Suzuki Touch-Up Pen — Paint Only
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL TOUCH UP PAINT PRODUCTS!
FREE SHIPPING ON ALL TOUCH UP PAINT PRODUCTS!
Fix small chips, scratches, and edge nicks on your Suzuki with a precise touch-up paint pen — controlled, mess-free application for quick spot repairs.
Every pen is custom-matched to your Suzuki's exact factory paint code — choose your code and we'll mix it to match.
What you get:
Add our matching ClearCoat and Primer for a complete prep-to-finish repair.
VIN-assisted paint matching
A paint code is important, but it is only one piece of the match. Partify uses your vehicle details to help verify the correct factory color before you order touch-up paint.
Use the right repair
Touch-up paint FAQ
Get the details on VIN-assisted matching, clear coat, primer, and when touch-up paint is the right repair.
Yes. Your VIN helps us identify your vehicle's year, make, model, and factory paint options so we can help match the correct touch-up paint. It is especially helpful if you are not sure where to find your paint code.
Paint codes can repeat across years, trims, and manufacturers, and some vehicles have multiple similar color options. VIN-assisted matching gives us more vehicle context, which helps reduce guesswork compared with sellers who only ask for a paint code.
Sometimes, yes. The VIN is a strong starting point, but the paint code can be the final confirmation. If there is any uncertainty, using both gives the best chance of selecting the right factory color.
We match the original factory color as closely as possible using your vehicle information. Real-world results can still be affected by sun fading, age, previous repairs, clear coat condition, and how the paint is applied.
Touch-up paint is best for small rock chips, light scratches, scuffs, and small spots where paint has been worn away. It is meant for small cosmetic repairs, not major body damage.
No. Rust, bubbling paint, peeling clear coat, dents, cracks, and large scrapes usually need body repair first. If the part is badly damaged, a painted replacement part may be the better fix.
Most modern vehicles use a base coat and clear coat finish, so clear coat is usually recommended. It adds gloss, protection, and helps the repaired area look closer to the surrounding paint.
Primer is recommended when the chip or scratch goes down to bare metal or plastic. If the damage is only in the color layer and the surface underneath is still painted, primer may not be necessary.
Pens and bottles are best for small chips, fine scratches, and precise repairs. Pint, quart, and gallon sizes are better for larger repair areas, repeated use, or customers using spray equipment.
Yes, as long as the part is painted and the damage is small. If the plastic is cracked, gouged, warped, or missing chunks, replacing the part will usually give a better result.