White K-Rend looks superb but shows surface algae and grime sooner than darker shades — not because it attracts more, but because the contrast is starker. Keep it bright with an occasional gentle, render-safe biocidal soft wash (never a pressure washer), and by tackling the damp and shade that feed algae — clear gutters, trim vegetation, improve drainage. It’s through-coloured, so the answer is cleaning, never painting or coating over it.
- White K-Rend shows algae and grime soonest because the contrast against white is starkest.
- Keep it bright with an occasional gentle, render-safe biocidal soft wash — never a pressure washer.
- Tackle the causes: clear gutters, trim vegetation, improve drainage so walls dry quickly.
- It’s through-coloured — the answer is cleaning, never painting or coating over it.
The beauty and the trade-off of white
White K-Rend is one of the most striking choices you can make — clean, bright, modern and architectural, it gives a home an immaculate, fresh face. But it comes with one honest trade-off, and it’s worth understanding before you choose it: white is the colour that shows dirt and algae soonest. Not because white render attracts more growth than grey or cream — it doesn’t — but because any green, grey or black film contrasts far more starkly against a bright white than against a darker shade.
So the maintenance question isn’t a flaw unique to white render; it’s simply that white shows what every render eventually picks up. The good news is that keeping white K-Rend bright is entirely manageable with the right approach — and crucially, with the right approach, not the wrong one. This guide is about doing it safely and effectively, so you get the stunning white look without it turning grubby and grey within a couple of years.
Why white render goes green
The green or grey film that appears on white render is living surface algae — airborne spores that settle and grow wherever a wall stays damp and shaded long enough. It feeds on moisture and a little daylight, not on the render itself, so it’s a surface issue rather than a sign the render is failing. It’s the same growth that turns patios, fences and north-facing roofs green; white render just makes it obvious sooner.
Which is why some walls go green while others stay bright: north-facing, shaded and poorly-drained walls stay damp and host algae readily, while sunny, well-drained elevations dry quickly and stay cleaner. Walls under trees, near gutters or facing open ground green up fastest. Reading where your white wall is discolouring tells you a lot about why — and our fuller guide on why K-Rend goes green goes deeper into the causes.

How to keep white K-Rend bright
The safe, effective way to keep white K-Rend looking its best is a gentle, render-safe biocidal soft wash — a low-pressure application of a fungicidal treatment that kills the algae at the root so it stops regrowing, with the dead growth weathering away over the following weeks. It’s the same method used on any K-Rend, and our how to clean K-Rend guide walks through it step by step.
The one rule that matters most: never use a pressure washer. On a white render the temptation is strong because it makes the green vanish instantly, but high pressure can blast off the textured finish, drive water into the wall, and only clears the visible film while the algae returns fast on a roughened surface — and it can void guarantees. With white especially, where any scarring or patchiness shows starkly, gentle chemistry is the only safe route. Let the treatment do the work, not force.
Don’t paint or coat it to keep it white
When a white wall starts to grey, some firms will offer to paint or coat it to “restore” the white — and it’s the wrong answer for K-Rend. White K-Rend is through-coloured by design and never needs painting; that’s one of the main reasons to choose it. Painting over it throws that benefit away and commits you to an endless repaint cycle, because paint films on render eventually flake and peel and can trap moisture, often making the problem worse.
The right way to restore a tired white wall is to clean it properly and tackle the damp and shade feeding the growth — not to bury a sound through-coloured finish under a coating. A correct biocidal clean brings the white back to the colour that runs through the render. If a white render is genuinely worn out at the end of its life, the honest answer is re-rendering, not painting over it. Keeping it paint-free is exactly what keeps it low-maintenance.
Tackle the cause to stay brighter longer
Cleaning restores today’s brightness; reducing the conditions that feed algae is what keeps a white wall bright between cleans. Since algae needs persistent moisture, the most effective step is to keep the wall drier: clear and repair gutters and downpipes so rain isn’t running down the render, make sure sills and flashings shed water away, and improve drainage so the base of the wall isn’t left damp. A single leaking gutter can keep a white wall greening no matter how often you clean it.
Then tackle shade and airflow — cut back overhanging branches and shrubs so sunlight and breeze can dry the wall faster, since algae struggles on a wall that dries quickly. None of this stops algae forever in the UK climate, but on a white wall, where growth shows soonest, these steps make a real, visible difference — turning a wall that greys every year into one that stays bright for far longer between gentle washes.
So is white K-Rend worth it?
For all the upkeep talk, white K-Rend is absolutely worth it for the right owner — the crisp, bright look is unmatched, and the maintenance is genuinely modest: an occasional gentle wash and sensible attention to gutters and vegetation, not a constant chore. If you love the white look and your walls get reasonable sun and good drainage, you’ll keep it bright with little effort.
Where to think twice is if your walls are heavily shaded or north-facing and you want truly minimal upkeep — there, a mid grey or a warmer off-white like Champagne will look fresher for longer with less attention, while still being light. The honest summary: choose white for its unbeatable crisp look, go in expecting to clean it a little more often than a darker shade, and tackle the causes to keep those cleans few and far between. Our Polar White guide covers choosing the shade itself.
Frequently asked questions
Why does white K-Rend go green or grey?
How do I keep white K-Rend clean and bright?
Can I pressure wash white render to clean it?
Should I paint or coat white K-Rend to restore it?
Why does only one wall of my white render go green?
Is white K-Rend high maintenance?
Is white K-Rend worth choosing?
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