgrade (heavier traffic, problem soils, exposure, historic-district compatibility) we'll quote the upgrade explicitly and explain why. When the site conditions allow a downgrade without affecting service life, we'll quote the downgrade and pass the savings through. The point is that the spec matches the job, not the other way around.
- Type S cement and graded sand for traditional 3-coat
- Galvanized self-furring lath
- Grade D building paper, double layer
- Acrylic-modified finish coats in standard and custom colors
- Sto, Dryvit, and Parex EIFS systems
- Expansion joint and casing bead trim
How We Actually Do the Work — Step by Step
One thing that separates real contractors from "guys with a truck" is that real contractors follow a documented process on every job, in the same order, every time. The stucco sequence below is what every one of our crews runs — not what we wish they'd do, what they actually do. If a step is skipped, the job doesn't pass our internal QC and it doesn't get billed as complete.
We share this process publicly for two reasons. First, so you know what to expect: when you book stucco with us, the steps below are the steps that happen, in this order, with photo documentation at each milestone. Second, so you can use it to evaluate any other quote you're considering. Ask the contractor across town what their process is — if they can't answer in this much detail, that's information.
- Substrate inspection, moisture testing on repair work
- Install weather-resistive barrier (2 layers of Grade D)
- Lath installation with proper fastener spacing
- Scratch coat application, scored horizontally
- Brown coat application, screeded flat
- Finish coat application in chosen texture
- Tool expansion joints, install trim, cure
Mistakes Other Contractors Make — and What to Watch For
We get called in to fix recent stucco work all the time — sometimes a year after the original install, sometimes within weeks. The mistakes are remarkably consistent, and almost all of them are avoidable with proper training and a no-cut-corners attitude on site. If you're vetting contractors, the list below is what to look for and what to ask about.
Some of these mistakes are technical (wrong mix, wrong gauge, wrong substrate prep). Others are procedural (no permit, no written warranty, no insurance certificate). And a few are commercial red flags — pressure to sign today, large up-front deposits, "cash discounts" that conveniently leave no paper trail. We've never asked a customer for cash, we don't take more than a reasonable mobilization deposit, and we don't pressure anyone to decide before they're ready.
Yes — we mock up sample boards on site to match texture, color, and finish before full-wall application. Building movement, missing expansion joints, wrong mix, or substrate movement. Hairline cracks are normal and sealable; wide cracks indicate a deeper issue.
- Single layer of weather barrier — guaranteed wall rot in 5–7 years
- Missing kickout flashing where roof meets wall — water tracks behind stucco
- No expansion joints on large fields — cracks across the wall
- Patching synthetic stucco with traditional mix — different expansion rates crack the seam
What Stucco Costs in 2026 — and What Moves the Number
Stucco pricing in 2026: $9–$15/sq ft for traditional 3-coat new install, $7–$12/sq ft for EIFS, $4–$8/sq ft for recoat and finish refresh, with repair work priced per scope.
Pricing for stucco is driven by a handful of variables that we lay out plainly in every quote. Two jobs that look identical from the curb can price very differently once you account for sub-grade condition, access, permit requirements, and finish level. That's why we don't give blind phone quotes — a 5-minute site visit is the difference between a number you can trust and a number that grows once the work starts.
Whatever the final number ends up being, it's documented before any work begins. Line-item scope, materials by spec, labor, permit, disposal, and any allowances all show up on the estimate. Change orders (when they're needed) are written, signed, and priced before the change happens. You never get a surprise invoice at the end.
Ongoing maintenance on stucco is straightforward when the install is done right. The schedule below is what we recommend to every customer — follow it and the work we deliver lasts the full design life.
- Square footage of wall area
- New install vs. repair vs. recoat
- 3-coat traditional vs. 1-coat or EIFS
- Scaffolding for elevations over 1 story
- Maintenance: Inspect annually for hairline cracks and seal as they appear
- Maintenance: Re-paint or recoat finish every 8–12 years
- Maintenance: Keep landscaping irrigation off the wall surface



