Exterior Painting Weather in Tyler, TX: 10-Day Windows & Best Months
The exterior painting season in Tyler runs February through June — 9 months averaging at least 8 workable days by NOAA 1991–2020 normals. The single best month is October, averaging 24 days that clear every check — highs of 78°F, lows near 57°F, and a 23% 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 Tyler 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 Tyler. |
| 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 Tyler
| Month | Avg high | Avg low | Rain odds/day | Workable days | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 58°F | 38°F | 30% | 0 | |
| February | 63°F | 42°F | 32% | 18 | |
| March | 70°F | 49°F | 30% | 22 | |
| April | 77°F | 55°F | 29% | 21 | |
| May | 84°F | 64°F | 30% | 22 | |
| June | 90°F | 71°F | 28% | 11 | |
| July | 93°F | 74°F | 23% | 0 | |
| August | 94°F | 73°F | 22% | 0 | |
| September | 88°F | 67°F | 22% | 20 | |
| October | 78°F | 57°F | 23% | 24 | |
| November | 66°F | 47°F | 27% | 22 | |
| December | 59°F | 40°F | 30% | 11 |
Figure 170 workable days a year in Tyler, spread across February through June. Shoulder months turn on the overnight rule: an afternoon at 63°F passes, but the 40°F night floor is what actually opens the season in February. The Texas table ranks every listed city by the same math.
July here fails on heat, not rain: the average high of 93°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 October.
If the walls pass, the roof might too: roof coating in Tyler uses the same film chemistry with tighter dew and wind limits.
Source honesty: every monthly figure on this page is the 1991–2020 normal at Tyler, Tx Us, 2.0 km from Tyler's center — your block's shade lines and wind exposure sit on top of that baseline. Scoring details are on the methodology page.
Tyler by the numbers
- Hottest month: August — 94°F average high, 31 days topping 90°F.
- The cold floor is January at 58°F afternoons and 38°F overnight.
- Measurable rain: February leads at 32% of days; August is the quiet end at 22%.
- The 40°F-night season spans February–December here.
- Bottom line for Tyler: roughly 170 workable exterior painting days a year.
Prep checklist
- Find application day plus 24 dry hours with nights at 40°F+; Tyler offers that pairing most often in October (24 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 Tyler can need double after a February-grade soak.
- An ir surface thermometer settles arguments: label limits bind the wall surface, which outruns Tyler'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 October lows near 57°F, Tyler'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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Extension pole
Second-story reach without moving the ladder every pass.
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IR surface thermometer
Reads the wall, not the air — sun-baked siding runs hotter.
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Canvas drop cloths
Grips ladders and won't shred like plastic.
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Exterior paint + primer
One-coat hide on sound, prepped siding.
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Angled brush set
Control at trim, corners, and cut-in lines.
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 Tyler the practical range is set by nights: the 40°F overnight floor arrives around February 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 Tyler's rain odds swinging from 22% of days in August to 32% 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 Tyler 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 Tyler'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 Tyler's hot afternoons and the dew-point spread after sunset — both are surface problems the air forecast hides.
When does painting season end in Tyler?
When nights stop clearing 40°F — in Tyler that's typically after June, when average lows hit 71°F and falling. Low-temp formulas (35°F rated) buy a few extra weeks; the engine shows them as MARGINAL days before the hard close.
Related
Other projects in Tyler
- Deck Staining in Tyler
- Driveway Sealing in Tyler
- Concrete Pouring in Tyler
- Roof Coating in Tyler
- Lawn Seeding in Tyler
- All outdoor project weather in Tyler
Exterior Painting nearby
Guides
Climatology: NOAA 1991–2020 normals via TYLER, TX US (2.0 km from Tyler center, elevation 550 ft); live outlook by Open-Meteo.