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Essential Information

Product Details

Description

Everest Masonry Repair Compound is a premium white exterior repair mortar designed for restoring damaged masonry surfaces before painting or coating.

Formulated for render, brick and concrete, it is ideal for repairing holes, deeper cracks, damaged render, broken edges and worn exterior masonry. The compound mixes with clean water to form a slump-resistant mortar that can be applied to vertical surfaces and shaped into damaged areas before finishing.

Once cured, Everest Masonry Repair Compound creates a strong, paint-ready repair suitable for overcoating with Everest Masonry Primer, Everest Textured Basecoat or Everest Silicone Masonry Paint. It is designed as the repair-first product in the Everest Masonry System, helping restore damaged mineral surfaces before the protective coating stage.

The white cementitious finish makes it especially suitable beneath light exterior coatings, while the low-shrinkage formulation helps reduce the risk of repair failure as the material cures.

Key benefits


  • Repairs damaged render, brick and concrete

  • Suitable for deeper cracks, holes and patch repairs

  • White finish, ideal beneath exterior masonry coatings

  • Low-shrinkage cementitious repair compound

  • Slump-resistant mix for vertical wall repairs

  • Helps rebuild damaged edges and worn masonry

  • Paint-ready once fully cured

  • For use before primer, textured basecoat or masonry paint

  • Part of the Everest Masonry System

  • Supplied in a premium 25kg pail
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.

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Restoring Block Paving: Removing Moss, Weeds, and Lichen

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How to Sand a Painted Concrete Floor for Recoating
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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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