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The UAE painting calendar: when to book, what it costs, and why timing is half the job

In most countries you paint when the walls need it. In the UAE, you paint when the weather allows it — heat, coastal humidity and shamal dust each change how paint behaves on the wall. This guide walks the full local calendar, plus move-out repaints, paint brands and what a fair AED quote looks like.

in this guide

Paint answers to the weather hereOctober to April: the exterior windowMarch to May: the pre-summer sprint and heat-reflective coatingsJune to September: interior season, and the August problemShamal season: dust is the enemy of a good finishCoastal humidity and the blistering wallRamadan and Eid: the calendar inside the calendarThe move-out repaint: what your tenancy contract actually saysWhat is actually on the roller: Jotun, National and the sheen questionFeature walls and gypsum ceilings: the two jobs people underestimatewhat it costsHow a home painting visit actually runsemirate by emirateBefore the painters arrivemistakes to avoidfrequently asked questions

Paint answers to the weather here

Paint is chemistry, and chemistry cares about temperature and moisture. Most emulsion paints sold in the UAE are formulated to be applied between roughly 10 and 35 degrees on a surface that is dry and stable. For half the year, an exterior wall in Dubai or Abu Dhabi sits well outside that range by mid-morning — a west-facing villa wall in July can reach 60 degrees or more at the surface, hot enough to flash-dry emulsion before it can level out. The result is visible lap marks, poor adhesion and a coat that starts failing within a couple of years instead of lasting five or six.

Humidity is the other half of the equation. On the Gulf coast in August, relative humidity regularly climbs past 80 per cent overnight. Water-based paint cures by evaporation, and evaporation slows to a crawl in saturated air, so recoat times stretch and soft films pick up dust and fingerprints. Trapped moisture is also the main cause of the blistering you see on older buildings near the sea — bubbles under the film where vapour pushed its way out.

None of this means painting stops in summer. It means the work moves indoors, the schedule changes, and good crews adjust their methods. The rest of this guide is organised the way experienced UAE painters actually think: around the calendar.

October to April: the exterior window

The stretch from late October to early April is the only period when villa exterior painting in the UAE is genuinely comfortable and technically ideal. Daytime surface temperatures sit inside the paint's application range, humidity is moderate, and crews can work full days on scaffolding without heat-stress breaks. This is when boundary walls, parapets, pergolas and full villa envelopes should be done, and every landlord and community manager knows it — which is why exterior painters book out weeks ahead in November and December.

Winter also brings the UAE's only meaningful rain. It is rare, but a surprise shower on a half-cured exterior coat means redoing sections, so decent crews watch the forecast in January and February and build a buffer day into multi-day exterior jobs. If a vendor quotes a tight three-day window for a full villa exterior in peak winter, ask what happens if it rains.

Practical advice: if your villa exterior is chalking (a powdery residue when you rub the wall), cracking at the parapets, or streaked below the AC condenser lines, get quotes in September and book for October or November. Waiting until March means competing with everyone who had the same idea, and April risks the first serious heat arriving mid-job.

March to May: the pre-summer sprint and heat-reflective coatings

Spring is when smart villa owners do the work that pays off in their DEWA or ADDC bill. Heat-reflective exterior paints — sold in the UAE under names like Jotun Jotashield Extreme and equivalent National Paints and Caparol lines — use infrared-reflective pigments to bounce a meaningful share of solar heat off the wall before it soaks into the block. Applied to a west- or south-facing villa elevation before June, they measurably lower the heat load the AC has to fight all summer. Applied in September, you have paid for the benefit and missed the season it matters most.

The pre-summer window is also when exterior crack repair should happen. Hairline cracks in render open and close with thermal movement; summer expansion makes them worst, and painting over an open crack in May with a standard emulsion guarantees it reappears by August. Elastomeric coatings, which stretch with the substrate, cost more per square metre but are the honest fix for a crack-prone elevation.

Expect the pre-summer sprint to be a seller's market for exterior work by late April. Interior work, by contrast, is easy to book in spring — which makes March to May a good moment to compare several painting vendors side by side in the tamam app, where quotes come as transparent AED ranges rather than a single take-it-or-leave-it figure, and pick a slot before the summer interior rush begins.

June to September: interior season, and the August problem

Summer flips the market. Exterior work all but stops — reputable crews will not put emulsion on a 55-degree wall, and UAE midday outdoor work restrictions limit site hours anyway — but interior painting gets busier, not quieter. Two reasons: apartments empty out as families travel for the school holidays, making July and August the most convenient months to have a flat painted without living in it, and the September school return creates a hard deadline that concentrates demand into late August.

August itself needs specific handling. With coastal humidity at its annual peak, an interior repaint in a sea-facing apartment cures slowly even indoors. Good painters run the AC on dry mode throughout the job and between coats — never switch the unit off to 'save power' during a summer paint job, because still, humid air is exactly what causes a soft, tacky film that scuffs at the first touch. Recoat intervals that take two hours in January can honestly need four or five in August.

If you are handing keys to a painting crew while abroad, agree the scope in writing beforehand — number of coats, whether ceilings and doors are included, the exact colour codes — and ask for photos at each stage. Booking through tamam helps here: payment and the job record sit in the app, and coordination while you are overseas can run over WhatsApp rather than phone calls across time zones.

Shamal season: dust is the enemy of a good finish

The shamal — the north-westerly wind that carries fine desert dust across the Gulf — blows hardest in early summer, typically late May through July, with a lesser winter season around December and January. For painters, shamal days are a quiet disaster. Airborne dust settles on tacky paint and reads as a gritty, sandpaper texture under raking light; it contaminates wet edges on exterior work; and it finds its way indoors through window seals and door gaps faster than most residents expect.

On dusty days a careful interior crew will wipe walls down with a damp cloth immediately before cutting in, keep windows shut with the AC filtering the air, and tack-rag any surface that has sat overnight between coats. On exteriors, an honest vendor will simply pause. If a crew is happy to roll a boundary wall while visibility on Sheikh Zayed Road is down to a few hundred metres, that tells you something about the finish you will get.

Dust matters before the first coat too. UAE walls that have gone two or three years without painting carry a fine film of settled dust bonded with humidity, and paint applied straight over it adheres to the dust, not the wall. Proper prep — washing, light sanding, spot-priming patches — is the least glamorous line in a quote and the one most worth paying for.

Coastal humidity and the blistering wall

Walk any older street within a kilometre of the sea — Deira, Sharjah's Al Majaz, Ajman corniche, RAK's old town — and you will see paint blistering: bubbles, flaking sheets, and the tide-mark staining of salt migrating through render. The mechanism is simple. Moisture gets into the wall, from humid air, a plumbing leak, a dripping AC line or rising damp, and when the sun heats the surface, that moisture turns to vapour and pushes the paint film off from behind. No paint, however premium, survives being applied over a wet substrate.

The fix is diagnosis before decoration. A competent painter arriving at a blistered wall should ask where the moisture is coming from before quoting, and on a bad case use a moisture meter rather than guesswork. If the source is a leak, that is a plumber's job first and a painter's second. If it is ambient coastal humidity in a bathroom or kitchen, the answer is surface prep down to sound material, an alkali-resistant or damp-tolerant primer, and a paint specified for wet areas — not another coat of standard matt over the bubbles.

Sea-facing apartments deserve one more note: choose sheens deliberately. Full matt marks easily in humid rooms; a washable matt or eggshell in bathrooms, kitchens and hallways costs slightly more per litre and survives UAE condensation far better.

Ramadan and Eid: the calendar inside the calendar

Ramadan changes the rhythm of home services in the UAE, and painting is no exception. Many crews shorten daytime hours and shift productive work to late afternoon and evening; residents, meanwhile, often prefer visits before iftar or later at night. If you are fasting, mid-morning is usually the calmest slot to have painters in the house. Tower and community rules still apply — most buildings prohibit noisy work late in the evening regardless of season, though painting is quieter than most trades and often gets more scheduling latitude than drilling.

The real crunch is the fortnight before Eid Al Fitr. Repainting the majlis or the whole ground floor before family gatherings is a genuine UAE tradition, and demand for interior painters spikes hard in the last third of Ramadan. Prices at the top of the normal range and fully booked calendars are standard in that window. If you want the house fresh for Eid, book in the first week of Ramadan, not the last.

Ramadan also shifts each year — falling across February and March in the late 2020s — which means it now overlaps the tail of the exterior season. A villa exterior job planned around Ramadan needs honest conversation about daily working hours, because a job quoted at five winter days can stretch to seven or eight on a reduced schedule.

The move-out repaint: what your tenancy contract actually says

The single most common reason UAE tenants book a painter is the move-out clause. Most tenancy contracts in Dubai (registered through Ejari) and Abu Dhabi (Tawtheeq) require the unit returned in its original condition, fair wear and tear excepted, and many spell out repainting explicitly. In practice, landlords and building management routinely deduct a repaint charge from the security deposit — often at a rate well above what you would pay a painter directly — unless you hand the flat back freshly painted with a receipt to prove it.

The economics usually favour doing it yourself. A landlord's deduction for a one-bedroom repaint frequently lands higher than the AED 700–1,500 a tenant-arranged repaint typically costs, and arranging it yourself means you control the quality evidence. Photograph every room after painting and before handover, keep the invoice, and if you altered colours during your tenancy — that maroon feature wall — budget for an extra coat, because dark colours need two to three coats of white to disappear.

Timing is the trap. The repaint has to happen after the movers empty the flat and before the handover inspection, which usually leaves a one- or two-day window in an apartment with the DEWA or SEWA account about to close. Book the painter the moment your moving date is fixed, not after the boxes are out, and confirm the crew can work in an empty unit on short notice. Same-vendor rebooking in the tamam app is useful here: if a crew painted your place well two years ago, they already know the unit.

What is actually on the roller: Jotun, National and the sheen question

Two names dominate UAE residential painting. Jotun, the Norwegian brand with major regional manufacturing, is the default premium choice — Fenomastic for interiors, Jotashield for exteriors — and is what most landlords mean when a contract says 'repaint in original specification'. National Paints, headquartered in Sharjah, is the high-volume local workhorse, noticeably cheaper per drum and entirely respectable for rental-standard work. Caparol, Hempel, Berger and Asian Paints fill out the market. The honest difference between budget and premium emulsion shows up in coverage (fewer coats to hide), scrub resistance and how well the colour holds under UAE sunlight — not in how it looks the week it dries.

Always get the paint specified in writing on the quote: brand, product line and colour code. 'White' is not a specification — landlord-standard whites in the UAE are usually an off-white in the region of Jotun 1001 Egg White or a close equivalent, and matching the existing wall matters if you are only painting one room. A vendor who writes 'Jotun' on the quote and shows up with unbranded drums is the oldest trick in the trade; it is fair to ask to see the sealed drums on the day.

On sheen: full matt hides wall imperfections best and is the default for ceilings and bedrooms; washable matt or eggshell earns its keep in corridors, kids' rooms and kitchens; silk and semi-gloss are for doors, skirting and wet areas. In a dusty, humid climate, wipeability is not a luxury.

Feature walls and gypsum ceilings: the two jobs people underestimate

The feature wall is the UAE's favourite small paint job — one bold colour or a textured finish behind the bed or the TV — and it is less trivial than it looks. Dark, saturated colours need quality paint and usually a tinted undercoat to reach full depth without patchiness, and crisp edges against a white ceiling and side walls are a taping-and-steady-hand skill, not a given. Textured finishes (stucco effects, concrete looks, metallics) are a different price category again, quoted per wall rather than per square metre, and worth seeing in a vendor's photo portfolio before committing.

Gypsum ceilings deserve their own paragraph because almost every UAE apartment and villa has them — flat gypsum board or decorative bulkheads with cove lighting. Gypsum is thirsty and shows every flaw under the raking light of an LED strip, so the correct sequence is sealer or primer first, then two coats of a dead-flat ceiling emulsion, rolled in consistent directions. Painters who skip the primer to save an hour leave you with a blotchy ceiling that only reveals itself at night with the cove lights on.

Ceiling work is also where water damage hides. The brown ring from an old AC condensate leak upstairs will bleed straight through fresh emulsion unless it is spot-sealed with a stain-blocking primer first. If your ceiling has stains, mention it when booking — it changes the materials list, and a good vendor will price the sealer in rather than discovering it on the day.

what it costs

UAE interior painting is quoted either per square metre of wall area — the fairer method for large or unusual spaces — or as flat per-room and per-unit packages, which dominate the apartment market. The going market rate sits around AED 25–45 per square metre for standard two-coat interior work including materials, with premium paint lines, dark colour changes, high ceilings and heavy prep pushing quotes towards the top of each range. Exterior villa work is priced by survey because scaffolding, elevation condition and coating type vary so much.

jobtypical range
Interior walls, standard two coats (per m2, incl. paint)AED 25–45
Studio or 1BR apartment, full repaintAED 700–1,800
2–3BR apartment, full repaintAED 1,500–3,500
3–4BR villa interior, walls and ceilingsAED 3,500–8,000
Single feature wall, solid colourAED 250–700
Textured or stucco-effect feature wallAED 600–1,800
Gypsum ceiling, per room incl. primerAED 200–500
Villa exterior with heat-reflective coatingAED 6,000–20,000

Treat these as orientation, not a quote — the real number depends on wall condition, paint specification and access, which is why comparing several verified vendors' AED ranges side by side in the tamam app before booking beats accepting the first figure you hear.

How a home painting visit actually runs

Painting is inherently an at-home trade, but the visit has a shape worth knowing. It starts before the crew arrives: for anything beyond a single wall, expect either an in-person survey or a request for photos and room dimensions so the quote reflects reality. On the day, a typical crew is two to three painters arriving by van with everything they need — drums, rollers, brushes, trays, masking film, drop sheets, a small stepladder or platform, and filler for minor wall repairs. You supply nothing except access and, ideally, an empty or half-empty room.

Access is the detail people forget. In towers, the crew usually needs a building work permit arranged with the management office a day or two ahead, plus service-lift access; in villas, gate access and somewhere to park the van matter more. Tell the vendor your building's rules when booking, not when the crew is standing in the lobby. Your preparation list is short: move small and fragile items out of the rooms being painted, take pictures and shelves off the walls, and decide colour codes in advance — daylight and evening LED light render colours very differently, so check a sample patch under both before committing.

Duration scales predictably. One feature wall is a half-day including drying between coats; a one-bedroom full repaint runs one to two days; a three-bedroom villa interior takes three to five. Summer humidity adds time, as covered above. When you book through tamam, the scope, the agreed AED range and payment all sit in the app, coordination runs over WhatsApp if you prefer, and if the finish is good you can rebook the same vendor for the inevitable touch-up before your next landlord inspection.

how it plays out emirate by emirate

dubai

Dubai's market splits sharply between tower apartments and master-community villas. In towers, interior repaints dominate and building management usually requires a work permit and insurance details from the crew before they can use the service lift — allow a day or two for approvals in communities like Dubai Marina or Downtown. Villa owners in Emaar, Nakheel and Dubai Hills communities cannot repaint exteriors in any colour they like: master developers publish approved palettes, and an off-palette elevation can trigger a violation notice. Move-out repaints tied to Ejari handovers are a year-round staple, with RERA's deposit-dispute process quietly incentivising tenants to repaint and keep the receipt.

abu dhabi

Abu Dhabi runs on Tawtheeq tenancy contracts, and handover standards in corporate-owned buildings on the island tend to be enforced strictly, so the pre-handover repaint is near-mandatory. Villa compounds in Khalifa City and Mohammed Bin Zayed City generate steady exterior work each winter, and Abu Dhabi Municipality expects external modifications on some plots to stay within approval conditions. Al Ain deserves its own line: the inland climate means far less humidity blistering than the coast, but harsher UV fade and heavier dust loading, so exterior repaint cycles there are driven by sun-bleached colour rather than peeling. Materials often route through Musaffah's trade suppliers, which keeps drum prices competitive.

sharjah

Sharjah has some of the oldest apartment stock on the Gulf coast, and repainting between tenancies is close to universal — many landlords in Al Nahda, Al Majaz and Al Qasimia handle it through the building watchman's regular crew, so tenants should clarify early whether the contract expects them to repaint or simply accept a deduction. SEWA move-in inspections and final-bill clearance add a scheduling step around handover week. Sharjah is also National Paints' home turf, and its products are the default in most quotes here. Coastal humidity off Khalid Lagoon makes bathroom and kitchen blistering a particularly common call-out in older buildings.

ajman

Ajman's housing mix leans low-rise and older, with a growing band of newer towers along the corniche and in Al Rashidiya. Corniche-facing units take the full brunt of Gulf humidity, and flaking paint on balconies and window reveals is the emirate's signature complaint — worth photographing at move-in so it is not billed to you at move-out. Budgets run lower than Dubai, and per-room package pricing is more common than per-square-metre quotes. Many crews serving Ajman are based in Sharjah's industrial areas, so morning slots can start slightly later; confirm arrival windows when booking.

ras al khaimah

RAK painting work divides between coastal master communities — Al Hamra Village and Mina Al Arab, where community rules keep villa exteriors inside approved colour schemes — and older stock in the town centre and Al Nakheel. The coast gets the humidity problems; properties towards the Hajar foothills deal more with dust and thermal cracking in render, and elastomeric exterior coatings earn their premium there. Winter is high season in the holiday-home communities, as owners freshen units ahead of the rental peak, so exterior slots in November and December go early. The local vendor pool is smaller than Dubai's, which rewards booking ahead rather than same-week.

fujairah

Fujairah faces the Gulf of Oman rather than the Arabian Gulf, and its weather is genuinely different: more winter rain off the Hajar mountains, occasional summer cloud, and salt-heavy east-coast air that is hard on exterior films. Exterior repaint cycles run shorter here than inland, and quotes should include proper surface washing to remove salt before priming — paint over salt bloom and it will fail early. Housing is mostly low-rise apartments and standalone villas, with per-room packages common. The professional painter pool is the thinnest of the seven emirates, so crews often come across from Sharjah or Dubai for larger villa jobs; build travel into the schedule and confirm the crew stays until completion rather than commuting daily.

umm al quwain

Repaint cycles run shorter near the Umm Al Quwain shoreline: humid, salty air off the lagoon blisters exterior paint and stains ceilings under older flat roofs, so villa exteriors here justify the better weather-resistant systems rather than the cheapest coat. Inside, the older stock means more prep — filling settlement cracks, sealing damp patches — which is where quotes genuinely differ. Painters travel from Ajman and Sharjah; scope the prep work explicitly or the cheap quote will skip it.

Before the painters arrive

  • Fix colour codes in advance and test a sample patch under both daylight and your evening LED lighting before confirming.
  • Get the quote in writing with brand, product line, colour codes, number of coats and exactly which surfaces are included.
  • Arrange the building work permit and service-lift booking with your management office at least two days ahead (tower apartments).
  • Move small, fragile and valuable items out of the rooms being painted; take down pictures, mirrors and shelves.
  • Point out every crack, stain and damp patch during the survey so prep and sealers are priced in, not discovered on the day.
  • Photograph walls before and after the job — essential evidence for move-out handovers and deposit discussions.
  • For summer jobs, plan to keep the AC running on dry mode throughout and between coats.
  • For move-out repaints, book the crew as soon as your moving date is fixed so they slot in after the movers and before the inspection.
  • Ask to see the sealed paint drums on arrival and check they match the brand and line on the quote.
  • Keep the invoice and a copy of the scope — useful for the landlord, and for rebooking the same vendor for future touch-ups.

mistakes to avoid

Booking exterior work at the wrong end of the calendar

Every May, someone signs off a full villa exterior job just as surface temperatures leave the paint's application range. The result is a rushed, compromised finish or a job that stalls until October anyway. Exterior painting belongs between late October and early April; if you missed the window, wait rather than forcing it.

Painting over moisture instead of fixing it

Blistered or stained walls are a symptom, not the disease. Rolling fresh emulsion over a damp wall near the coast, a leaking AC line or a bathroom with no extraction guarantees the failure returns within months. Find and fix the moisture source first, then prime and paint.

Accepting 'a room' without a definition

Per-room packages are common in the UAE, and 'one room' can mean walls only, or walls plus ceiling, doors, frames and skirting, depending on the vendor. The gap between those two definitions is hours of labour and litres of paint. Pin down exactly which surfaces the package covers before comparing prices.

Choosing colours from a phone screen

UAE homes swing between hard desert daylight and warm evening LEDs, and a grey that looks elegant on a screen can read blue at noon and beige at night. Insist on a physical sample patch on your actual wall, viewed at both times of day, before the crew tints twenty litres.

Leaving the move-out repaint until after the movers

The repaint has to fit between the removal van and the handover inspection, often a window of a day or two. Tenants who start calling painters only once the flat is empty end up paying rush rates or accepting the landlord's inflated deduction instead. Book the painter the same week you book the movers.

Skipping primer on gypsum and patched walls

Gypsum board and fresh filler absorb paint at a different rate to the surrounding wall, so unprimed patches telegraph through the final coat as dull, blotchy shadows — brutally visible under cove lighting. A sealer coat costs little and is the difference between a flat, even ceiling and one you notice every night.

frequently asked questions

Do I really have to repaint my apartment when I move out?

Check your tenancy contract — many UAE contracts require the unit returned in original condition and some name repainting explicitly. Even where the clause is vague, landlords commonly deduct a repaint charge from the deposit, usually at a higher rate than you would pay a painter directly. Repainting yourself and keeping the invoice and photos is almost always the cheaper, safer route.

Can exterior painting be done in summer?

Reputable crews avoid it. Exterior wall surfaces in July and August routinely exceed the maximum application temperature for emulsion, causing flash-drying, lap marks and early failure, and midday outdoor work restrictions cut site hours anyway. Book exterior work between late October and early April; use summer for interiors.

How long does a full apartment repaint take?

A one-bedroom typically takes one to two days, a two- to three-bedroom two to three days, and a villa interior three to five, assuming rooms are reasonably clear. High humidity in July and August stretches drying times between coats, so summer jobs can run half a day to a day longer than the same job in winter.

Is Jotun worth the premium over National Paints?

For a rental handover in landlord-standard white, National or an equivalent local brand is perfectly adequate and keeps the quote down. For a home you live in, premium lines like Jotun Fenomastic cover in fewer coats, resist scrubbing better and hold colour longer under UAE light, which usually justifies the difference over a five-year cycle. Whichever you choose, get the exact product and colour code written on the quote.

Why is the paint bubbling on my wall near the coast?

Blistering is almost always moisture in the wall turning to vapour and pushing the paint film off — from humid sea air, a plumbing or AC leak, or rising damp. Repainting over the bubbles without finding the moisture source guarantees they return. Fix the leak first if there is one, then repaint over a properly dried, primed surface with a damp-tolerant system.

Who buys the paint — me or the painter?

Either works, but most UAE quotes include materials, which is simpler and makes the vendor responsible for quantity and quality. If you supply your own paint to control the brand and colour, say so up front so the quote is labour-only, and over-buy slightly — running out of a tinted colour mid-wall risks a visible batch difference.

How many coats should I expect for the price?

Two coats over sound, similar-coloured walls is the standard that quotes should be based on, plus spot-priming of filled patches. Covering a dark feature wall with white, or painting fresh gypsum, honestly needs a primer or extra coat, and a fair vendor will say so at the survey stage rather than charging a surprise on the day.

Can painters work during Ramadan?

Yes — crews commonly shift to shorter daytime hours or late-afternoon and evening slots, subject to your building's noise rules, and painting is quiet enough that most managements allow it. The practical warning is demand: the two weeks before Eid Al Fitr are the busiest interior-painting window of the year, so book early in the month if you want the house done for Eid.

Do I need permission to change my villa's exterior colour?

In master-planned communities across Dubai, Abu Dhabi and RAK, yes — developers and owners' associations publish approved exterior palettes, and repainting outside them can bring a violation notice and forced rectification at your cost. On private plots, municipal rules are looser but boundary-wall and elevation changes may still need sign-off. Check with your community management before choosing a colour, not after.

Is heat-reflective exterior paint actually worth it?

On villa elevations that take direct afternoon sun, infrared-reflective coatings measurably reduce surface temperature and the heat load your AC fights, and owners typically notice the difference on summer bills. It costs more per square metre than standard exterior emulsion, so it makes most sense on west- and south-facing walls and roofs, applied in spring before the heat arrives.

How soon can I put furniture back against a painted wall?

Walls are touch-dry within hours, but emulsion takes days to reach full hardness — longer in humid months. Keep furniture a few centimetres off freshly painted walls for three or four days, and wait a week or two before scrubbing marks off a new finish. In August, add a day and keep the AC running on dry mode to help the cure.

What should a proper painting quote include?

Scope room by room, the paint brand, product line and colour codes, the number of coats, whether ceilings, doors and skirting are included, prep work such as crack filling and sanding, protection of floors and furniture, and the AED range with payment terms. Anything not written down is not included — assume that, and you will rarely argue on handover day.

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