I have a cedar deck that needs stain every other year, and I have killed brushes and burned out cheap sprayers learning what actually works. After comparing five sprayers across two full deck jobs, these are the ones worth your time.

Paint SprayerTypeTank/HopperBest For
Graco Magnum X5AirlessCup or bucketAll-around pick
Wagner Control Pro 130Low-pressure airless1.5 gal hopperReduced overspray
HomeRight Super Finish MaxHVLP39 oz cupSmall decks
Graco TrueCoat 360 DSPHandheld airless32 oz cupPortability
Titan ControlMax 1700Low-pressure airlessBucket suctionPro DIY

Graco Magnum X5

This is the workhorse. Pulls stain directly from a 5 gallon bucket, lays down a smooth coat, and handles thick semi-transparent or solid stains without thinning. I did my 600 square foot deck in under 90 minutes including a back-brush pass.

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Wagner Control Pro 130

The Control Pro uses lower pressure than a standard airless, which means less overspray and fewer fumes drifting onto your siding and plants. It is the sprayer I recommend for decks in tight spots near houses. Sprays slightly slower but cleaner.

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HomeRight Super Finish Max

The HVLP is the right pick for small decks under 200 square feet or for the railings and balusters where finesse matters. Holds 39 ounces in the cup so you refill more often, but the spray pattern is the finest of the lineup.

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Graco TrueCoat 360 DSP

A handheld airless that bridges the gap between cup sprayers and full airless rigs. Holds 32 ounces and runs on house current. Great for railings, fascia, and tight spots where dragging a bucket sprayer is awkward.

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Titan ControlMax 1700

The Titan is the pro-level pick for big jobs. Sucks straight from a 5 gallon pail, lays a wide pattern, and handles even high-viscosity solid stain without breakdown. Heavier and pricier than the Magnum X5, but for multi-day jobs the time savings adds up.

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What Matters Most

Tip size determines what you can spray. For stains, 0.013 to 0.017 inch tips work well. Anything smaller clogs on solid stain, anything bigger oversprays badly. Then look at flow rate. 0.27 to 0.35 GPM is the sweet spot for deck work.

My Setup

I run my Magnum X5 with a 50 foot hose so I can park the unit on the lawn and walk the gun across the deck. A clean 5 gallon bucket holds my stain, and a paint strainer in the bucket catches debris that would otherwise clog the tip.

Common Mistakes

Do not start spraying without masking siding, plants, and walkways. Even low-pressure sprayers throw mist that lands 6 to 10 feet away. Plastic drop cloths around the perimeter save hours of cleanup. Also do not skip flushing the unit thoroughly when done. Dried stain ruins seals and tips fast.

Final Recommendation

For most DIY deck stain jobs the Graco Magnum X5 is the right buy. For small decks or low-overspray situations, the Wagner Control Pro 130. For pro-level speed and durability, the Titan ControlMax 1700. Tip size matters more than brand.

Frequently asked questions

Can I spray stain straight from the can without thinning?+

For airless sprayers, usually yes. For HVLP and handheld sprayers, you typically need to thin solid stain by 10 to 15 percent with water or mineral spirits depending on the base.

Do I still need to back-brush after spraying?+

Yes. Spraying lays the stain down fast but does not work it into the grain. A quick back-brush with a stain pad gives much better penetration and a cleaner finish.

Independent video for additional perspective on 5 Best Paint Sprayer For Deck Stain of 2026.

Third-party YouTube content. Watch on YouTube.
RC
Author

Riley Cooper

Health Devices & Outdoor Equipment Editor

Riley Cooper reviews health and personal care devices, outdoor power tools, and garden equipment at The Tested Hub. With a background in physical therapy and years of hands-on product testing, Riley evaluates health devices with a practical, clinical eye and puts outdoor gear through real-world use across the seasons. From blood pressure monitors and massage guns to lawn mowers and irrigation tools, Riley focuses on what actually holds up in everyday use.