Exterior Painting Weather in Buckeye, AZ: 10-Day Windows & Best Months
The exterior painting season in Buckeye runs October through April — 7 months averaging at least 8 workable days by NOAA 1991–2020 normals. The single best month is April, averaging 28 days that clear every check — highs of 86°F, lows near 57°F, and a 5% daily rain chance. Below: today through day 10 against the label rules, then the year at a glance.
GOOD — every label check passes MARGINAL — one soft fail NO — hard fail or several soft
The rules this check uses
These rows are what the Buckeye strip checks hour by hour: consensus paint-can requirements, plus the low-temp-formula band the engine marks MARGINAL.
| Check | Threshold | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | 50–90°F (low-temp formulas from 35°F) | The film (or mix) chemistry runs on temperature — both while you work and for the first hours after. |
| Overnight low | ≥35°F during the first 24 h (≥40°F preferred) | Curing continues after dark; the first night can undo a perfect afternoon. |
| Dry before | ≤0.05" rain in the prior 12 h; watch back to 24 h | Checked backward from your start hour using the two look-back days in the forecast data. |
| Dry after | <0.05" rain for 24 h after | The engine sums forecast rain hour by hour through the cure window for Buckeye. |
| Evening dew-point spread | ≥5°F from 6–11 pm | When air temperature meets the dew point, water condenses on your fresh work first. |
| Daytime humidity | ≤80% | Read as the daytime maximum, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; within 3 points of the limit counts as marginal. |
| Wind | ≤15 mph (brush only up to 20 mph) | Wind dries the leading edge too fast and carries overspray. |
Always follow your product label — formulas vary. The table above is the typical range across major manufacturers, not a promise about your can.
Best months for exterior painting in Buckeye
| Month | Avg high | Avg low | Rain odds/day | Workable days | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 66°F | 43°F | 13% | 27 | |
| February | 70°F | 46°F | 14% | 25 | |
| March | 78°F | 51°F | 11% | 28 | |
| April | 86°F | 57°F | 5% | 28 | |
| May | 94°F | 65°F | 3% | 3 | |
| June | 104°F | 74°F | 2% | 0 | |
| July | 106°F | 81°F | 10% | 0 | |
| August | 105°F | 81°F | 13% | 0 | |
| September | 99°F | 74°F | 11% | 0 | |
| October | 88°F | 61°F | 7% | 19 | |
| November | 75°F | 49°F | 8% | 28 | |
| December | 64°F | 42°F | 13% | 27 |
Figure 184 workable days a year in Buckeye, spread across October through April. Shoulder months turn on the overnight rule: an afternoon at 88°F passes, but the 40°F night floor is what actually opens the season in October. The Arizona table ranks every listed city by the same math.
July here fails on heat, not rain: the average high of 106°F sits over the 90°F label ceiling, and 31 of 31 days typically top 90°F. Midsummer work moves to dawn or waits for April.
If the walls pass, the roof might too: roof coating in Buckeye uses the same film chemistry with tighter dew and wind limits.
Grain-of-salt note: Buckeye's numbers ride on Litchfield Park, Az Us, 27.0 km away — the closest station with full 1991–2020 normals. Month rankings are robust to that distance; single-day counts less so. The live strip uses the city's own coordinates. Scoring details are on the methodology page.
Buckeye by the numbers
- Hottest month: July — 106°F average high, 31 days topping 90°F.
- The cold floor is December at 64°F afternoons and 42°F overnight.
- Measurable rain: February leads at 14% of days; June is the quiet end at 2%.
- Bottom line for Buckeye: roughly 184 workable exterior painting days a year.
Prep checklist
- Find application day plus 24 dry hours with nights at 40°F+; Buckeye offers that pairing most often in April (28 workable days).
- Scrape, then wash: loose paint and chalk go first, because latex only grips solid substrate.
- Give washed siding 24 hours — north walls in Buckeye can need double after a February-grade soak.
- An ir surface thermometer settles arguments: label limits bind the wall surface, which outruns Buckeye's air by 20°F+ in sun.
- Bare wood gets primer, stains get stain-blocker, gaps get caulk — in that order, on dry substrate.
- Sequence walls so you always paint in shade; midday sun skins latex before it levels.
- Cut in with an angled brush set, roll a wet edge, and drop the sprayer plan over 15 mph.
- Stop 2 hours before sunset: with April lows near 57°F, Buckeye's siding meets the dew point before the late news.
Gear that saves a window
Transparency note: gear links here become affiliate links only when the program is enabled — today they are plain references. See the affiliate disclosure.
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Angled brush set
Control at trim, corners, and cut-in lines.
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Exterior paint + primer
One-coat hide on sound, prepped siding.
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IR surface thermometer
Reads the wall, not the air — sun-baked siding runs hotter.
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Extension pole
Second-story reach without moving the ladder every pass.
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Canvas drop cloths
Grips ladders and won't shred like plastic.
FAQ
What temperature can you paint outside?
50–90°F for standard formulas, 35°F+ for low-temp lines, and the wall itself must stay 5°F above the dew point. In Buckeye the practical range is set by nights: the 40°F overnight floor arrives around January and leaves after December.
How many dry hours does exterior paint need before rain?
Plan 24 rain-free hours after the last coat; the engine fails any day that can't deliver them. With Buckeye's rain odds swinging from 2% of days in June to 14% in February, the strip above is mostly a search for that dry pair.
Why does dew ruin fresh paint?
Fresh latex needs hours before it can take standing water; evening condensation gets there first on cooling siding. The check: air minus dew point from 6–11 p.m., 5°F or better. Humid February evenings in Buckeye are when GOOD afternoons hide failing nights.
Can you paint in high humidity?
Up to about 80% daytime RH — above that, dry times stretch until the film meets the evening dew. 80–83% reads MARGINAL on the engine; more is a fail. Pair humidity with Buckeye's dew-point spread rule and paint mornings-into-early-afternoons in the humid months.
What is surface temperature vs air temperature?
Two different numbers: air (what the app shows) and the wall (what the paint feels). Sun adds 20°F or more; evening radiational cooling subtracts. That's why the engine checks the 90°F top on Buckeye's hot afternoons and the dew-point spread after sunset — both are surface problems the air forecast hides.
When does painting season end in Buckeye?
The closing bell is the overnight floor. April is the last month averaging viable nights (57°F lows); after that, even warm afternoons sit on failing nights. Spring reopens around October from the same rule.
Related
Other projects in Buckeye
- Deck Staining in Buckeye
- Driveway Sealing in Buckeye
- Concrete Pouring in Buckeye
- Roof Coating in Buckeye
- Lawn Seeding in Buckeye
- All outdoor project weather in Buckeye
Exterior Painting nearby
Guides
Climatology: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via LITCHFIELD PARK, AZ US (27.0 km from Buckeye center, elevation 1040 ft); live outlook by Open-Meteo.