Many car owners treat getting a ceramic coating as the end of the process. This is the single most common misunderstanding about ceramic coatings — and it leads to premature failure and expensive recoating.
The Critical First 7 Days
- Days 1–7: Do not wash the car. Do not expose it to rain. Do not park under trees. No automatic car washes of any kind.
- If bird dropping lands on the car: Remove immediately with a damp microfiber cloth. Do not leave acidic contamination on an uncured coating.
- Days 8–30: First washing permitted — hand wash only with pH-neutral shampoo.
The Ongoing Maintenance Schedule
| Task | Frequency | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| pH-neutral hand wash | Every 1–2 weeks | Removes surface contamination before it bonds permanently |
| Iron remover spray | Every 2–3 months | Dissolves embedded brake dust and industrial fallout |
| Clay bar / clay mitt treatment | Every 6 months | Removes bonded contamination the coating cannot repel |
| SiO2 coating booster spray | Every 3–4 months | Tops up the hydrophobic layer as it naturally degrades |
Important: Don't confuse a contaminated coating with a failed coating. In most cases, a thorough decontamination wash restores 80–90% of original hydrophobic performance. Many owners prematurely pay for repolishing when decontamination was all that was needed.
What Kills a Ceramic Coating Prematurely
- Alkaline shampoos used regularly — gradually dissolve the silica cross-link network
- Automatic rotary brush car washes — abrade and contaminate the coating surface rapidly
- Allowing bird droppings to dwell — will etch through the coating within hours in Indian summer heat
- Applying any polishing product — even "light" polishes remove the coating
Seasonal Ceramic Coating Maintenance Calendar for India
A ceramic coating maintained to a fixed seasonal schedule lasts significantly longer than one maintained only when problems become apparent. The Indian climate's dramatic variation between seasons — dry cold winters, brutal hot summers, humid monsoons — creates predictably different demands on the coating through the year. Matching your maintenance actions to these seasonal demands is the most efficient approach.
January to March is the easiest maintenance period — mild temperatures and low UV make this the ideal window for thorough decontamination. Perform a full iron remover treatment and clay bar session in February when the coating is about to face rising UV intensity. This removes accumulated winter contamination and prepares the surface for the most critical maintenance application of the year.
April to June demands the most attention. Apply a fresh ceramic maintenance topper before April — the coating faces its maximum UV stress in this period. Wash only in the early morning and dry immediately to prevent water spots from hard water evaporating on hot surfaces. Inspect water beading after each wash — if beading degrades to sheeting before June ends, apply another maintenance topper immediately rather than waiting.
July to September monsoon period: increase wash frequency to every 3–4 days to remove acid rain before it dries on the coating. The coating handles monsoon chemistry well if it is at full strength — degraded coatings show visible water spot etching by August in cities with hard water. October to December is restoration time: full decontamination, polish any high spots or coating damage, apply fresh maintenance spray before winter.
Seasonal Ceramic Coating Maintenance for Indian Conditions
India's four distinct seasons each present different challenges for ceramic coating maintenance. A coating that receives season-appropriate care lasts 40–60% longer than one maintained with a generic year-round routine.
Pre-Summer (February–March)
February and March are the most important maintenance months of the year. UV Index starts climbing rapidly from March onwards, and the coating needs to be at full strength before April's peak intensity arrives. Complete a full iron remover treatment, clay bar the entire car, and apply a ceramic maintenance spray or graphene topper. This single annual investment of 4–6 hours protects the coating through the harshest UV period of the year.
Summer (April–June)
Bonnet surface temperatures in Indian summer regularly exceed 70°C in direct afternoon sun. At these temperatures, water evaporates almost instantly, leaving concentrated mineral deposits. Wash exclusively before 8 AM or after sunset. Never leave water on a coated surface in summer — dry immediately with a plush 700 GSM microfibre after every wash. Check water beading weekly by pouring a small amount of water on the bonnet. Tight, high-contact-angle beads indicate the coating is performing correctly.
Pre-Monsoon (June)
Apply a fresh ceramic maintenance spray in the last week of June before monsoon rains arrive. Indian monsoon rainfall is mildly acidic — pH 5.2 to 5.8 in metro areas due to dissolved industrial pollutants. A coating at full strength resists this acid exposure. A depleted coating allows etching that requires machine polishing to remove. This single pre-monsoon application is the most cost-effective maintenance investment of the year.
Post-Monsoon (October)
October is the best time for a comprehensive annual maintenance session. Four months of monsoon acid rain, biological contamination, and road grime accumulate on the coating surface. Perform a full decontamination — iron remover, tar remover if needed, and clay bar. Inspect the coating under a detailing light for any failed sections showing water spotting or loss of hydrophobics. Apply a fresh maintenance topper and the coating will perform like new through winter.
Products to Avoid on Ceramic Coated Cars
Several products sold at Indian petrol pumps and car accessory shops actively damage ceramic coatings. Silicone-based spray waxes and tyre dressings that overspray onto paint coat the ceramic surface and reduce its hydrophobic performance. Alkaline car shampoos — anything above pH 8 — strip the ceramic layer incrementally with every wash. Automatic brush car washes inflict micro-scratches that degrade the coating surface clarity. Avoid all three completely to protect your coating investment.
Hard water from Indian municipal supplies (TDS 200–500 ppm) is the number one cause of water spot etching on ceramic coated cars. Keep a 5-litre container of RO filtered water (TDS under 50 ppm) specifically for the final rinse after every wash. Pour it over all horizontal surfaces — bonnet, roof, boot — before drying. This single habit eliminates water spot damage almost entirely.