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Essential Information

Product Details

Description

Everest Masonry Primer is a ready-to-use stabilising and adhesion primer designed for exterior masonry surfaces. Suitable for brick, render, concrete and stone, it helps prepare porous, dusty or previously painted surfaces before applying Everest Textured Renovation Basecoat or Everest Silicone Masonry Paint.

Used as Step 2 in the Everest Masonry System, it helps bind weak surface particles, reduce uneven suction and improve coating adhesion before topcoat application.

Key benefits

  • Stabilises porous and dusty masonry surfaces
  • Improves adhesion before painting
  • Helps reduce uneven surface suction
  • Suitable for brick, render, concrete and stone
  • Can be used on previously painted masonry, providing the coating is sound
  • Ready to use
  • Exterior use
  • Part of the Everest 4-Step Masonry System

Recommended system

Step 1: Clean

Use Everest Masonry Cleaner to remove dirt, algae and surface contamination.

Step 2: Prime

Apply Everest Masonry Primer to stabilise and prepare the surface.

Step 3: Repair & Basecoat

Use Everest Textured Renovation Basecoat where the surface is uneven, patched or weathered.

Step 4: Protect

Finish with Everest Silicone Masonry Paint for long-lasting breathable exterior protection.

Suitable surfaces

  • Brick
  • Render
  • Concrete
  • Stone
  • Sound previously painted masonry

Finish

Clear / translucent when dry. Ready to use. Exterior use.

Available Colours
  •  
    Clear
Files & Data Sheets

The Knowledge Hub

Everything You Need to Know

Browse our collection of in-depth articles and how-to guides designed to help you get the most out of this product. whether you need help with surface preparation or application advice, we have you covered.

View Technical Hub

A visual comparison of a mossy, weed-infested block paving driveway next to a freshly cleaned section in the UK.
  • by Sam Marriott

Restoring Block Paving: Removing Moss, Weeds, and Lichen

Block paving is the most popular driveway choice in the UK, but it has a major design flaw: Joints. Those thousands of gaps between the bricks are the perfect nursery for weeds, moss, and the dreaded "black spot" lichen. Every...

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An unbranded industrial floor scrubber being used to maintain the high-gloss shine on a polished concrete warehouse floor.
  • by Sam Marriott

Deep Cleaning Polished Concrete Without Damaging the Shine

Polished concrete is often sold as the "maintenance-free" flooring option. That is a lie. Yes, it is incredibly durable. It won't peel or flake like paint. But if you ignore it, or worse - if you clean it with the...

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Two unbranded silver tins labeled Acid and Alkaline on an industrial concrete warehouse floor.
  • by Sam Marriott

Acid vs. Alkaline Concrete Cleaners: Which is Best for Your Floor?

If you walk into a hardware store and ask for "concrete cleaner," you'll probably end up with a few different options in-front of you. Most people grab the bottle with the most aggressive warning label, thinking "stronger is better." But...

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How to Sand a Painted Concrete Floor for Recoating
  • by Sam Marriott

How to Sand a Painted Concrete Floor for Recoating

In our Sanding vs. Grinding: Preparing Previously Painted Concrete guide, we established that if your floor passes the Cross-Hatch Adhesion Test, then the next step for recoating will be sanding. Choosing to sand rather than grind saves you hundreds of pounds in equipment rental and diamond consumables....

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