How to Plaster a Wall in the UK – Complete Beginner’s Guide

DIY Home Repairs

At a glance

Time neededHalf day per coat plus drying time
Coats needed2 – scratch coat then finish coat
Drying time24-48 hrs between coats
DifficultyIntermediate – practice required

Plastering is one of the most satisfying DIY skills to acquire and one of the most in-demand. A competent plasterer can charge upwards of £200 per day in most parts of the UK, and even a small patch repair to a wall or ceiling can cost significantly more than the materials involved. Learning to plaster – even to a good amateur standard rather than a professional finish – saves real money on every renovation project and gives you a skill that gets steadily better with practice.

The honest caveat is that plastering is not a beginner skill in the way that painting or tiling is. Getting a flat, smooth finish requires understanding how the material behaves as it sets, developing a consistent trowel technique, and managing the working time before the plaster hardens. The first attempt almost always disappoints. The second is noticeably better. By the third or fourth wall most people are producing a finish that needs only minor sanding before decorating. This guide covers the full process for a two-coat system on a brick or block wall, plus the slightly different approach for patch repairs.

What you’ll need

Plastering trowel (11-inch stainless)
The main tool for applying and smoothing plaster – a good quality trowel makes a real difference
Hawk
Flat board for holding plaster while you work – load your trowel from it repeatedly
Large mixing bucket (20-25 litre)
Plaster is always added to water – a large bucket gives room to mix without splashing
Paddle mixer / drill with mixing paddle
Mixes plaster to an even, lump-free consistency much faster and more reliably than hand mixing
Bonding coat plaster (e.g. Thistle Bonding)
The base scratch coat applied to bare brick or block – provides a key for the finish coat
Finishing plaster (e.g. Thistle MultiFinish)
The thin top coat applied over bonding – creates the smooth surface ready for decorating
PVA bonding agent
Diluted and applied to the wall before plastering to improve adhesion and control suction
Water spray bottle and clean water supply
Misting the wall and plaster during finishing keeps the surface workable longer

Types of plaster

Choosing the right plaster for the job is the first decision to get right, and it depends on what surface you are plastering onto and what finish you want to achieve.

Types of plaster compared
Type
Use on
Coats
Verdict
Bonding coat (e.g. Thistle Bonding)
Brick, block, concrete
Undercoat only
Essential base coat
Finishing plaster (e.g. Thistle MultiFinish)
Over bonding / board
Top coat only
Smooth finish coat
Board finish (e.g. Thistle Board Finish)
Plasterboard only
Top coat only
Skim over plasterboard
One-coat plaster
Patch repairs
Single coat
Repairs only

For a bare brick or block wall – the most common scenario in a renovation – the correct system is bonding coat followed by finishing plaster. The bonding coat is applied thickly (8-11mm), scratched to provide a key while still soft, and left to harden fully before the finishing coat is applied. The finishing coat goes on at 2-3mm and is worked to a smooth, flat surface. This two-coat system gives the most reliable result on difficult substrates. For a wall that has had old plaster removed and is being replastered onto exposed plasterboard, board finish alone is applied directly to the board surface as a thin skim.

Preparing the wall

Wall preparation determines the quality of the finished plaster as much as technique does. Skipping or rushing the preparation phase is the most common reason plaster fails – either by not bonding properly, developing cracks, or blowing away from the wall within months of application.

Start by removing all loose or blown plaster. Tap the existing surface with a knuckle and listen for a hollow sound – hollow areas have lost their bond with the substrate and must be removed entirely before replastering. Use a bolster chisel and club hammer to cut back to a sound edge, undercutting slightly to give the new plaster something to grip. Clean all dust and debris from the wall surface with a stiff brush. Any mould must be treated with a fungicidal solution and allowed to dry fully before plastering proceeds – never plaster over active damp or mould as it will reappear through the finish coat.

Once the surface is clean and sound, apply a diluted PVA solution – one part PVA to five parts water – with a brush or roller, covering the entire area to be plastered. Allow this first coat to dry, then apply a second coat of stronger PVA (one part to three parts water) and plaster while this second coat is still tacky. The tacky PVA dramatically improves adhesion and regulates the suction of porous brick and block, which would otherwise draw moisture out of the plaster too quickly and cause it to crack before it can be worked.

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How to plaster – step by step

1

Mix the bonding coat

Add clean water to the bucket first, then add bonding plaster gradually while mixing – not the other way round. Mix to a thick, smooth consistency with no dry lumps. The mix should hold its shape on the hawk but spread easily from the trowel. Mix only what you can apply in 30-40 minutes.

2

Apply the bonding coat

Load the hawk and transfer plaster to the trowel. Apply with firm, sweeping strokes, working from the bottom of the wall upward and pressing the plaster firmly into the surface. Aim for an 8-11mm thickness. Work in sections and maintain a wet edge to avoid visible joins. Use a straight edge or feather edge to level the surface as you go.

3

Scratch the bonding coat

Before the bonding coat fully sets – when it has firmed up but can still be marked – scratch the surface with a deviling float or a piece of wire mesh dragged across it. These scratches provide a mechanical key for the finishing coat to grip. Leave the bonding coat to harden fully – typically 24 hours minimum, longer in cold or humid conditions.

4

Apply the finishing coat

Dampen the bonding coat lightly with a water spray before applying the finish. Mix finishing plaster to a smooth, creamy consistency – thinner than bonding. Apply at 2-3mm in two thin passes: first to cover the surface completely, second to flatten and begin smoothing. Work quickly – finishing plaster has a shorter working window than bonding coat.

5

Flatten and polish the finish

As the finishing coat begins to firm – when it has lost its shine but is not yet hard – work over the surface with long, firm, overlapping trowel strokes to flatten any ridges. Lightly mist the surface with water if it is drying too fast. As it hardens further, use increasingly light, polishing strokes with the trowel held at a low angle to the wall to bring up a smooth, tight finish.

6

Allow to dry fully before decorating

Fresh plaster must dry completely before painting or papering – typically 4-6 weeks for a full two-coat system in a well-ventilated room. New plaster appears dark pink-grey when wet and lightens to a uniform pale buff colour when fully dry. Applying paint or wallpaper to incompletely dried plaster traps moisture and causes adhesion failure. Mist coat the dry plaster with heavily diluted emulsion before full decoration.

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Work from the bottom up on the bonding coat, top down on the finishing coat. Applying bonding from the bottom prevents the heavy material from sagging and dragging down over freshly applied sections below. Finishing, being much thinner, benefits from working top to bottom so that any material that drops falls onto unfinished wall rather than the polished surface you have just completed.

Patch repairs

Patch plastering – filling a hole or damaged section in an existing wall – follows the same principles as full plastering but requires additional care at the edges where new plaster meets old. The biggest visual problem with patch repairs is a visible outline where the patch meets the surrounding wall, either because the new plaster sits proud of the old or because the texture does not match exactly. Cutting back the damaged area to a clean, square edge rather than leaving a ragged perimeter gives a cleaner, less visible join.

For small holes up to 15-20cm across, one-coat filler or one-coat plaster applied in layers is the most practical approach – these products are formulated to work without the two-coat bonding system and are more forgiving in small applications. For larger areas, the full bonding coat plus finishing coat process applies. Dampen the edges of the existing plaster and the exposed substrate before applying the bonding coat, and feather the finishing coat out onto the surrounding existing plaster surface by a few centimetres to disguise the transition.

Common problems and solutions

Problem
Plaster drying too quickly and cracking before it can be worked – most common on highly porous brick in warm, dry conditions where moisture is drawn out of the plaster before the working window closes
Solution
Apply two coats of PVA before plastering rather than one. Dampen the wall with clean water before applying the PVA. Keep windows and doors closed while plastering to reduce airflow. Mist the surface with a water spray during the finishing stage if it is tightening faster than expected.
Problem
Plaster pulling away from the wall or blowing after drying – a hollow sound when tapped indicates the plaster has lost adhesion to the substrate, usually because the surface was not properly prepared or PVA was not applied
Solution
Blown plaster must be removed entirely and the area replastered from scratch with proper surface preparation. There is no reliable way to re-bond detached plaster. Prevention is the only solution – never skip the PVA preparation stage and always ensure the substrate is clean and sound before starting.
Problem
Trowel marks and ridges visible in the finished surface – lines left by the trowel edge that have hardened before they could be polished out, leaving the surface uneven when light rakes across it
Solution
Light trowel marks can be sanded back with fine sandpaper once fully dry. For deeper ridges, allow the plaster to dry completely then use a sharp scraper to flatten the high points before sanding. Prevent by overlapping trowel strokes more generously during the polishing stage and keeping the trowel angle low to the wall surface.
Amazon Plastering essentials

Stainless steel plastering trowel

★★★★★

~£18

View on Amazon

Plastering hawk aluminium

★★★★★

~£14

View on Amazon

PVA bonding agent 5 litre

★★★★★

~£10

View on Amazon

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Prices correct at time of publishing.

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