Home Paint Calculator
Painting a room is more than multiplying floor size by a paint-label number. Walls have height, windows and doors remove area, ceilings add a large flat surface, trim can consume surprising paint, and rough surfaces need more gallons than smooth walls. This Home Paint Calculator is built for that complete room-planning step. It estimates the paintable area, base gallons, gallons after a 10 percent allowance, and the rounded gallon purchase for an interior project.
Use it when you are preparing a bedroom, office, rental turnover, nursery, hallway, or living room and want a realistic purchase quantity before going to the store. Unlike a simple coverage tool, this calculator lets you enter exact unpainted square footage for windows, doors, and other areas. It also has switches for ceiling and trim, making it closer to a project estimator than a can-count shortcut.
What this estimator measures
The calculator starts with the room’s four walls. Length, width, and height are all entered in feet. Window area, door area, and other unpainted area are entered directly as square feet, so you can handle a wall of glass, built-in cabinets, tile wainscoting, or an accent section that will not be painted. If the ceiling switch is on, the calculator adds length times width. If the trim switch is on, it adds 10 percent of wall area as a practical allowance for baseboards, casings, and other linear trim.
For a coverage-only wall estimate with standard door and window deductions, use the paint coverage calculator. For a broad paint area comparison, visit the paint calculator. If your first problem is measuring the room footprint, the square footage calculator can help before you estimate paint.
Calculation and rounding
Wall area is the perimeter of the room multiplied by wall height:
The total paintable area adds optional ceiling area and optional trim allowance, then subtracts unpainted areas:
The coverage rate depends on surface type. Smooth surfaces use 400 square feet per gallon, semi-smooth surfaces use 350, and rough surfaces use 300. The calculator then multiplies by the number of coats, adds 10 percent extra, and rounds up to whole gallons:
The three coverage values, the trim allowance, and the 10 percent extra are editable publisher planning scenarios. Check the selected paint’s label and manufacturer calculator rather than treating these presets as product guarantees.
Example
Consider the default room: 12 feet long, 10 feet wide, and 8 feet high. Window area is 30 square feet, door area is 20 square feet, other unpainted area is 0, the surface is smooth, the room needs two coats, and ceiling and trim are both off.
The wall area is:
The total unpainted area is 30 + 20 + 0 = 50 square feet, so paintable area is 302 square feet. Smooth coverage is 400 square feet per gallon. With two coats, the base amount is 302 × 2 ÷ 400 = 1.51 gallons. Adding 10 percent extra gives 1.661 gallons, displayed as 1.66 gallons. The recommended purchase rounds up to 2 gallons.
Turn on the ceiling for the same room and another 120 square feet is added. Turn on trim and 35.2 square feet is added. Those two switches can move a project from a comfortable two-gallon purchase to a three-gallon purchase, depending on the wall texture and coat count.
Benchmarks for interior paint
Many interior wall paints are advertised near 350 to 400 square feet per gallon on smooth, properly prepared surfaces. The smooth setting uses the upper-end 400-square-foot scenario. Semi-smooth walls, light orange peel texture, older plaster, and repeated patching reduce spread, so the calculator uses 350. Rough surfaces use 300 because rollers leave paint in texture and because the surface area is effectively larger than a flat rectangle.
Ceilings often use flat paint and can be estimated separately if the product differs from the walls. Trim may use semi-gloss or satin enamel, so the 10 percent trim shortcut should be treated as a planning number, not a substitute for a professional bid on detailed millwork.
Money-saving ways to use the estimate
Measure the unpainted areas instead of accepting defaults. A room with a large picture window, mirrored closet doors, or built-ins may need much less wall paint than a plain room of the same size. Prepare the surface before applying finish paint: wash greasy walls, sand glossy patches, spot-prime repairs, and seal stains. Good prep often saves more than buying a cheaper paint because it reduces extra coats. If several rooms use the same product and color, add their gallons together before buying so you can choose the most economical container size and keep the color batch consistent.
Common pitfalls
Do not subtract windows and doors twice. If you enter the window and door square footage, leave those openings out of any “other unpainted area” number. Do not use floor area as wall area; wall area depends on height. Do not assume one coat will cover a strong color change, even with premium paint. Also remember that this tool does not price labor, primer, rollers, tape, drop cloths, or disposal. It is a gallon estimator for the paint itself.
Sources
The arithmetic uses the values entered above.
Coverage and unit references:
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NIST unit conversion reference Any other links below provide context only; they do not establish editable prices, presets, recommendation bands, or the calculator arithmetic.
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Sherwin-Williams, Pure White SW 7005 product page — manufacturer coverage and product-data context for interior paint.
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Sherwin-Williams, Peeling and cracking problem solver — surface preparation issues that can affect coating performance.
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EPA, Volatile Organic Compounds’ Impact on Indoor Air Quality — indoor air quality context for painting projects.