How Does the Paint Calculator Work?
If you are asking how much paint do I need, start here: our free paint calculator online turns room dimensions into gallons and liters so you can order confidently. It doubles as a wall paint calculator and room paint calculator—enter length, width, and wall height in feet or metres, set doors and windows (we subtract typical opening areas), choose how many coats you plan to apply, then paste the coverage number from your can.
The paint estimator computes perimeter × height wall area, removes openings, multiplies by coats, and divides by coverage—the same logic pros use for quick budgets. Add optional price per liter for instant material cost. Live totals mean you can compare brands or switch from two coats to three after a bold colour choice.
Want gross and net wall surface before coverage math? Use our Wall Area Calculator, then return here for coats, gallons, and liters.
Paint Coverage Formula
The paint coverage calculator applies a straightforward formula you can audit. When you want wall surface isolated from cans first, run the Wall Area Calculator, then carry net area into the steps below:
- Gross wall area ≈ perimeter × wall height (four walls in a typical box-shaped room).
- Net paintable area = gross wall area − deductions for doors, windows, and anything you are not painting.
- Total coated area = net paintable area × number of coats.
- Paint volume = total coated area ÷ coverage from the label (match sq ft per gallon, sq m per litre, or whatever the manufacturer specifies).
Real-world spread rates change with porosity, roller nap, thinning, temperature, and primer—always trust your product datasheet over a generic guess. Run two scenarios if you are comparing efficient premium lines versus budget cans.
How Much Paint Do I Need for Different Rooms?
Each space behaves differently, so treat every room as its own room paint calculator pass unless dimensions truly match:
- Bedrooms — Usually simple rectangles; alcoves, wardrobes, and feature walls change coated area.
- Kitchens — Tile backsplashes, cabinets, and appliances reduce wall paint; adjust counts or run a conservative estimate.
- Halls & stairs — Extra vertical surface from stair flights or vaulted ceilings drives litres up fast.
- Ceilings — Count them only when ceiling paint is in scope; products often differ from wall emulsion.
- Whole-home jobs — Sum rooms or floors separately, round up cans consistently, and keep 5–10% for touch-ups.
HomeSols outputs gallons and liters together so you can shop globally. Pair results with our tools hub—try the Wall Area Calculator when you want gross and net wall square footage without coverage math, or the tile calculator when kitchens or baths mix tile and paint.
Interior vs Exterior Paint Coverage
Interior paint calculator workflows assume climate-controlled drywall or plaster, typical rollers, and labeled indoor coverage. Dark-to-light schemes, plaster repairs, or skipping primer can push you toward a third coat.
An exterior paint calculator must factor harsher UV, wind-driven rain, masonry texture, wood grain, multiple system coats (primer, body, trim), and slower curing—effective coverage almost always trails the brochure number. Use exterior-specific label rates here only as a starting point, then add contingency.
Always specify moisture-rated products for wet zones (bath, laundry) even when you are “only” using an interior workflow—the underlying maths is the same, but allowable film thickness and recoat windows differ.
Common Paint Estimation Mistakes
- Using the wrong coverage — Treating every brand like “350 sq ft/gal” breaks your paint coverage calculator results.
- Forgetting extra coats — Feature colours or patched substrates eat litres; multiply coats before dividing.
- Ignoring large openings — Floor-to-ceiling glazing should be deducted when you need quote-grade accuracy.
- Mixing units — Keep feet/metres consistent with the coverage units printed on the tin.
- Zero buffer — Ordering exact litres leaves nothing for touch-ups after furniture moves.
No automated paint estimator replaces site-specific inspection for damp, failed coatings, or regulatory requirements—bring pros in when scope or safety demands it.