Dealer Prep Isn't Detailing
Dealers wash your car with whatever's cheapest and fastest. That "dealer prep" often includes automatic tunnel washes that leave swirl marks, silicone-based tire shine that slings everywhere, and interior spray that leaves everything artificially glossy. Your brand-new paint might already have wash-induced swirls by the time you drive it home.
Step 1: Paint Decontamination
Before any protection goes on, the paint needs to be properly cleaned — foam wash, chemical decontamination with iron remover, and potentially a light clay bar pass to remove rail dust and lot fallout. New cars sit on transport trucks, dealer lots, and often get prepped with compounds that leave residue.
Step 2: Paint Enhancement or Correction
A light single-stage polish removes dealer wash swirls and refines the finish. On new paint this is usually a quick process — 2–3 hours for a sedan. The goal isn't aggressive correction; it's removing the shallow defects from dealer handling so the protection layer seals in a flawless surface.
Step 3: Ceramic Coating
This is the time. Fresh paint with minimal defects is the ideal canvas for ceramic coating. Applying it within the first month means you're sealing in factory-fresh clear coat before the sun, rain, and daily driving start degrading it. A 5-year coating on a new car is one of the best investments you can make.
Step 4: Interior Protection
Leather and vinyl coating on seats, dashboard, and door panels. Fabric protector on carpets and cloth surfaces. These products make cleaning easier and prevent stains from setting. Doing this when the interior is pristine is dramatically easier and more effective than trying to protect surfaces after months of use.
