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Don’t Skip This Step: Lath Installation Can Make or Break Your Stucco

By Stucco Champions··3 min read
Lath installation comparison showing correct metal lath bonding versus failed installation with cracks and drainage system compromise

Written by Stucco Champions — Southern California’s Authority on Exterior Plastering.

Don't Skip This Step: Lath Installation Can Make or Break Your Stucco

When homeowners think about stucco, they focus on the finish texture and the color. But the longevity of your exterior is determined long before the first bucket of cement is mixed. It is determined by the Lath—the hidden assembly of paper and wire that anchors the system to your home.

Lathing is the skeleton of your stucco. If the lath is loose, the wall will sag. If the paper is lapped incorrectly, the studs will rot. This guide explains the technical components of a code-compliant lath system and why it is the foundation of long-lasting stucco.

1. The Anatomy of Lath

Lathing is not just stapling chicken wire to a wall. According to ASTM C1063, a proper lathing assembly consists of three distinct layers working together:

  • The Drainage Plane (Waterproofing): Two layers of Grade D building paper (Super Jumbo Tex). This separates the wet stucco from the dry wood framing.
  • The Reinforcement (Wire): Galvanized metal mesh that holds the cement.
  • The Accessories (Flashings): Weep screeds, casing beads, and corner aids that define the edges and drainage points.

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2. The Two-Layer Waterproofing Rule

In Southern California, we face intense "wet-dry" cycles. This makes the waterproofing layer critical.

Why Two Layers?

Code requires two separate layers of paper over plywood sheathing.
Layer 1: The "Sacrificial Layer." It bonds to the stucco and absorbs moisture.
Layer 2: The "Barrier Layer." It remains separate from the stucco, creating a tiny air gap (drainage plane) that allows water to run down to the weep screed instead of soaking into the wood.

3. Fastening: Shear Strength and Seismic Safety

Stucco is heavy (10-12 lbs per sq. ft.). The fasteners holding the lath must support this weight plus the lateral forces of an earthquake.

  • Stud Spacing: Staples must be driven into the studs, typically every 6 inches vertically.
  • Furring: We use "Self-Furring" wire. This wire has small crimps that hold the mesh 1/4 inch away from the wall. This allows the scratch coat to flow behind the wire, fully embedding it in cement. If you use flat wire, the cement won't key in, and the wall will fail.

4. Common Mistakes We Avoid

Why do some stucco jobs crack in 6 months? Usually, it's a lathing error.

  • Improper Lapping: Wire mesh must overlap by at least 1 inch horizontally and 2 inches vertically. If the wire isn't continuous, the stucco will crack in a straight line at the seam.
  • Missing Weep Screeds: If the lath runs into the dirt without a weep screed, moisture wicks up the wall (capillary action), rotting the mudsill.
  • Reverse Lapping: Installing paper from top-to-bottom instead of bottom-to-top. This traps water behind the paper rather than shedding it.

Conclusion: Inspect the Bones

Before the brown coat covers everything up, the lath installation is your only chance to verify quality. A tight, properly lapped lath system ensures your home is waterproof, fire-resistant, and structurally sound for decades. At Stucco Champions, we treat the lath inspection as the most critical phase of the project.

Related Resources

Last week, we shared The Comprehensive Guide to Stucco Lathing Wire Types. Learn which wire gauge is right for your project.

Lath InstallationStucco Lath

Frequently Asked Questions About Stucco

How much does stucco repair cost in Orange County and Los Angeles?+

Stucco repair typically ranges from $500 for minor crack patching to $5,000+ for full re-stucco of a single elevation. The exact cost depends on the damage type (hairline cracks, water damage, delamination, weep screed failure), the square footage involved, and whether the original three-coat or one-coat stucco system needs to be matched. Stucco Champions provides fixed-price written estimates after a free on-site assessment — no hourly billing, no surprise change orders. See our stucco repair cost guide for detailed pricing by repair type.

How long does stucco last in Southern California?+

Properly installed three-coat stucco lasts 50-80+ years in Southern California's climate. The most common failure points aren't the stucco itself — they're the supporting components: corroded weep screed, deteriorated building paper behind the stucco, and improperly sealed window flashing. Most "stucco failures" are actually moisture-intrusion failures that start at one of these points. Annual visual inspection catches problems before they spread, which is why we offer free weep screed assessments for homeowners in our service area.

Can I repair stucco myself, or do I need a contractor?+

Hairline cracks under 1/8 inch wide can be sealed with elastomeric caulk by a homeowner. Anything larger — pattern cracks, delamination (where stucco pulls away from the wall), water-damaged areas, or chimney/window leak repairs — requires a licensed contractor. Improper DIY repair on these is the #1 cause of repeat failures because the underlying cause (usually moisture) isn't addressed. California's CSLB requires a license for any stucco work over $500. We're a CSLB-licensed and insured contractor — see our contractor team for credentials.

How do I know if I need stucco repair vs. full re-stucco?+

If less than 30% of an elevation has visible damage, repair is the right call. If you see large areas of cracking, multiple zones of delamination, or the underlying paper and lath have rotted across an entire wall, full re-stucco of that elevation is more cost-effective long-term. Our free assessment includes a moisture survey and lath inspection so you get a defensible recommendation either way — not just a quote pushing whichever option costs more.

Do you offer warranties on stucco work?+

Yes. Stucco Champions provides a written 5-year workmanship warranty on all stucco repairs and a 10-year warranty on full re-stucco. We're a CSLB-licensed and insured contractor (license #1122006 — verifiable at cslb.ca.gov), which means our work is backed by California's contractor licensing board, not just our own promise. Request a free estimate to see the warranty terms in writing before you sign anything.

How long does a stucco repair take?+

Most patch repairs are completed in 1-2 days, including a 24-hour cure time before texture matching and color application. Full re-stucco of a single elevation runs 5-7 working days because each coat (scratch, brown, finish) needs to cure properly before the next is applied. We schedule around weather — California stucco needs daytime temperatures above 50°F with no rain forecast for at least 24 hours after each coat. Our crew shows up on time, every time.

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