How much paint do I need?
For a room, wall area is 2 x (length + width) x wall height. A 12 x 12 room with 8 ft walls, 2 coats, and 350 sq ft per gallon needs about 2.19 gallons before a separate buffer.
Coverage changes by surface
Porous drywall, patched areas, textured walls, dark color changes, exterior surfaces, and rough wood can reduce real coverage per gallon.
Estimate rooms separately
Separate rooms, ceilings, trim, doors, cabinets, decks, and accent walls when coats, color, surface type, or coverage differs.
Paint surface coverage examples
Examples use measured paintable surface area before final product-label adjustments.
| Surface example | Paintable area | Estimated gallons |
|---|---|---|
| Smooth sealed surface | 120 sq ft | 0.34 gallons at 350 sq ft/gal |
| Rough wood or masonry | 120 sq ft | 0.48 gallons at 250 sq ft/gal |
| Small parts and edges | 120 sq ft | 0.55 gallons at 220 sq ft/gal |
| Primer coat planning | 120 sq ft | 0.40 gallons at 300 sq ft/gal |
Before you calculate
- Measure paintable surface area rather than relying only on floor area.
- Separate walls, ceilings, trim, decks, cabinets, and exterior surfaces when products or coats differ.
- Use the actual product coverage from the label.
Common mistakes
- Forgetting coat count, primer, texture, color changes, and surface porosity.
- Combining trim, ceilings, doors, and walls in one estimate.
- Ignoring pattern repeat for wallpaper or absorption for stain.
Formula
units = ceil((area * (1 + wastePercent / 100)) / coveragePerUnit)
Assumptions
- Coverage changes with product, surface texture, primer, color change, coats, and surface condition.
- Openings, trim, repairs, masking, and separate coatings should be estimated separately.
- Use the selected product label and a realistic coat count before buying.
Example
Estimated garden production greenhouse row plant label kiosk paint coverage needed (gallons): 1 gallon
How to estimate paint gallons
- Measure the paintable surface area in square feet, subtracting only major openings when appropriate.
- Enter paint coverage per gallon from the product label and include the number of coats when the project needs more than one coat.
- Add waste or touch-up allowance for texture, color changes, overspray, trim edges, and small parts.
- Divide adjusted paint area by coverage per gallon and round up to whole gallons or containers; the default example returns 1 gallon.
- Check primer, prep, masking, trim paint, and sprayer or roller needs separately from paint quantity.
Before you buy materials
- Round up to full gallons, rolls, or containers.
- Keep extra material for touchups when color consistency matters.
FAQ
How do I calculate wall area for painting?
Use wall area = 2 x (room length + room width) x wall height. Then multiply by coats and divide by coverage per gallon.
How much paint for a 12 x 12 room?
With 8 ft walls, 2 coats, and 350 sq ft per gallon, a 12 x 12 room needs about 2.19 gallons before subtracting openings or adding a separate buffer.
Should I subtract windows and doors?
For quick room estimates, many people leave openings in as a buffer. For detailed takeoffs, subtract large openings and calculate trim separately.
Does this include ceilings or trim?
No unless you add those surfaces to the area. Ceilings, trim, doors, cabinets, and decks often need separate paint or stain estimates.
Related calculators
This calculator is for planning estimates only. Verify final quantities with product labels, project conditions, and a qualified professional when accuracy matters.