Interior ceramic — what it does to leather, plastic and fabric

UV, stain and grease defence on the steering wheel: how formulas differ by material and why studios keep them separate.

Interior ceramic isn't "the same ceramic, only inside." Leather, plastic, fabric, and Alcantara react to chemistry in completely different ways: the formula that seals dashboard plastic is too stiff for leather and won't work on fabric. So interior ceramic isn't one procedure but a set of narrow formulas, each with its own density, elasticity, and lifespan. Below — what each does, how it differs from exterior body ceramic, why Tbilisi summers make it pay off, and what price to ask so you don't overpay for marketing.

How interior ceramic differs from body ceramic

Exterior ceramic works on hard clearcoat: put a hydrophobic film on a rigid surface that doesn't flex. Interior ceramic is a different problem: it sits on materials that bend, stretch, and rub against a seat belt and the driver's elbow 40 hours a week. Interior formulas are different — elastic, with lower crosslink density, and often with extra components against UV and oily fingerprints.

Second difference: the load. On the body the enemies are water, salt, bird droppings, UV. Inside it's grease from hands, sweat, cosmetics, summer sunscreen, kid stains, coffee on the centre console. These soak into porous materials — especially bare plastic and natural leather — and are hard to lift once inside. Interior ceramic works as an "invisible lid": the stain stays on the film and comes off with a damp cloth.

Third difference: lifespan. Interior ceramic lives shorter than exterior — 6–18 months versus 2–3 years. The reason is constant mechanical wear. In a year, the seat belt buffs ceramic off the driver's seat almost entirely; the steering wheel wears it faster. High-wear points (wheel, driver's seat, centre console) often get refreshed separately rather than redoing the whole cabin.

Ceramic on leather — formula, load, what changes

Natural leather is the most finicky cabin material. Over time it dries, cracks, and darkens where contact is heaviest. Standard care (monthly conditioner) helps but doesn't stop sunscreen fingerprints and denim darkening. Leather ceramic is a lanolin-based formula with SiO₂ crosslinking on top: first layer feeds, second seals.

What changes in practice. First: leather stops dulling from sweat and oily hands — oil stays on the film and wipes off with a leather cloth. Second: UV defence. Gyeon Q² LeatherShield and similar carry UV filters that slow colour loss under glass. Tbilisi summers put the cabin in direct sun 4–6 hours a day; without UV cover light leather yellows in 2–3 seasons. Third: ceramic doesn't feel slippery. Unlike conditioners that leave leather "wet," ceramic gives a dry matte film — you sit and grip the wheel as usual.

What ceramic on leather doesn't do: stitch cuts, restore already-dried leather (that gets separate restoration first, then ceramic), or make leather "stiff" — that's a forum myth. Applied correctly, leather stays soft.

Ceramic on plastic — which zones are critical

Interior plastic splits into two categories: hard unpainted (dashboard, door cards, roof pillars) and soft unpainted (armrests, upholstery inserts, base-spec wheels). Both fade under UV, pick up scratches from rags and fingernails, and start absorbing oil prints. Plastic ceramic works three ways: lays down a hard UV-stable film, fills micro-relief (matte plastic gets a deeper sheen at its native angle), and cuts chemical absorption.

Critical zones in Tbilisi: dashboard (direct summer sun, up to 80°C on a black panel), upper door cards (constant UV through side glass), centre tunnel (oil from hands, spilt coffee). Cheap plastics on these surfaces go tacky within a year — polymers leach out under UV, and the only way to stop it is a ceramic film on top.

What happens without ceramic in Tbilisi. First: colour loss — a black panel turns grey-brown in 3–4 years. Second: micro-cracking, which collects dust and eventually shows as a visible web. Third: the tacky effect. Ceramic stops all three at the prevention stage.

Ceramic on fabric and Alcantara — the stain sits on top

Fabric works differently: leather and plastic have no pores between fibres, but fabric is nothing but pores. The job for fabric ceramic isn't to seal the surface (that turns it plastic to the touch) but to make each fibre hydrophobic. Water, coffee, juice — whatever lands on the seat doesn't sink in; it beads on top until you wipe it. Same principle as DWR on outdoor jackets, only for automotive fabric.

Fabric formula is liquid, applied with a sprayer and soft brush, cures in 30–60 minutes. Even application matters: a thin spot absorbs faster and shows as a "reverse stain." So fabric work is usually done by the same technicians who do exterior ceramic — the discipline is the same.

Alcantara is its own case. It's a short synthetic pile that crushes fast and goes "glossy" in contact zones (wheels, seat inserts, premium headliners). Alcantara ceramic is a softer formula that doesn't glue the pile but makes every strand repel sweat and grease. Without it, a driver's Alcantara wheel turns polished in two years — no interior dry cleaning fully reverses that.

Interior ceramic coating — pricing in Tbilisi

BESTAUTO interior pricing depends on the material mix: plastic only is one tier, plastic plus leather is another, full cabin with fabric and Alcantara is a third. Base rate covers a sedan; SUVs and minivans are priced separately for surface area.

  • Interior ceramic coating — from 300 ₾
  • Full-body exterior ceramic — from 500 ₾
  • Anti-rain coating on glass — from 150 ₾

Pricing logic: leather formula costs more than plastic, Alcantara takes 1.5x the application time, fabric needs less material but more hand work. At inspection the technician counts actual materials, identifies critical zones, and decides whether you need the full cabin or just wheel-seats-dashboard. Full pricing and package breakdown are on the ceramic coating service page.

Who actually benefits and who is paying for marketing

Two profiles pay off. First — owners of light leather cabins (beige, cream, white) on cars that park outside in Tbilisi summers. UV yellowing and denim ink transfer are their main problems and ceramic genuinely solves them. Second — families with small children or dogs, where stains on rear fabric are inevitable. A hydrophobic film buys you the first six months of family life.

Who gets more marketing than value: owners of black-plastic economy cabins past 100k km. UV fade has already happened, cracks are there, and ceramic doesn't reverse past damage — it only defends future wear. For those cars, a good annual interior dry cleaning with fabric impregnation is cheaper and more effective.

A separate case — ceramic on a car prepped for sale. It gives a "new interior" look for 4–6 months and often lifts resale. But as a long-term investment on a car you'll hand over in six months, it's wasted spend.

FAQ
How long does interior ceramic last?

6–18 months on average, depending on formula, material, and zone. Wheel and driver's seat — 6–9 months. Dashboard, door cards, passenger seats — 12–18 months. Headliner, pillar Alcantara, rear seats — up to 24 months because contact is minimal. Often the high-wear zones get refreshed separately rather than redoing the whole cabin.

Can leather be coated if it has already darkened?

Only after restoration. Ceramic preserves current state — existing darkening gets sealed in for another 12–18 months and is harder to remove later. Leather is restored first (cleaning, colour restoration, conditioning), then ceramic is applied. The two often run in one visit: restoration in the morning, ceramic in the evening after degrease.

Does plastic ceramic differ between cars?

The formula is the same; the approach differs by base plastic quality. Hard unpainted plastic (most economy cars) — one coat, straightforward. Soft-touch plastic (premium Audi, BMW, Mercedes top specs) — two thin coats with inter-coat flash, otherwise the film gives a "plastic gloss" that looks wrong on soft-touch. Good studios always ask the make and spec before work.

How do I care for a cabin with ceramic?

First week: dry microfibre only, no liquids. After that — normal care with pH-neutral products: no aggressive degreasers on the dashboard, alcohol wipes locally and rarely. Leather gets a conditioner every 4–6 months (more isn't needed — ceramic holds moisture). Fabric vacuums as usual; wipe spills immediately with a damp cloth. Every 12 months, visit the studio for a refresh on wear zones.

Does interior ceramic protect against odours?

No. Smells from smoke, pets, or spills live in the foam under the upholstery, not on the surface. Ceramic works on the surface and does nothing for smell. For smell you need ozone treatment after interior dry cleaning and before ceramic. Sequence: clean and ozone first, then once materials are fully dry and clean, apply ceramic. The reverse doesn't work.

Conclusion

Interior ceramic coating isn't one universal product but a set of narrow solutions for leather, plastic, fabric, and Alcantara. Each defends its own load: leather against UV and grease, plastic against fade and tackiness, fabric against stains and absorption. The economics: for light interiors and families with kids, ceramic saves restoration cost 3–4 years out; for black plastic past 100k km, it's more marketing than value.

For physical body protection, interior ceramic does nothing — different job. If paint defence against stone chips is on the agenda, PPF paint protection film on the exterior body is the tool, not interior ceramic.

Key takeaways:

  • Interior ceramic is a set of different formulas for leather, plastic, fabric, and Alcantara — not one product
  • Cabin lifespan is shorter than body: 6–18 months versus 2–3 years
  • Ceramic defends against future wear; it does not restore already-damaged materials
  • Tbilisi price starts at 300 ₾ for interior; the full mix depends on materials
  • For odours, dry cleaning with ozone runs before ceramic, never after

Book an interior ceramic coating at BESTAUTO via the form on the service page, or call whichever studio is more convenient:

  • BESTAUTO Guramishvili — Guramishvili Ave. 78, tel. +995 550 000 299
  • BESTAUTO Politkovskaya — Anna Politkovskaya St. 51, tel. +995 550 000 199

Both studios operate Monday to Saturday, 10:00–20:00. A free in-person cabin inspection comes first — that's how formulas are matched to the actual materials and the final price is agreed.

Real reviews from our clients
Google Reviews
4.8 ★★★★★ (185)
View all reviews on Google
Why Choose Our Detailing Center?
You'll love the result
  • 5 Years of Detailing Experience
    Professional wrapping of hundreds of cars of different makes and models
  • 2 Studios in Tbilisi
    Guramishvili 78 and Anna Politkovskaya 51 — choose a convenient location
  • 2,000 Satisfied Clients
    Hundreds of reviews, 4.9★ rating on Google
  • 10-Year Film Warranty
    We cover peeling, yellowing, and material defects

Order professional ceramic coating

Our detailing studio will handle your task with quality

Book a consultation

Choose the nearest studio
for a free consultation

Free inspection, pre-consultation and booking for main services available at both locations

BESTAUTO Guramishvili
Tbilisi, Guramishvili Ave. 78
BESTAUTO Guramishvili

Tbilisi, Guramishvili Ave. 78

+995 550 000 299
Mon–Sat 10:00 – 20:00
Enter phone in international format: +995 5XX XXX XXX
Request sent!
We will call you back within 15 minutes.
Or call us: +995 550 000 299
BESTAUTO Saburtalo
Tbilisi, Anna Politkovskaya St. 51
BESTAUTO Saburtalo

Tbilisi, Anna Politkovskaya St. 51

+995 550 000 199
Mon–Sat 10:00 – 20:00
Enter phone in international format: +995 5XX XXX XXX
Request sent!
We will call you back within 15 minutes.
Or call us: +995 550 000 199
Chat on WhatsApp
Choose your studio
Guramishvili Studio
78 Guramishvili St
Saburtalo Studio
51 Anna Politkovskaya St
Book a Free Inspection