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Exterior Care beginner 4 min read

Keeping Your Door Panels From Fading Out

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Aussie sun and red dust absolutely wreck door trims if you let them sit. Here is how to clean and protect them before the UV turns your black plastics grey.

B"W
Barry "Bazza" Williams Product Reviewer
| Updated: 5 March 2026
Keeping Your Door Panels From Fading Out

Aussie Conditions

Australian conditions are tougher than most—intense UV, red dust, coastal salt, and 40°C summers. European car care advice often doesn't cut it here.
Quick Summary

Look, most blokes forget about the door panels until they're covered in kick marks or chalky from the sun. Between the salt air if you're near the coast and that bloody red dust that gets into every crevice, your doors take a beating. This is a quick guide on how to get them sorted without spending all arvo on it. Just a few pro tricks to keep them looking factory.

01

Why Bother With Doors?

Thing is, your door panels are the first thing you see when you hop in, and they're also the first thing the sun hits when you're driving. I've seen so many modern utes with 'elbow fade' on the armrest where the sweat and UV have literally eaten the grain away. If you've been out past Broken Hill or parked near the beach, you've got salt and silica sitting in those textures acting like sandpaper. It's gotta go.

Ditch the Silicone Sprays

Honestly, don't waste your money on those cheap, greasy 'shiny' sprays from the servo. They're a dust magnet. I learned this the hard way on a black Commodore, used a cheap silicone dressing and by the time I drove home, the doors were orange from the dust sticking to them. Use a matte or satin finish protectant like Bowden's Own Vinyl Care or Aerospace 303. They actually protect from UV without the oily mess.

The Soft Brush Trick

If you've got red dust stuck in the grain of the plastic, a microfibre cloth won't touch it. You'll just be pushing dirt around. Get a soft-bristled detailing brush (or even a clean 2-inch paintbrush) and work your cleaner into a lather. This lifts the grit out of the texture so you can actually wipe it away. (your partner will thank you when their clothes stop getting red stains from the door).

Watch the Electronics

Don't go spraying your cleaner directly onto the door. A mate of mine once fried the window switch on his Ranger because he soaked the panel with an All-Purpose Cleaner (APC). Spray your product onto your cloth or brush first, then apply it to the door. It keeps the liquid away from the switches and stops you getting overspray on the glass.

Kick Marks and Scuffs

Those white scuff marks at the bottom of the door from people's boots? Most of the time they aren't scratches, they're just rubber transfer. I usually use a slightly stronger dilution of APC and a Magic Eraser, but be bloody careful, if you scrub too hard with a Magic Eraser, you'll strip the texture right off the plastic. Light pressure only, then hit it with a protectant immediately after.
02

The Door Detail Kit

What You'll Need

0/4
Interior Detailer or APC — Meguiar's Quik Interior Detailer is a safe bet for most.
Soft Detailing Brush — Essential for getting dust out of speaker grilles.
3-4 Microfibre Cloths — One for cleaning, one for buffing dry.
UV Protectant — Must have an SPF rating for the Aussie sun.

Watch Out

Never use baby wipes on your interior. They've got oils and chemicals that can react with automotive plastics over time, making them sticky. Also, stay away from any product that says 'High Gloss' unless you want the sun reflecting off your door and blinding you while you're trying to drive to work.
03

Common Questions

How often should I do this?
If it’s a daily driver, give it a quick wipe every fortnight. If you've been off-road or at the beach, do it the same day you wash the outside. Salt and dust don't wait.
Can I use the same stuff on leather inserts?
Usually, a dedicated interior detailer is fine for 'leatherette' or vinyl, but if you've got real cowhide, stick to a proper leather cleaner. Real leather hates the high-pH stuff found in some multi-purpose cleaners.
04

Wrap Up

Right, so that's the go. Keep the dust out of the grain, use a brush for the tricky bits, and always finish with a UV blocker. It only takes 5 minutes a door, and it'll stop your interior looking like a sun-bleached desert in three years' time. Give it a crack this weekend. No dramas!

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