DIYPicks

Best Paint Sprayers for Large Projects (2026)

By The DIYPicks Team ยท Updated July 2026

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Big jobs like fences, siding, decks, and whole rooms reward a sprayer that moves paint fast and handles unthinned material. Airless units draw straight from the bucket and cover large areas quickly, but the trade-off is heavy overspray and mandatory thorough cleanup. Here are the best picks for high-output work, with each one's honest downsides.

4.3$375each

An entry-level airless sprayer that draws paint from the bucket at up to 3,000 PSI to speed large jobs โ€” with the tradeoffs of overspray, cleanup, and a learning curve.

  • Large projects
  • Exterior
  • Doors

Pros

  • Sprays straight from 1- or 5-gallon buckets with no thinning, speeding large jobs
  • Adjustable pressure and SoftSpray tip give good DIY control
  • Handles walls, ceilings, fences, decks, siding, and trim

Cons

  • Significant overspray requires extensive masking and drop cloths
  • Learning curve to avoid runs, drips, and uneven coats
  • Mandatory thorough cleanup; entry-level pump built for occasional use, not heavy duty
4.2$219each

A handheld electric airless that sprays unthinned paint fast for fences, doors and furniture, at the cost of heavy overspray and a higher price than HVLP units.

  • Fences
  • Furniture
  • Trim
  • Doors
  • Small projects

Pros

  • True airless power sprays unthinned paint and stain right from the can with no turbine haze
  • FlexLiner bag system lets you spray at any angle, even upside down, and cuts cleanup mess
  • Dual speed control drops to a slower rate for detail work like doors and furniture

Cons

  • Airless spray creates heavy overspray, so it is best for fences, exteriors and garages, not open interiors
  • The 32 oz cup and 2-gallons-or-less design mean lots of refills on large projects
  • Costs more than most HVLP handhelds and the pump still needs a careful flush-out clean
4.2$179each

A versatile handheld HVLP that sprays unthinned paint and swaps between wall and fine-finish nozzles, making it a strong one-tool pick for mixed DIY jobs.

  • Cabinets
  • Furniture
  • Walls
  • Fences
  • Trim

Pros

  • Sprays unthinned latex and primer straight from the can, saving the thinning step
  • Two nozzles cover both broad walls (iSpray) and fine cabinet/furniture work (Detail Finish)
  • Nine-speed X-Boost dial and flow control let you dial in the pattern for the job

Cons

  • Heavier in the hand than the base HomeRight since the whole motor rides on the gun
  • The iSpray nozzle throws noticeable overspray, so wall work needs thorough masking
  • The many-piece nozzle assemblies are tedious to clean and easy to reassemble wrong

Still deciding? Compare them

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of sprayer is best for fences and siding?
An airless sprayer like the Graco Magnum X5 is the fastest choice for fences, siding, and decks because it draws unthinned paint straight from the bucket at high pressure. Expect significant overspray, so mask surroundings well and plan for a thorough pump cleanout afterward.
Can I use one sprayer for both walls and a fence?
A versatile handheld like the Wagner FLEXiO 3500 handles walls and smaller exterior jobs and sprays unthinned paint, while a bucket-fed airless like the Magnum X5 is better when the sheer square footage is large. For occasional mixed use, the FLEXiO is the more flexible single tool.