Paint Coverage
Gallons needed for room walls
About Paint Coverage
A paint-coverage calculator estimates how many gallons of paint you need for a room based on wall area, coats, and the paint's spread rate. The Toolenza calculator uses a default of 350 sq ft per gallon for one coat — the manufacturer-quoted spread for most interior latex paints in good condition.
What "350 sq ft per gallon" actually means
That's the first-coat coverage on a smooth, primed, single-colour surface. Real coverage drops on:
- Porous surfaces (raw drywall, bare wood) — often need a separate primer first, then ~280–320 sq ft/gal on the paint.
- Textured surfaces (popcorn ceiling, brick, stucco) — 200–280 sq ft/gal. The extra surface area eats paint.
- Dark colours over light — most need 2 coats, sometimes 3, because high-pigment paints have lower spread.
- Light colours over dark — almost always 2 coats; sometimes 3 with a tinted primer.
Two-coat rule of thumb
For most repaints, plan for 2 coats. The math: room area × 2 / 350 = gallons needed. A 12 × 14 ft room with 9 ft ceilings has ~468 sq ft of wall (less ~40 sq ft for one door and one window) → 428 × 2 / 350 ≈ 2.4 gallons. Round up to 3 — paint stores can't reorder the exact tint match later, so finishing one room with one batch matters.
Buying tips
- Buy all the paint at once. Tint batches vary by a few percent; mid-job replenishment can show on the wall as a streak.
- Save the leftover. Cans last 2–10 years if properly sealed. Label with the room + date.
- Skip the bargain primer. A separate quality primer on bare or stained surfaces saves a coat of finish paint, which costs more per gallon.
- Quart for trim, gallon for walls. Trim takes 50–80 sq ft/quart; a 100-ft baseboard at 4 inches tall is ~33 sq ft per coat, easy on one quart.
Frequently asked questions
Two for most colour changes. One coat works only when the new colour is very close to the old, or with self-priming dark-to-dark paints.
For small rooms, yes — they're a big percentage of wall area. For large rooms, the difference is small and the extra paint serves as insurance.
350 sq ft/gallon is the typical claim. Rough textures (popcorn ceilings, stucco) drop to 200-250; smooth flat walls hit 400+.
Yes if: bare drywall, oil over latex (or vice versa), big colour change, stained surface. Tinted primer (toward the topcoat colour) saves a topcoat layer.
Real-world coverage is 10-20% below the can's claim due to texture, application style, and brand. Buy a touch more than the calculator says for the first coat.
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