Ready Seal Exterior Stain & Sealer for Wood Fences Review (2026)
By The DIYPicks Team ยท Updated July 2026
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- Cedar and redwood privacy fences
- Pressure treated pine fences
- Spraying with no back brushing or lap marks
- Beginners staining a big fence run
The most forgiving way to coat a big fence: an oil-based all-in-one stain and sealer you can spray on in one liberal coat with no back-brushing, no lap marks, and no primer, and it penetrates so pickets never crack or peel. Because fence boards are vertical and shed water, recoats stretch to about every 2-3 years. The trade-offs are a two-week color cure, a limited pre-tinted range, and less UV defense than an opaque stain.
Pros
- Goof-proof on tall fence runs: no lap marks, runs, or required back-brushing even in the sun
- All-in-one oil stain and sealer that penetrates instead of filming, so it will not crack, peel, or flake off pickets
- Vertical fence boards shed water and wear slower than a deck, stretching recoats to roughly every 2-3 years
Cons
- Oil base means a long cure and color that keeps shifting for about two weeks after application
- Sold only pre-tinted in a limited palette, with no custom color matching at the store
- Penetrating semi-transparent finish offers less UV and graying defense than a pigment-heavy solid stain
Specifications
| opacity | Semi-transparent |
|---|---|
| base | Oil-based (all-in-one stain and sealer) |
| coats | 1 coat applied liberally |
| coverage | 100-125 sq ft per gallon on smooth wood; less on rough-sawn fence pickets |
| dryTime | 48-72 hours to cure |
| cleanup | Mineral spirits |
| reapply | About every 2-3 years on a vertical fence |
| note | Reaches true color in about 14 days; spray-and-go, no thinning or primer |