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Wall mural vs paint — Japandi Garden navy panoramic mural showing the scale and impact a mural delivers over a painted feature wall

Wall Mural vs Paint: Cost, Impact & Design

Paint is a colour. A mural is a scene. That is the whole argument in a sentence — and it is the reason the "feature wall" conversation keeps swinging away from a tin of Dulux and toward a panoramic. Paint gives you a flat plane of pigment that the eye glides across in a second. A mural gives you depth, horizon, atmosphere and something to actually look at when you walk in.

This guide is written for the moment you are standing in front of an empty wall trying to decide: do I paint it, or do I mural it. We compare both honestly — paint wins some battles — and we cost it out over ten years, not just the install weekend.

Painted Province mural styled in a considered dining room as an alternative to a painted feature wall Heron Lake Scenic panoramic mural transforming a lounge wall where paint would have sat flat Mineral Fade Panoramic Mural in navy blue — the depth and horizon that paint cannot replicate

Painted Province Mural Wallpaper  ·  Heron Lake Scenic Wallpaper Mural Wallpaper  ·  Mineral Fade Panoramic Painted Mural in Navy Blue Wallpaper

Paint vs Mural: the honest comparison

Most "paint vs wallpaper" pieces online flatten the whole conversation into a cost argument. That is lazy. The real decision is ten-dimensional, and some of those dimensions only reveal themselves two or three years after the roller has dried. Here is how paint and a panoramic mural actually stack up once you live with both.

1. Upfront cost — paint wins on small walls

A 5 to 8 m² feature wall costs AUD $80 to $200 to paint DIY — tester, a can of wash-and-wear, roller kit, tape. A custom-sized mural of the same wall sits AUD $300 to $650. If cost is the only axis and the wall is small, paint wins. Move up to a 12 to 15 m² entry wall or a staircase void, and every subsequent dimension starts pulling the other way.

2. Installation difficulty — paint wins narrowly

Paint is easy — two coats, overnight dry, done. A panoramic mural needs a clean, primed wall, an accurate measurement (see our how-to-measure guide), and a steady hand with three to six drops. Most homeowners manage it; if you would rather hand it over, our installer directory is the starting point.

3. Visual impact — mural wins decisively

This is the one that swings the whole argument. Paint can only ever be a colour. A mural is a scene — a forest canopy, a panoramic lake at dawn, a chinoiserie garden, a mineral-fade horizon. The eye behaves differently inside a room with depth on the wall, because it is processing perspective rather than pigment. Paint colours a room. A mural composes one.

4. Longevity — mural wins (10+ years)

Painted feature walls visibly fade, yellow and show touch marks inside two to four years in sun-exposed rooms. Our non-woven murals are rated for a decade or more of stable colour. Peel-and-stick mural lasts three to five years — still longer than most accent walls.

5. Commitment — paint wins

If you are the sort of homeowner who redecorates every eighteen months, paint is the right answer. A fresh coat covers a colour you have tired of in a weekend. A mural is the opposite end of the commitment spectrum — a deliberate, longer-term design decision.

Paint asks you to pick a colour. A mural asks you to pick a world. Those are different questions, and they suit different homes.

6. Personality — mural wins

A painted terracotta accent wall looks like every other 2024 accent wall. A mural — and particularly a custom mural made for the exact dimensions of your wall — cannot look like anyone else's because the scene is specifically composed. The difference shows up immediately in photographs and on Zoom calls.

7. Maintenance — paint wins

Scuffs and chair knocks touch up in seconds with a leftover can. Mural wallpaper wipes clean on Type II vinyl, but a tear means replacing the affected drop. Paint is forgiving; mural is durable but unforgiving of damage.

8. Resale read — mural reads higher-end

Real estate stylists have quietly shifted toward murals in hero rooms because photography favours depth. A panoramic in a dining room reads as intentional design in a listing photo. A terracotta accent wall reads as a DIY decision.

9. Renter-friendliness — tied

Paint requires landlord permission and a promise to repaint in neutral on exit. A peel-and-stick mural goes up without nails, primer or permission and peels off cleanly when you move. For most renters, peel-and-stick is actually the easier decision than repainting twice.

10. Room transformation speed — mural wins

Paint needs two coats and a full dry between them. Realistically, a painted feature wall is a two-day job. A three-drop panoramic mural installs in four to six hours and is done. Same day transformation, and a far bigger visual payoff.

Mineral Fade Panoramic Mural in purple lavender — proof that pigment alone cannot do what a gradient painting can Mineral Fade Panoramic Mural in stone taupe — a neutral scene instead of a neutral colour

Mineral Fade Panoramic Painted Mural in Purple Wallpaper  ·  Mineral Fade Panoramic Painted Mural in Stone Taupe Wallpaper

When paint is the right call

There are genuine cases where a tin of paint is the smarter decision. We sell wallpaper, and we will still tell you to pick up a roller in these scenarios:

  • Small rooms already carrying heavy pattern. If you have a patterned sofa, patterned rug, patterned curtains and patterned art, another scene on the wall will overload the room. A considered paint colour calms it down. Our colour drenching guide covers how to do this properly.
  • Frequent colour-changers. If you re-do your rooms every twelve to eighteen months for the pleasure of redecorating, a mural is the wrong product. Paint is your medium.
  • Ultra-tight budgets on small walls. Under AUD $150 for a 5 m² wall, paint wins cleanly.
  • Kid-level zones with mess risk. Waist-down on a nursery wall is going to cop crayon, food and sticky hands. Paint the bottom metre in washable satin and put the mural above dado height.
  • Short-term rentals you are freshening for sale. Neutral paint is the standard for pre-sale styling under four weeks from listing.

When a mural is the right call

Every room below is a scenario where paint has nothing interesting to add and a mural changes the brief entirely.

  • Feature walls in hero rooms. Living rooms, primary bedrooms, dining rooms. This is the top of the list for a reason — it is where depth on the wall matters most.
  • Entries and hallways. First impression rooms. Paint does nothing here. A panoramic does the whole hello for you.
  • Home offices. Zoom backgrounds are the new front door. A scene behind you reads as considered; a painted wall reads as a room.
  • Dining rooms. Lighting is low, conversation matters, and the wall is viewed from a seated position for hours. A scene holds the eye; a colour does not.
  • Primary bedrooms. Headboard wall as a mural is the single best-performing install type in our data. It frames the bed.
  • Staircase voids. Double-height walls are where paint looks most like paint. A panoramic mural is the only honest answer.
Japandi Garden panoramic mural in navy blue on white — a scene that paint cannot deliver

Japandi Garden Panoramic Mural Navy Blue on White Mural Wallpaper

The hybrid approach: mural on one wall, matched paint on the other three

The quietest-but-smartest design decision in this whole discussion is not "mural or paint" at all. It is both. Hang a mural on the feature wall and pull its dominant mid-tone into the paint for the other three walls — the technique commonly called colour drenching. The room reads enveloping rather than accented, and the mural stops feeling stranded on one wall.

Our all-four-walls guide explains when to go full wrap versus feature-wall. The hybrid sits in between and is where most homeowners land after they live with a mural for a year.

The AUD cost deep-dive

Real numbers for real wall sizes. These are Australian retail pricing as of April 2026.

  • 5 m² feature wall — paint DIY: AUD $80 to $180 all-in (tester, 4L can of premium wash-and-wear, roller kit, tape).
  • 5 m² feature wall — mural DIY (non-woven): AUD $300 to $450 depending on substrate and finish.
  • 5 m² feature wall — mural + professional install: AUD $550 to $750 depending on installer rates.
  • 10 m² dining wall — paint DIY: AUD $140 to $260 (two coats, more tape, more rollers).
  • 10 m² dining wall — mural DIY: AUD $500 to $750.
  • 15 m² staircase void — paint DIY: AUD $220 to $400 plus scaffolding hire or a very long ladder.
  • 15 m² staircase void — mural + install: AUD $1,100 to $1,650 all-in. This is where professional install earns its keep.

If you want to work through your specific wall dimensions, our full wallpaper pricing guide for Australia walks through per-square-metre rates, install loadings and substrate differences in detail.

Time investment — surprisingly similar

The intuitive assumption is that paint is fast and wallpaper is slow. In practice, a single panoramic mural and a painted accent wall take roughly the same weekend.

  • Paint: sand and fill (30 min), prime if bare (2 hours dry), coat one (1 hour + 4 hours dry), coat two (1 hour + overnight dry). Realistic total: 2 days with overnight dry time between coats.
  • Mural: clean and prime the wall (1 hour + overnight for primer), measure and cut drops (30 min), hang three to six drops in sequence (3 to 4 hours), trim and smooth (1 hour). Realistic total: 2 days with overnight prime cure.

Where the mural pulls ahead is transformation on the second day — the wall goes from blank to finished scene in four hours, not "coat one looks patchy, wait, coat two, wait, finally done."

Soft Golden Horizon panoramic mural transforming a wall with warmth paint cannot produce Misty Blue Forest panoramic mural adding depth and atmosphere beyond any paint colour

Soft Golden Horizon Mural Wallpaper  ·  Misty Blue Forest Panoramic Painted Mural Wallpaper

Design longevity: why last year's accent wall colour looks dated

Here is the awkward truth about painted feature walls. They are almost always reflecting the year they were painted. Millennial pink (2017). Sage green (2020). Terracotta (2022). Deep bottle green (2024). If you painted an accent wall at any of those moments, you know exactly which year the room is frozen in the second you walk in.

A botanical, a panoramic landscape, a chinoiserie garden or a mineral-fade mural does not carry that year-stamp. A Chinoiserie Garden mural is pulling from 18th-century hand-painted wallpaper tradition — it was not invented for 2026 and will not look like 2026 in 2030. That durability of idea is the secret argument against trend-led paint colours on feature walls.

Case study: same room, same wall, two decisions

Picture a 3.2 m × 2.7 m dining room in a Federation cottage. One internal wall, south light, same brief for two homeowners: "make this dining wall do something."

Homeowner A paints it in a moody Porter's "Cellar" deep green. Cost: AUD $140 all-in, weekend job. Result: a green wall. In photographs it looks like a green wall. The timber table in front of it disappears against it.

Homeowner B hangs Chinoiserie Garden Panoramic Mural on the same wall. Cost: AUD $520 DIY, same weekend. Result: a garden scene behind the dining table. The table reads as a foreground object inside a composition rather than a piece of furniture against a flat colour. Guests comment on the wall in every dinner thereafter.

The AUD $380 delta pays for itself the first time the room is photographed for Instagram, a listing, or a memory.

Chinoiserie Garden Panoramic Mural — a scene that ages far better than any trend paint colour

Chinoiserie Garden Panoramic Painted Mural Wallpaper

The 10-year cost analysis — mural actually wins

Here is the calculation most paint-vs-wallpaper articles skip entirely. Paint is not a one-time expense. A feature wall in a high-traffic room gets repainted every two to three years — scuff marks, hand oil around light switches, trend fatigue. Let us run ten years honestly.

  • 10 years of painted feature wall: 4 to 5 repaints at AUD $140 each = AUD $560 to $700. Plus your weekend, four to five times.
  • 10 years of non-woven mural: 1 install at AUD $500 = AUD $500. One weekend, ten years ago.

Paint is cheaper on Day One. The mural is cheaper by Year Four and significantly cheaper by Year Ten — with the added benefit that every year in between looked like a scene, not a colour.

Custom mural vs custom paint mix — different products

Some customers ask: "can I just mix a custom paint colour to get what I want?" You can mix a custom colour. You cannot mix a custom scene. A custom mural lets you supply artwork, photography, a favourite motif or a specific brief and we produce it at exact wall dimensions. Custom paint gives you a very specific shade of grey. Those are not the same product and they solve different problems.

If the question is "what colour do I want?", paint is your answer. If the question is "what do I want this room to feel like?", a mural is the only honest response.

Moody Seagrass panoramic painted mural — atmospheric depth impossible with a single paint colour Aspen Sky panoramic painted mural — sky and horizon on a bedroom wall Vintage Garden panoramic painted mural — a scene that ages gracefully where trend paint dates immediately

Moody Seagrass Panoramic Painted Mural Wallpaper  ·  Aspen Sky Panoramic Painted Mural Wallpaper  ·  Vintage Garden Panoramic Painted Mural Wallpaper

What about painting over wallpaper later?

This is a common objection — "I do not want to commit, what if I want to paint over it one day?" The short answer is: you can. Our painting-over-wallpaper guide covers exactly when it is a sensible idea and when it is not. For non-woven murals, painting over is straightforward with the right primer. For peel-and-stick, remove it first — which is the whole point of peel-and-stick.

Sampling first — AUD $4.99

Before committing to either paint or a mural, pull samples. Paint stores offer free or cheap testers; we ship A4 wallpaper samples (48 cm × 40 cm / 19 in × 16 in) to anywhere in Australia for AUD $4.99 so you can see the mural colour, scale and substrate in your own light before ordering the full drops. This is the single most valuable AUD $4.99 in the whole wallpaper-versus-paint decision.

Designer tips

  • Decide the room's hero. Which wall do you walk toward when you enter? That is the mural wall. The other three are paint candidates.
  • Order the AUD $4.99 sample. Tape it up for 48 hours, morning, afternoon, evening, before committing.
  • Pull paint from the mural, not the other way around. Match your trim and surrounding walls to a mid-tone pulled from the mural. Never pick the paint first and hope the mural matches.
  • Prime every wall. Whether you are painting or hanging a mural, a primed wall is the non-negotiable foundation. See our prepping walls for peel-and-stick guide.
  • For renters — go peel-and-stick mural, not paint. It removes cleaner and lasts the whole lease.
  • We ship to 40+ countries with all import duties paid. Whether you are in Sydney, Auckland, London or New York, the price you see is the price you pay — no customs surprises at the door.

For more on the broader decision, read our paint vs wallpaper guide and our deep dive on wall murals as the statement wall trend of 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a wall mural actually worth the price difference versus paint?

On any wall larger than 5 m², or any wall that is the visual hero of the room, yes. Paint is a colour. A mural is a scene. The AUD $300 to $500 delta returns on visual impact immediately and on ten-year cost by year three or four, because painted feature walls get repainted every 24 to 36 months while a non-woven mural lasts a decade.

How long does a wall mural last compared to paint?

A non-woven panoramic mural from Olive et Oriel is rated for 10+ years of stable colour on a properly prepared wall. A painted feature wall in a high-traffic room typically needs a refresh every two to three years due to scuffs, yellowing in sun-exposed walls, and trend fatigue.

Which is easier to change — paint or a mural?

Paint is easier to change. A weekend and AUD $100 gets you a new colour. A mural is a deliberate longer-term decision. If you are the sort of homeowner who redecorates every eighteen months, paint is your medium. If you want to pick a scene and live with it for a decade, a mural is the answer.

Can peel-and-stick mural work as a paint alternative for renters?

Yes — and for renters, it is actually easier than paint. Peel-and-stick goes up without landlord permission, primer or nails, and peels off cleanly at lease end. A repaint on move-out typically costs more than the peel-and-stick install did in the first place.

Does a mural affect resale value?

A tasteful panoramic or botanical mural in a hero room reads as considered design in listing photography and stylist schedules have been shifting toward murals for exactly this reason. An outdated trend-colour accent wall often reads as a DIY decision the new owner will repaint. Both are neutral at the contract level, but the mural photographs better.

Is a mural viable for renters?

Absolutely — go peel-and-stick rather than non-woven. It installs without any permanent modification to the wall, lasts three to five years easily, and peels off without residue on exit. Many renters find peel-and-stick mural a lower-commitment decision than painting (which requires permission and repainting to original colour on exit).

How do I match paint to a mural?

Pull a dominant mid-tone from the mural and ask your paint shop to colour-match it to a satin or low-sheen interior paint. Do it in that order — never pick the paint first and hope the mural matches. A useful trick is to photograph the mural sample, upload it to your paint brand's app, and let it suggest the closest match.

Custom mural vs custom paint mix — what is the difference?

A custom paint mix gives you a bespoke colour. A custom mural gives you a bespoke scene — your artwork, photography, or a specific brief produced at exact wall dimensions. The two products solve different problems. If you want a specific grey, that is paint. If you want a specific garden, lake, horizon or motif, that is a custom mural.

Browse our full panoramic mural collection, explore peel-and-stick murals for renters, or read more on On the Wall.

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