What oxidation actually is — and why Florida boats get it fast
That chalky, faded, almost powdery look on an older hull is oxidation: the top layer of the gelcoat has been broken down by UV until it's a dead, porous surface that no longer reflects light. In Northeast Florida it happens fast. A boat left uncovered under our sun can go from glossy to chalky in a single season or two, and salt and heat only speed it along. The good news is that oxidation is almost always just surface-deep — and beneath it is perfectly good gelcoat waiting to be uncovered.
Restoring it is a mechanical process, not a coat of something you brush on. We cut through the dead layer to reach fresh gelcoat, refine the surface back to clarity, and then seal it. Done right, a hull that looked ready for paint comes back to a deep, wet shine — for a fraction of what a repaint or re-gel would cost.
How we bring gelcoat back
- Assess the severity. Light oxidation may polish out; heavy chalking needs wet-sanding first. We test a section and quote honestly.
- Wet-sand (when needed). Progressive grits knock down the worst oxidation and deep water spots evenly across the panel.
- Multi-stage compound. Heavy cutting compound removes the sanding marks and the remaining dead layer, revealing fresh gelcoat.
- Refine & polish. Finer polishes bring the surface up to a clear, swirl-free gloss.
- Seal it. A marine sealant — or an upgrade to a ceramic coating — locks in the restored finish so it doesn't chalk right back.
The catch worth knowing: restored gelcoat oxidizes again if you leave it bare. Sealing is not optional in Florida — it's what makes the restoration last. A ceramic coating is the longest-lasting way to protect the work you just paid for.
When it's oxidation removal vs. a full detail
Oxidation removal is the heavy-correction heart of a detail. If your boat is generally clean but the gelcoat is chalky, this focused service is what you want. If it also needs its vinyl, metal, glass, and interior brought back at the same time, our full boat detail wraps oxidation removal into the complete package. Not sure which you need? Tell us the boat's age, where it's kept, and how it looks, and we'll point you to the right one.
Every hull, at your dock
We restore gelcoat on center consoles, bay boats, offshore boats, cruisers, and pontoons — in the water, on the rack, or on the trailer. We bring the compounds, machines, water, and power, and we work where your boat already lives across Duval, Clay, St. Johns, and Nassau. Keep the restored shine going with a maintenance wash plan.