January 8, 2026 · Updated May 12, 2026
How often should you wash your car in Southern California?
How often to wash your car in the South Bay: every 2 weeks inland, weekly if you park outdoors near the coast. Here's a practical rule by zip code and parking.
Short answer: every two weeks in the South Bay, weekly if you park outdoors near the coast.
Cars in the South Bay live a harder life than cars 20 miles inland, even though it looks like paradise. Three forces work on your finish around the clock.
What’s actually damaging the paint
1. Ocean salt and marine layer moisture. Salt aerosolizes off the Pacific, drifts inland, and settles on your hood overnight. Marine layer humidity dissolves it onto the clear coat where it sits and slowly oxidizes the paint. Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach, and South Redondo see this worse than Torrance and Lawndale.
2. PCH, Hawthorne Blvd, and 405 road grime. Brake dust, asphalt particulate, and exhaust from the main arteries deposit a sticky film that doesn’t rinse off in rain — it bonds, then sun-bakes.
3. The South Bay sun. UV combined with salt and grime accelerates clear-coat failure. You’ll see it first as faded reds and sun-cooked hood paint.
A simple wash-frequency rule
- You park indoors, drive a commuter: once every 2–3 weeks.
- You park outdoors, more than a mile inland: every 2 weeks.
- You park outdoors, within a mile of the coast: weekly.
- You park on the street near The Strand: every 4–7 days, no exaggeration.
What kind of wash, how often
You don’t need a top-tier wash every week. An exterior Scuba Wash is the cheapest paint-protection plan you can buy — it removes the salt and grime before they bond. Once a month, step up to a Surf Wash or Big Kahuna for the ceramic finish and the interior reset.
See current pricing on the wash packages page.
The protect-it-now math
Paint correction on a sun- and salt-damaged hood runs $400 to $800. A full repaint is $3,000 to $8,000. A weekly $14 exterior wash is roughly $700 a year — and you keep the car you have looking like the car you bought.
After it rains, wash within 48 hours
Rain pulls everything that was airborne — including the salt — onto your hood, then leaves it baked into the paint when the sun returns. A quick exterior wash within 48 hours of a rainstorm is one of the most protective single things you can do. More detail on this in why you should wash your car after it rains.
When to graduate from wash to detail
If your paint feels rough to the touch, looks dull even after a wash, or you can see water spots that don’t lift — that’s past the wash threshold. Read when to detail instead of just washing for the line between the two.
Find us at 617 Torrance Blvd, Mon–Sat 8–5, Sun 9–4. Catch you on the next wave.
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