
Carmel HOA boards have gotten sharper than they were a decade ago — they ask about the wood, the prep, the warranty, the insurance, and the communication plan. Here's what good HOA exterior painting looks like when it's done right, told through a real Carmel townhome community we just finished: Monon & Main, at 428 Neuman Way, right behind Bub's Burgers.
By the time most boards call us, the problem is two years past the point where a clean repaint would have solved everything. There's wood damage on a few balconies, the trim has lost its color line, and three residents are pointing out three different things. The contractor who wins the work isn't always the cheapest — it's the one who can walk the property with the board and answer one question honestly: what needs to happen here, in what order, before any paint goes on?
Why HOA exterior painting in Carmel is its own discipline
Carmel townhome and condo communities sit in a specific category. They're not single-family residential — the project economics, insurance requirements, and resident communication are different. They're not pure commercial — the buildings are people's homes, and residents are watching every step. The contractor who succeeds here treats HOA painting as its own discipline, with a real walk-through, a written scope that distinguishes "must do" from "consider for next cycle," a phasing plan that respects budget years, and a wood-repair plan that gets done before paint goes on.
Case study: Monon & Main townhome community in Carmel
Monon & Main is a townhome community at 428 Neuman Way in Carmel — right behind Bub's Burgers. By the time Beacon was brought in, the exterior had reached the point where the community's curb appeal didn't match the quality of life inside.
What we found on the walk-through
- Trim had sun-faded unevenly. South-facing fascia had lost crispness years before the north sides did. Painting all sides at once was the only way to get a uniform community appearance.
- Wood components needed repair before paint. Balcony rails, select fascia sections, and a handful of door surrounds had soft spots and minor rot. Paint over them and the repaint fails inside two seasons.
- Masonry needed pressure washing first. Years of accumulated dust, pollen, and traffic film. Skip this step and paint adhesion suffers at the trim-to-brick transitions.
What we did
Beacon handled it end to end: pressure washed every exterior surface; repaired wood trim, balcony rails, and damaged surfaces before primer; brightened the trim across all buildings with a consistent line; repainted select exterior surfaces; coordinated daily start times, quiet zones, and resident communication with the property manager.
The result
The community reads as deliberately maintained rather than weathered. Trim lines are sharp, surfaces are uniform building to building, wood components are stable for the next painting cycle. See the full Monon & Main project page for additional photos.
Three signals your Carmel HOA repaint is ready
- Trim color is uneven across the property. Sun fading is unforgiving in Carmel. If south-facing trim has clearly lost color and north-facing trim still looks fresh, you're at the point where the community would benefit from a coordinated repaint rather than building-by-building touch-up.
- Residents are flagging wood issues. When wood damage shows up in complaints, it's almost always more widespread than the complaints suggest. A proper walk-through finds 3-5x more wood issues than the resident reports.
- Last full exterior was 7-10+ years ago. Indiana weather + Carmel seasonal swings push high-quality exterior paint to a 7-10 year life. Past 10 years, you're accumulating wood damage costs the paint would have prevented.
What good HOA painting communication looks like in
- Written, line-item scope before the contract is signed — not after.
- $1M+ liability insurance, workers' comp, and a current COI named to your community.
- Resident communication plan: how residents are notified, when, by whom, what to expect on their building's day.
- Clean daily site presentation — ladders down, tarps off balcony rails by end of day.
- A 1-year workmanship warranty in writing.
- A walk-through with the property manager when the work is complete.
Anything less than that and you're hiring a residential painter, not an HOA painter.
Beacon Painting serves HOA & townhome communities across Carmel
Beacon Painting is a commercial painting contractor focused on HOA communities, condo associations, and multi-family properties across Carmel, Fishers, Westfield, Noblesville, and the greater Indianapolis area. We don't take residential single-family work. We do walk-throughs, written scopes, phased plans, and follow-up after work is done. As CAI members, we understand how HOA decision-making actually works.
To start a conversation, request a walk-through or call (765) 754-4366 (answers 7am-7pm ET, voicemail any time).
The work, in photos
Five views from across the Monon & Main community after exterior repaint and wood repair — corner detail, garage rows, balconies, and full driveway perspective.




Frequently asked questions
How long does a townhome community exterior repaint take?
A 6-8 building Carmel community with wood repairs typically runs 4-6 weeks of active work, weather permitting, broken into building-by-building cycles so residents always have parking and access.
Will residents be displaced during the work?
No. Beacon coordinates the schedule around residents: ladders up in the morning, work during the day, site cleared by end of day.
What's the difference between HOA painting and residential painting?
HOA painting requires different insurance, scheduling discipline, communication plans, and crew management because work happens around residents rather than in a vacant house. Most residential painters aren't set up to do this.
Does Beacon work in Carmel specifically?
Yes. Carmel is one of our primary service areas, with completed projects across the Carmel and Hamilton County area. See the Monon & Main case study.