Monocoat Render Facade: Method, Finishes and Price
Once the concrete block walls are built and the building is watertight, the facade needs finishing. Monocoat render (one-coat render) has been the standard for new-build houses for thirty years: waterproofing, decoration and tinted finish in a single machine pass. Practical, fast, economical — but application is unforgiving. A facade with the wrong mix, poor application or work done in bad weather will crack, powder or blister within a single winter. This guide gives you the method, standard thicknesses, available finishes and the real price per m².
What is monocoat render?
Monocoat render (also called one-coat render or OC render) is a factory-mixed mortar, supplied in 25 or 30 kg bags, designed for the external finish of masonry facades. Unlike traditional render which requires three successive coats (spatterdash, body coat, finish coat), monocoat is applied in a single operation (one or two wet-on-wet passes) — hence the name.
It combines three functions in one product:
- Bond to the substrate (replaces the spatterdash coat)
- Waterproofing of the facade (prevents rainwater penetrating the wall)
- Decorative finish — through-coloured, available in around a hundred shades
Typical composition: CEM II cement or hydraulic lime NHL, graded sand 0/2 or 0/3, admixtures (water repellents, water retainers, air entrainers, fibres), mineral pigments for colour.
Monocoat vs traditional 3-coat render: the comparison
| Criterion | Monocoat render | Traditional 3-coat render |
|---|---|---|
| Number of passes | 1 (sometimes 2 wet-on-wet) | 3 (spatterdash + body + finish) |
| Total thickness | 10-15 mm | 20-25 mm |
| Application time 100 m² | 1 to 2 days | 5 to 8 days |
| Application | Machine spray (required) | Machine or hand |
| Through-coloured | Yes (RAL, NCS colour range) | No (paint or additive) |
| Vapour permeance | Medium | Good (especially lime) |
| Suitability for old/stone buildings | Limited | Recommended |
| Installed price (per m²) | £30-50 | £45-75 |
| Aesthetics | Modern, uniform | Authentic, nuanced |
Tip — Monocoat render is suited to new masonry (concrete block, clay block, shuttered concrete, aircrete with a specific OC1 product). For renovation of an old stone or earth building, use a 3-coat hydraulic lime render: wall breathability is essential and monocoat traps moisture in the fabric.
Monocoat render classifications: OC1, OC2, OC3
The NF EN 998-1 standard classifies monocoat renders by hardness (compressive strength) and recommended use:
| Class | Strength | Use | Substrate |
|---|---|---|---|
| OC1 | CS I (0.4-2.5 MPa) | Soft substrates (aircrete, hollow clay block Monomur) | Thin-joint masonry |
| OC2 | CS II (1.5-5 MPa) | Standard use for housing | Concrete block, standard clay block |
| OC3 | CS III (3.5-7.5 MPa) | Industrial buildings, highly exposed locations | Concrete, block in very exposed zones |
Most new-build houses with concrete block receive OC2. Choosing OC3 on a standard block is counter-productive: the render, harder than the substrate, cracks when the wall moves.
Warning — The golden rule in facade rendering: the finish coat must be softer than the substrate, never the reverse. OC3 on Monomur clay block guarantees radial cracking by the first winter. Always check the manufacturer’s technical data sheet (Weber, Parex, Vicat, Knauf, PRB) for compatibility with your substrate.
Compatible substrates and preparation
Compatible substrates
- Concrete block (laid in mortar with filled joints)
- Clay block — standard or precision-ground
- Shuttered concrete or aircrete (with specific OC1 product)
- Sound existing render after diagnosis and sounding
- Stone or rubble masonry: not recommended — traditional lime render required
Substrate requirements before application
Before any spraying, the substrate must be:
- Clean: no dust, no release oil, no moss or algae
- Sound: no active cracks, no de-bonded areas, joints repaired as needed
- Flat: tolerance 10 mm on a 2 m straight-edge — otherwise fill or hack off high spots
- Damp at surface but not saturated: wet down with a hose 24 h before in summer, to prevent the substrate drawing water from the mortar
- Cured: minimum 4 weeks for shuttered concrete, 2 weeks for fresh blockwork
Treatment of critical details
Before spraying, fit the following:
- Stop beads: aluminium profiles at the base of walls, around openings, in reveals
- Corner beads: PVC or notched aluminium at every external corner
- Fibreglass mesh (reinforcement) in crack-risk zones: above lintels, at substrate junctions, around window reveals
- Resilient strips at thresholds and window sills to absorb movement
- Protection of joinery, thresholds and floors with plastic sheeting and tape
Best practice — Always fit fibreglass mesh (4x4 mm mesh, 160 g/m²) in a 300 mm band above and below every lintel and window sill, and at every material change (block/concrete, block/brick). That is about £25 of mesh for a 150 m² facade — and it is what prevents the characteristic V-cracks around windows two years later.
Application method
Required equipment

Monocoat render must be machine-applied. Hand application cannot achieve the homogeneity and density required for waterproofing, and the output rate is unworkable (a hand plasterer covers 10 m²/day; the machine covers 80 to 120 m²/day).
- Rendering machine such as PFT G4 / G5, Putzmeister MP25, m-tec Duo-Mix — hire: £120-200/day + deposit
- Compressor integrated or separate (minimum air flow 300 l/min)
- 25 m spray hose, spray gun with nozzle (10 or 12 mm nozzle for monocoat)
- Aluminium screed rule 2 m (H-section or feather-edge)
- Floats: sponge, polystyrene, plastic, wood (depending on finish required)
- Trowel, skimming float, smoothing tool
- Gauge bucket and water point on site
- Full access scaffolding (not trestles) — safety and access to full height
- PPE: FFP3 mask (silica), safety glasses, nitrile gloves, hard hat, safety boots
Water dosing — the key to results
The monocoat bag is pre-batched. The only variable you control is the gauging water. Too much water = render that slumps, shrinkage cracks. Too little = poor spray, poor adhesion.
- Follow the manufacturer’s technical data sheet to the letter (e.g. 4.0 to 4.5 L per 25 kg bag)
- Target consistency: firm but workable, like a thick paste
- Regular check: a small amount of render on a trowel held vertical should not run, but stay attached to the blade
The application steps
Step 1 — Spraying the first pass (build coat)
Spray horizontally in 1 m bands, starting from the top of the facade. Nozzle-to-wall distance: 20 to 30 cm. The pass is applied at approximately 8 mm thickness.
Step 2 — Rule levelling
Immediately after spraying, run the aluminium rule across the corner beads and stop beads to screed off the excess using an upward zigzag motion. This gives the required thickness and overall flatness.
Step 3 — Second pass spraying
Immediately following (without waiting for the first pass to set), spray a second pass wet-on-wet, 5 to 7 mm thick, to reach the final thickness.
Step 4 — Final straightening
A further pass with the rule to level the whole surface. Final thickness must be 10 to 15 mm (as per the product data sheet, never less than 10 mm).
Step 5 — Float compaction
After 1 to 4 hours of initial set (depending on temperature), use a damp sponge float or plastic float to compact the surface and prepare it for the finish. This is the moment when the choice of finish is executed.
Step 6 — Finish
Apply the chosen decorative finish (see next section) when the render is at the “leather-hard” stage — meaning it no longer marks under finger pressure but is still damp.
Warning — Never go back over dry render by applying a new layer to “make good” a patch. The new layer will not bond to the old and will detach. If you miss an area, you must hack back to the substrate and start again.
Decorative finishes

The choice of finish is made before the bags are delivered (it can determine the aggregate size ordered) and is executed within the narrow window after initial set.
| Finish | Technique | Appearance | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scraped | Scraping with a toothed scraper on leather-hard render | Rough texture, visible aggregates | When render is leather-hard (3-6 h) |
| Fine floated | Floating with a sponge float | Lightly granular, smooth | On fresh render |
| Crushed float | Plastic float then pressed | Cloudy effect, modern look | On fresh render |
| Ribbed (rolled) | Textured roller on fresh render | Regular parallel lines | Roller + float |
| Rustic sprayed | No smoothing, spray texture left | Heavily textured, pebble-dash effect | Direct from the gun |
| Pressed | Float applied flat in rotation | Decorative swirl effect | On leather-hard render |
Scraped finish is the most popular for housing: it conceals slight substrate imperfections and gives a durable mineral look. It requires a specific tool (the toothed scraper or scraped render tool) which removes 1 to 2 mm of laitance to expose the tinted sand.
Weather conditions
Render is a climate-sensitive product. Unfavourable weather can ruin a job, even with the best mortar available.
Application conditions
| Parameter | Recommended value | Prohibited value |
|---|---|---|
| Air temperature | 5 to 30 °C | < 5 °C or > 35 °C |
| Substrate temperature | > 5 °C for 48 h | Night frost forecast |
| Relative humidity | 40-80 % | Fog, rain |
| Wind | < 30 km/h | Direct drying wind |
| Sun | Apply in shade | Direct south-facing sun in summer |
| Rain | None forecast within 24 h | Rain imminent |
Warning — In spring and autumn, the number one trap is overnight frost: even if the day is mild, a frost of -2 °C within 48 hours of spraying will blow the render apart. Always check the forecast for 48 hours — not just the day of application. If in doubt, postpone.
Protection after application
- Sheet the scaffolding if rain is forecast within 24 hours
- Shade netting or fine mist spraying on hot days (> 25 °C) to prevent over-rapid drying
- No direct sunlight on freshly rendered facades in summer
Monocoat render price
2026 price guide
| Item | Price per m² |
|---|---|
| OC2 tinted monocoat bags | £5-9 |
| Corner beads, stop beads, fibreglass mesh | £2-4 |
| Scaffolding (hire 2-3 weeks) | £4-8 |
| Machine application labour | £12-22 |
| Scraped or floated finish | £3-7 |
| Total installed | £30-50/m² |
For a house with 140 m² of facade (100 m² house, 2 storeys), budget £4,200 to £7,000 for render installed by a contractor.
Self-build: what saving is realistic?
If you take it on yourself — with a hired machine, assisted by an experienced renderer — the saving can be 40 to 50 % on labour. That is a saving of £1,700 to £2,500 on an average house. But:
- You must hire and set up the machine correctly
- You need a minimum of two people (one on the spray gun, one screeding behind)
- One bad day’s work = a facade to redo = a dead loss
- The 10-year insurance guarantee on the render is lost if done entirely as self-build
Tip — If this is your first render job, subcontracting to a specialist firm is worth the labour cost. You protect quality, guarantee, programme and your back. Keep self-build for garden walls, sheds, garage gables — surfaces where learning on the job makes sense.
Decision tree: which render to choose?
3-coat lime] A -->|Timber frame house| D[TIMBER CLADDING
or render on ITE] B -->|Over 100 m2 facade| E{Budget?} B -->|Under 100 m2| F[MONOCOAT OC2
contractor] E -->|Tight| G[MONOCOAT OC2
contractor] E -->|Comfortable| H{Aesthetic preference?} H -->|Authentic nuanced| I[LIME RENDER
3 coats] H -->|Modern uniform| G style A fill:#0F4C81,stroke:#0F4C81,color:#fff style B fill:#0F4C81,stroke:#0F4C81,color:#fff style E fill:#FDFCF9,stroke:#C67A3C,color:#0F4C81 style H fill:#FDFCF9,stroke:#C67A3C,color:#0F4C81 style C fill:#6B5876,stroke:#6B5876,color:#fff style D fill:#C67A3C,stroke:#C67A3C,color:#fff style F fill:#56C6A9,stroke:#56C6A9,color:#fff style G fill:#56C6A9,stroke:#56C6A9,color:#fff style I fill:#F58220,stroke:#F58220,color:#fff
Common mistakes to avoid
- Spraying in frost or extreme heat — the mortar does not cure correctly, cracks or blisters
- Under-dosing water to “hold” the render on the wall — poor adhesion, delamination
- Omitting fibreglass mesh over lintels and at material changes — V-cracks are inevitable
- Not dampening the substrate in summer — the render powders and de-bonds
- Going back over dry render — a patch never bonds; hack back and restart from bare substrate
- Rendering a wall too fresh (shuttered concrete < 4 weeks) — substrate shrinkage cracks the render
- Finishing too late (render already dry) — scraping is impossible, surface is milky and fragile
- Forgetting stop beads and corner beads — corners crumble within the first year
Maintenance and service life
A well-applied monocoat render lasts 30 to 50 years without major intervention. Key rules to maximise service life:
- Gentle pressure washing (max 80 bar, lance at 30 cm) every 5-10 years to remove moss and pollution
- Surface water-repellent treatment at 10-15 years to extend waterproofing performance
- Anti-moss product on north-facing or shaded facades every 2-3 years
- Local repairs to impact damage (hail, knocks) using repair mortar tinted to match — order from the original manufacturer (keep the colour reference)
Checklist before spraying
Checklist: validating your monocoat render job
- Substrate cured for a minimum of 2-4 weeks, clean, sound and flat
- Monocoat product selected (OC1/OC2/OC3) according to substrate and exposure
- Colour ordered in sufficient quantity + 10 % contingency, same batch
- Corner beads and stop beads fitted at all external corners and stops
- Fibreglass mesh fitted over lintels, sills and material changes
- Joinery, thresholds and floors protected with sheeting and tape
- Rendering machine hired, tested the day before, compressor checked
- Weather validated for 48 hours: no frost, no rain, no heatwave, no strong wind
- Substrate dampened the day before if temperature > 20 °C
- Full scaffolding in place and secured across the entire facade
- Product data sheet on site (water dosing, open time)
- Minimum 2-person team: one on the gun, one on the rule
- Finishing tools ready before spraying starts
- Full PPE: FFP3 silica mask, safety glasses, gloves, hard hat
Useful links
- Before rendering, make sure your concrete block walls are dry, clean and properly jointed
- For old buildings or a more authentic aesthetic, see our guide on traditional 3-coat render
- As a modern alternative, timber cladding offers a natural look and good insulation
- Window sills and external thresholds must be installed before render is sprayed
- Reference bodies and standards: CSTB (NF DTU 26.1), SNMI National Union of Industrial Mortars, manufacturers Weber, Parex, PRB