Why Carbon Fiber Yellows + How to Prevent It | RW Carbon
Carbon fiber yellows because UV radiation breaks down the clear resin coating on top of the weave — not the carbon itself. The weave underneath is essentially permanent. What you’re seeing turn yellow is the protective clear coat above it slowly degrading from sun exposure, heat, and time. We can all agree carbon fiber yellowing is not fun.
The good news: yellowing is preventable with the right care. This is why here at RW Carbon we always recommend our RW Carbon Fiber Care Kit. The better news: high-quality carbon parts built with UV-stable resin can stay deep, glossy, and black for a decade or longer when treated properly.
What Actually Causes Carbon Fiber To Yellow?
Going into more depth, the clear coat is what actually fails and not the carbon it self. When UV directly hits the resin it slowly starts to break down overtime. The byproduct of that is the clear starts to shift to an yellowish color. This is similar to old plastic headlights haze over and the white plastic tends to haze over.
A few accelerators make this worse:
Direct sun exposure – A car parked outside in Southern California will yellow faster than the same car garaged in Seattle.
Heat – Engine bay carbon (intake covers, strut bars) sees temperatures clear coat was never designed for.
Cheap resin – Lower-grade epoxies and clear coats can start yellowing within 12–18 months. Premium UV-stable formulations can last 7–10+ years before showing change.
Improper cleaning – Harsh degreasers, abrasive polishes, and wax with petroleum solvents strip and oxidize the clear coat from above.
How To Prevent Carbon Fiber From Yellowing
Use the RW Carbon Fiber Care Kit. This kit includes a premium spray wax, deluxe carbon wax, polishing compound, as well as a micro fiber and a buff pad. Using these products after a carwash will keep your carbon looking fresh and revived. Thus, allowing you to enjoy your parts for far much longer.
Apply ceramic coating. This is the single highest-leverage thing you can do. A quality ceramic coating adds a sacrificial UV-blocking layer above the factory clear coat. The coating takes the UV damage instead of your carbon. Reapply every 2–5 years depending on the product.
Buy quality parts from the start. This is the part most people skip. The clear coat formulation is set the day the part is made. You can do everything right after the fact and still watch a low-grade part yellow in 18 months because the resin was never UV-stable to begin with.
When you’re shopping carbon, ask the manufacturer specifically about their resin and clear coat process. Reputable brands will tell you. If they dodge the question, that’s your answer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does ceramic coating prevent carbon fiber from yellowing? Ceramic coating significantly slows yellowing by adding a UV-blocking layer above the clear coat. It doesn’t make carbon completely UV-proof, but it can extend the life of your finish by years.
Will yellowed carbon fiber keep getting worse over time? Yes. UV damage is cumulative. Once yellowing starts, the breakdown of the clear coat continues unless you stop the UV exposure (move it indoors, apply a coating, or refinish the part).
Can you paint over yellowed carbon fiber? Technically yes, but it defeats the entire purpose. Painting hides the weave that makes carbon visually distinctive. If you’re going to paint it, you might as well have used a cheaper material.
Does dry carbon fiber yellow less than wet carbon? Slightly, in some cases — dry carbon parts often use higher-grade resin systems. But the clear coat on top is still the primary variable. A wet-layup part with premium clear can outlast a dry-layup part with cheap clear.
How do I know if my carbon is yellowing or just dirty? Give the part a nice wash and wipe down to ensure it’s completely clean. Move the part into direct sunlight and check to see if the yellow tint is still there or if it’s gone.
If your current parts have already turned, you have options — restoration for surface yellowing, replacement for anything deeper. Either way, the next set of parts you buy should be ones built to outlast the problem in the first place.
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