What Paint Correction Actually Is
Paint correction is the process of removing a microscopic layer of clear coat to level out swirl marks, light scratches, water spots, and oxidation. It's done with a dual-action or rotary polisher, specific cutting and finishing compounds, and several passes per panel. Done properly, it restores true gloss and clarity — not a chemical trick, actual physical correction.
Correction vs. Polish vs. Wax
A wax hides imperfections temporarily. A one-step polish removes light defects and refines the finish. A full multi-stage correction is a deeper process that uses progressively finer abrasives to remove most visible defects. We use a paint depth gauge to track how much clear coat is being removed so the car isn't over-corrected.
When You Need It
If your paint looks hazy under direct sunlight, if you can see swirl marks around the door handles, or if there are water spots that survive washing — those are all candidates for correction. A pre-coating correction is also standard before any ceramic coating, because you're sealing the paint in whatever condition it's in.
How Long It Takes
A single-stage enhancement on a sedan takes 4–6 hours. A full two-stage correction takes 10–20 hours depending on paint hardness and defect depth. Three-stage corrections on show cars can run two full days. Anyone promising a full correction in under three hours is cutting corners.
Protecting the Work
Correction without follow-up protection is a waste. Once the clear coat is leveled and refined, seal it with a ceramic coating, sealant, or high-grade wax so the gloss lasts. Otherwise you're paying for a finish that'll fade back into swirls within months of normal washing.
