
How to Maintain a
Ceramic Coating
A ceramic coating makes washing easier and protection last for years — but only if you maintain it correctly. Here’s the simple two-week routine, the soaps to avoid, and how to keep the water beading strong.
To maintain a ceramic coating, wait about 10 days after application before the first wash, then hand wash every two weeks using the two-bucket method and a pH-neutral car shampoo — never dish soap or wax-additive soaps, which strip the coating. Dry with a microfiber towel (don’t let it air-dry), wash in the shade, and apply a ceramic booster spray every few months to revive the water beading. A yearly iron decontamination keeps the surface clean.
Ceramic Makes Washing Easier — Not Optional.
A ceramic coating from Big Shot Rides in Coconut Creek bonds to your paint and adds years of gloss, chemical resistance, and that signature water-beading hydrophobic effect. We apply Ceramic Pro, IGL, and Gtechniq systems over a proper paint correction so the finish is locked in clean.
Here’s what surprises people: a coated car still needs washing — it just washes faster and stays cleaner between washes. The mistakes that kill a coating early are using the wrong soap, letting it air-dry into water spots, and running it through brush car washes. Avoid those and a quality coating performs for five years.
Don’t Wash for the First 10 Days.
A fresh ceramic coating is touch-dry within 24–48 hours but keeps hardening for one to two weeks. Wait about 10 days before the first wash and keep the car dry during that window where you can — no rain if avoidable, no sprinklers, no car washes.
If the car gets dusty, a gentle waterless-detailer wipe with clean microfiber is fine. Save the full wash until the coating has cured.

The Two-Week Maintenance Wash
This is the whole routine. Done every two weeks, it keeps a coating performing for years.
- Wash in the shade, never in direct sun. Sun flash-dries soap and water into spots on the coating.
- Pre-rinse to lift loose dirt. Because the coating is hydrophobic, a lot of grime rinses off before you even touch it.
- Two buckets, pH-neutral shampoo. Use a coating-safe, pH-neutral soap — ideally a SiO2 “ceramic” shampoo. Never dish soap or wax-added soap.
- Wash top to bottom with a microfiber mitt. Light contact is all it takes; the coating releases dirt easily.
- Rinse thoroughly. Sheet the water off with a free-flowing hose to carry away the last of the soap.
- Dry with microfiber — don’t air-dry. A plush microfiber towel or a filtered air blower prevents water spots. Air-drying is the #1 cause of spotting on coatings.
Top It Up Every Few Months.
The hydrophobic beading is what makes a coating feel “self-cleaning.” Over months of UV and washing it slowly fades — so apply a ceramic booster (SiO2 spray sealant) every two to four months after a wash. It takes ten minutes, refreshes the slickness and beading, and extends the life of the base coating.
Once a year, decontaminate the surface with a pH-neutral iron remover to pull out embedded brake dust and industrial fallout the coating can’t shed on its own. That annual reset keeps the finish glassy.

Ceramic Care Do’s & Don’ts
Do
- Wait ~10 days after application before the first wash
- Hand wash every two weeks, two-bucket method
- Use pH-neutral or SiO2 ceramic shampoo
- Dry with microfiber, never air-dry
- Apply a ceramic booster every 2–4 months
- Do an annual iron decontamination
Don’t
- Use dish soap (Dawn) or wax-additive soaps
- Run it through automatic brush car washes
- Wash or dry in direct sunlight
- Let the car air-dry after rinsing
- Use abrasive sponges, brushes, or pads
- Assume “ceramic” means you never have to wash it
You Don’t Wax a Coated Car.
Wax sits on top of the ceramic, clogs the hydrophobic surface, and can streak — it actually works against the coating. If you want to refresh the gloss and beading, use a ceramic booster spray made for coatings, not wax. Already have PPF under your ceramic? See our PPF care guide — the wash routine is the same, which is exactly why the PPF-plus-ceramic combo is so low-maintenance.
Caring for the Whole Build.
Common Questions
How often should I wash a ceramic coated car?
Every two weeks is ideal. The coating keeps the car cleaner between washes, but regular washing removes bonded contaminants like bird droppings, sap, and brake dust before they can etch the surface.
Can I use dish soap on a ceramic coating?
No. Dish soaps like Dawn are high-pH degreasers that strip the coating’s hydrophobic properties and shorten its life. Always use a pH-neutral car shampoo, ideally one with SiO2 made for coated cars.
How soon can I wash my car after a ceramic coating?
Wait about 10 days. The coating is touch-dry in 24–48 hours but keeps hardening for one to two weeks. Keep it dry during that window — no rain, sprinklers, or car washes if you can avoid them.
Do I need to wax a ceramic coated car?
No — and you shouldn’t. Wax clogs the hydrophobic surface and can streak. To refresh gloss and beading, use a ceramic booster (SiO2 spray sealant) made for coatings instead of wax.
How do I restore the water beading on my ceramic coating?
Wash the car, then apply a ceramic booster spray every two to four months. It re-establishes the slick, beading top layer. If beading has faded badly, a yearly iron decontamination plus a booster usually brings it back; if not, the base coating may be due for inspection.
Can I take a ceramic coated car through a car wash?
A touchless car wash is fine. Avoid automatic brush washes — the brushes leave micro-scratches and often use high-pH soaps that degrade the coating. A two-bucket hand wash is always best.
Want That Showroom Gloss?
Ceramic Pro, IGL, and Gtechniq coatings in Coconut Creek. Free quotes and free care consultations.
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📍 6601 Lyons Rd, Suite C-14, Coconut Creek FL 33073
📞 (954) 531-9965 · ✉ info@bigshotrides.com
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