Repair Decision Guide
Repair or Replace Drywall? Use the Condition to Choose the Scope
The right drywall scope depends on damage size, board condition, source correction, texture, paint, access, and what finish result the owner actually needs.
Send one wide photo, close-ups, a tape-measure photo, the property address, and tell us whether the source of the damage has been corrected.

Service Fit
repair or replace drywall
Localized patching for small isolated damage
Localized board replacement for weak edges, water damage, or irregular openings
Broader wall or ceiling integration for many patches, smooth-wall goals, or finish consistency
What to Know
Localized Patching
Patching may make sense when the damage is small and isolated, the surrounding board is sound, the cause is corrected, backing can be added, and the customer accepts the stated finish boundary.
Localized Replacement
Board replacement may make sense when the opening is large or irregular, edges are weak, water damaged the gypsum core or paper, multiple holes can become one clean repair, or insulation and framing access is required.
Broader Finish Work
A larger plane may be recommended when prior repairs show throughout the surface, smooth-wall consistency matters, texture is uneven in several areas, or paint variation will remain after spot work.
Repair or Replace
The Right Scope Depends on the Condition
Localized patching
May make sense when damage is small and isolated, the surrounding board is sound, the cause is corrected, and the finish boundary is accepted.
Localized board replacement
May make sense when the opening is large or irregular, edges are weak, water damaged the core or paper, or framing and insulation access is needed.
Broader wall or ceiling work
May make sense when there are many patches, visible prior repairs, smooth-wall finish goals, uneven texture, or paint consistency concerns.
Process
From Damage Photos to Finished Repair
Send Photos and Property Details
Send the address, wide and close photos, dimensions, cause, source-correction status, access notes, and desired finish.
Confirm the Repair Path
The request is classified as photo-review, photo-quote, service visit, paid site evaluation, specialty review, or outside the confirmed launch scope.
Written Scope and Options
The scope states the repair area, removal, backing, board, tape, coats, texture, primer, paint, protection, cleanup, assumptions, exclusions, and finish expectations.
Protect and Prepare
Access is coordinated, floors and contents are protected as practical, loose material is removed, and sound edges and backing are prepared.
Patch, Tape, Finish, and Texture
Approved board and backing are installed, joints are taped, compounds are applied, and the approved texture is blended as closely as practical.
Prime, Paint, and Close Out
Primer or painting is completed only when included, the area is cleaned, and closeout notes or photos are provided where part of the approved scope.
Drying time, coat count, texture type, ventilation, access, and paint scope affect the number of visits. One-trip completion is not promised for every repair.
Larger or Complicated Scopes
$250 Site Evaluation + Written Bid Package
$250 Site Evaluation + Written Bid Package. The $250 is credited back if the construction project is approved within 30 days. It is not a deposit. Ordinary small repairs may not require it.
Work subject to attached T&C if approved. Hidden damage, code issues, access problems, or owner changes may require a written change order.
Questions
Drywall Repair FAQs
Next Step
Send the Address and Photos. We’ll Tell You the Practical Next Step.
Small, clearly visible repairs may be reviewed from photos. Larger, water-related, multi-unit, or approval-driven scopes may need a service visit or the $250 Site Evaluation + Written Bid Package.
