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Aftercare Guide
Ceramic Coating

Ceramic Coating Aftercare:
The Complete Guide

By Delicate Details July 2026 8 min read
Ceramic coating aftercare Lubbock TX — Delicate Details

You just invested in a professional ceramic coating. Whether you went with our 2-year Essential, 5-year Advanced, or 10-year Elite package, the goal is the same: make this thing last as long as possible and look as good as it did the day you drove out. That's on us to install correctly and on you to maintain correctly.

This is everything we tell every client after a coating job. Follow it and you'll get the full life out of your coating. Skip it and you'll be back in 18 months wondering why it stopped beading water.

Save this page. Bookmark it, screenshot it, send it to whoever else drives the car. The most common aftercare mistakes happen because the person driving doesn't know the rules.

The First 7 Days: Critical Curing Period

Ceramic coating doesn't cure the moment it goes on. It bonds to your clear coat over the next several days through a chemical process that requires dry conditions and no interference. This window is when most people accidentally damage a brand-new coating.

Days
1–2

Absolutely no water contact

No washing, no rain, no sprinklers, no bird baths, no morning dew if you can avoid it. Park in a garage if you have one. If you must drive and it rains, try to keep moving so water sheets off instead of sitting.

Days
3–5

Avoid prolonged water exposure

Light rain is less catastrophic now, but still avoid washing. Don't park under trees where sap, pollen, or bird droppings can land on the surface during curing.

Days
6–7

Coating is nearly set — still no washing

Resist the urge. Your coating looks incredible right now — don't risk a water spot or contamination the day before it's fully cured.

Day 8+

Normal maintenance begins

You can wash the car. Follow the washing guidelines below. The coating is now fully cured and bonded to your clear coat.

Lubbock-specific note: West Texas caliche dust and hard water are the coating's two biggest enemies locally. After the curing period, rinse caliche off with water before wiping anything. Never wipe dry dust across the surface.

How to Wash a Ceramic Coated Car

Ceramic coating makes your car easier to clean — contamination doesn't bond the same way it does to bare paint. But washing incorrectly will scratch the coating and reduce how well it repels water and dirt. Here's the right process.

Do This

  • Two-bucket hand wash with grit guards
  • pH-neutral car wash soap (5–9 pH)
  • Soft microfiber wash mitt
  • Rinse first to remove loose dirt
  • Wash top-to-bottom, rinse top-to-bottom
  • Dry with clean microfiber waffle weave towel
  • Wash in shade or early morning
  • Rinse wheels separately with dedicated wheel brush

Never Do This

  • Brush-style automatic car washes
  • Dish soap, Dawn, or household cleaners
  • Chamois or old terry cloth towels
  • Washing in direct Texas sun
  • Wiping dry dust or caliche off with a dry cloth
  • Using the same mitt on wheels and paint
  • High-pressure water directly at trim seals
  • Wax or SiO2 sealants on top of the coating

Why pH-Neutral Soap Matters

Dish soap is highly alkaline — typically pH 8–10. Ceramic coatings operate best in a 5–9 pH range, and repeated exposure to alkaline cleaners degrades the coating's hydrophobic properties over time. You won't see it happen after one wash, but six months of dish soap and your coating will stop beading water the way it should.

Use a dedicated pH-neutral car wash soap. We use and recommend CarPro Reset, Kochchemie Gentle Snow Foam, and P&S Double Black Car Wash. All are safe for coatings, effective at removing contamination, and inexpensive enough that there's no reason to use dish soap.

Touchless Car Washes — Okay Occasionally

Touchless automatic washes (water and chemicals only, no brushes or cloth) are acceptable for light cleaning between hand washes. They won't damage the coating. What they will do is leave behind some water spotting from Lubbock's hard water, and they're not great at removing brake dust from wheels. Use them when you're in a hurry — not as your primary wash method.

Brush-style washes are never acceptable on a coated car. The bristles scratch the clear coat and will eventually scratch the coating itself. One brush wash won't ruin everything. Twenty of them will shorten your coating's life significantly.

Bird Droppings, Bugs, and Tree Sap — Handle These Fast

Ceramic coating buys you time when contamination lands on the paint. On bare paint, a bird dropping can etch the clear coat in as little as a few hours in direct sun. On a coated car, you have significantly more time before damage occurs. But "more time" doesn't mean "unlimited time."

Bird droppings: Remove within 24 hours if possible. Mist the area with a spray detailer or water, let it soften for 30–60 seconds, then gently wipe with a clean microfiber. Never scrape or wipe dry.

Tree sap: Soften with isopropyl alcohol (70% or less) or a dedicated tar and sap remover. Let it dissolve, then wipe. Don't rub aggressively.

Bugs: Bug splatter is acidic. Remove before it hardens. A quick rinse and wipe with a damp microfiber handles most of it if you catch it early. Bug and tar removers work well for baked-on residue.

In Lubbock specifically: park away from cottonwood trees in late spring and mesquite trees year-round. Both drop sap and debris that can stain your coating if left long enough.

Annual Decontamination

Even with good washing habits, iron particles from brake dust, rail dust, and industrial fallout embed into and around the coating over time. You'll notice the paint starts to feel less smooth — like fine sandpaper — even after washing. That's contamination, not coating failure.

Once or twice a year, do an iron decontamination:

  1. Wash the car thoroughly first
  2. Spray an iron remover (CarPro IronX, Kochchemie Eulex) over the paint
  3. Watch it turn purple as it reacts with iron particles — this is normal
  4. Let it dwell 3–5 minutes, then rinse thoroughly
  5. Follow with a clay bar or clay mitt on contaminated areas
  6. Rinse again and dry

After decontamination, your paint will feel dramatically smoother and the coating's hydrophobic properties will perform noticeably better. We recommend doing this before your annual coating inspection if you have a multi-year package with us.

What You Don't Need to Do

One of the most common mistakes we see: clients applying wax or spray sealants on top of their ceramic coating. You don't need to. The coating is already providing protection at a level wax can't match. Layering wax on top doesn't add protection — it just creates a layer that needs to be maintained separately.

Similarly, you don't need to use any special "ceramic coating maintenance" sprays unless they're specifically formulated as a coating booster (like CarPro HydrO2 or similar SiO2 topper). Even those are optional — they extend hydrophobic performance between coating refreshes, but they're not required maintenance.

When the Coating Needs a Refresh

A properly maintained ceramic coating will last the full term of the package you chose. The signs that your coating is degrading:

  • Water stops beading into tight droplets and starts sheeting flat instead
  • Car feels less smooth to the touch after washing
  • Dirt and grime are bonding to the paint more than they used to
  • Coating looks dull in direct sunlight even after washing

If you're seeing these signs before your coating's expected life is up, text us a photo. Often it just needs a decontamination and a booster coat rather than a full reapplication. If the coating has failed early, we'll figure out why before putting another one on.

Lubbock hard water tip: After washing, dry your car immediately. Letting Lubbock tap water evaporate on your paint leaves mineral deposits that can spot-etch the surface over time. The coating slows this — it doesn't stop it entirely.

Summary: The Rules Worth Repeating

  1. No washing for 7 days after installation
  2. pH-neutral soap only — no dish soap, ever
  3. Two-bucket hand wash — no brush car washes
  4. Remove bird droppings, sap, and bugs fast
  5. Decontaminate with iron remover 1–2× per year
  6. No wax or standard sealants on top
  7. Dry immediately after washing to prevent water spots
  8. If something looks wrong, text us before you try to fix it

Questions About Your Coating?

If something doesn't look right, reach out before you try to fix it. Text us a photo and we'll tell you exactly what's going on — no appointment needed for that.

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