Clear-over-Base
Quick answer: Clear over base is a two-stage paint system where a coloured basecoat is sprayed first and then sealed with a clearcoat lacquer on top, giving the car its colour, gloss and protection.
Clear-over-base is the modern system for painting cars and the most commonly encountered. It consists of a layer of primer, followed by a base coat of colour, and topped by a thick coating of lacquer which is called the clear coat.
This method of painting has been around for a very long time, but used to be only used on cars with metallic paintwork which was charged at a premium price, with all other cars being a solid colour without a lacquer.
What it means
Clear over base describes the way most modern cars are painted. First a primer is applied, then a coloured basecoat that gives the car its actual colour. On top of that sits a clearcoat lacquer – a transparent top layer that provides gloss, depth and much of the protection against weather and wear. When people talk about polishing or correcting paint, they are almost always working on the clear layer of a clear-over-base system.
Why it matters
- Decides how correction is done: With clear over base, polishing and sanding are aimed at the clearcoat only. You rarely want to reach the colour coat underneath.
- Affects how damage shows: Scratches and etching usually sit in the clearcoat, while deep damage that reaches through to the basecoat or primer often needs repair and repaint rather than simple correction.
- Critical for colour match: In refinishing, the basecoat provides the colour match and the clearcoat provides the final gloss and texture, so both stages must be right for the repair to blend in.
- Defines thickness limits: Only a portion of the total film build is clearcoat, so there is a limit to how much material can safely be removed during polishing and flat and polish work.
Where you’ll see it
You will see clear over base mentioned on paint manufacturer datasheets, bodyshop estimates and detailing write-ups. Phrases such as two-stage clear-over-base system, repair clear over base on door or machine polish clear-over-base paintwork are common. It is effectively the standard system on most modern cars, including metallics, pearls and many solid colours.
Context
Clear over base replaced many older single stage systems where colour and gloss were in one layer. In a clear-over-base system, all cosmetic correction work – swirl removal, bird mess etching, orange peel reduction and so on – is carried out in the clearcoat. Detailers measure total paint thickness, then work with the understanding that only the top portion is usable for correction. Bodyshops follow paint system guidelines on film build, flash times and curing to ensure the clear over base finish stays stable and does not suffer from die back, solvent migration or other defects.
Common mistakes
- Assuming deep scratches in a clear-over-base system can always be polished out, even when they have gone through the clearcoat into the colour.
- Over-polishing clear over base paint without checking thickness, eventually thinning or burning through the clearcoat.
- Comparing modern clear-over-base finishes directly with older single stage paints and expecting the same behaviour when correcting or restoring them.
- Judging a respray only by colour match and ignoring a mismatched clearcoat texture or gloss, which can still give away a repair on a clear-over-base system.
Written by Danny Argent. Last updated 21/11/2025 15:05