Lines are the rules made visible. We lay out and stripe courts to exact regulation geometry — and add new sports to existing courts without turning them into scribble.
Striping looks simple until you measure it. A three-point arc is a compound radius, a pickleball kitchen must sit exactly seven feet from the net line, and every line has a regulation width that referees and muscle memory both depend on. We lay out courts with instruments, snap and tape every line, and apply textured acrylic line paint that bonds to the surface instead of flaking off it. The result reads crisp from the baseline and holds its edge for years of Montana seasons.
Striping is also the cheapest way to expand what an existing court can do. Adding a regulation 20'×44' pickleball layout to a basketball or tennis court is our most requested upgrade, and a considered color hierarchy — bold primary lines, muted secondary — keeps multi-sport courts legible instead of chaotic. We stripe courts we built and courts we didn't, restripe faded layouts, and correct the DIY geometry that never quite played right. Licensed, insured, and exacting about it.
Standalone striping runs $600–$3,500 depending on layout complexity; bundling striping with resurfacing is the best value.
Tell us about your project. We respond within one business day — usually faster.
No spam, no pressure. Prefer to talk? Call (406) 555-0148 or text us.
Layouts are measured with instruments and cross-checked diagonally before paint. Keys, arcs, kitchens, and service boxes land where the rulebook says, not roughly nearby.
We stripe with acrylic line paint matched to the court surface texture, so lines grip like the rest of the court and wear at the same rate — no slick painted strips.
Pickleball on your basketball court, shooting keys on your tennis run-off — new layouts on existing surfaces cost hundreds to a few thousand dollars, not tens of thousands.
Primary sport in full contrast, secondary sports in deliberately muted tones. Multi-sport courts should be legible at a glance; we design the palette before painting a foot.
Proper masking, two-pass application, and cure-window discipline give clean edges that stay sharp for years instead of feathering by next summer.
Faded lines, drifted DIY layouts, or outdated rules geometry — we restore or re-lay lines exactly, including blending out old layouts during recoat work.
We review the sports you play, the court's dimensions, and any existing lines, then recommend a layout and color plan that keeps everything legible.
The court is measured precisely and your striping plan is drawn to scale, with line colors and widths documented for approval before any paint.
Cleaning, spot repair, and — where old lines must disappear — a color coat pass to erase the previous layout ahead of new striping.
Lines are snapped, taped, and striped in textured acrylic, with regulation widths held and every intersection cross-checked as we go.
We verify dimensions with you against the approved plan, confirm edge quality, and note recommended restripe timing for your records.
One crew, one standard of work — from the Bitterroot to the Flathead, and west into Spokane and Coeur d'Alene.
Concrete makes the court possible; the acrylic system makes it playable. We install premium 100% acrylic color systems engineered for Montana UV and freeze-thaw.
Learn more →Montana sun and freeze-thaw are hard on acrylic. Resurfacing every 4–8 years restores color, grip, and true bounce — and heads off damage that gets expensive to ignore.
Learn more →Every arena has a mark at center court. Yours should too — a family name, a team crest, or a brand, rendered in durable acrylic that plays exactly like the rest of the surface.
Learn more →Free site visits. Honest numbers. Courts built to outlast Montana winters.
Get a free, no-pressure quote for your court. Most homeowners are surprised what fits their yard and budget.
Get My Free Quote