Paint Cost Calculator
Estimate the total cost to paint a room, house interior, exterior wall area, ceiling, rental unit, office, or renovation project. Calculate paint gallons, primer gallons, material cost, labor cost, supplies, waste, tax, and total painting cost in under 30 seconds.
Calculate Painting Cost
Your Paint Cost Estimate
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Formula used:
Practical recommendation:
Quick Formula Box
Net paintable area = total area − openings or excluded surfaces
Paint gallons = net area × paint coats ÷ paint coverage
Paint gallons with waste = paint gallons × waste factor
Primer gallons = net area × primer coats ÷ primer coverage
Material cost = rounded paint gallons × paint price + rounded primer gallons × primer price + supplies + prep
Labor cost = net area × labor rate
Total cost = material cost + labor cost + tax on materials
Paint Cost Reference Table
| Project Type | Typical Paint Coverage | Common Coats | Cost Drivers | Planning Tip |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interior room repaint | 300–400 sq ft/gal | 2 paint coats | Paint quality, labor, repairs, ceiling, trim | Two coats give better color consistency than one heavy coat. |
| New drywall painting | 250–350 sq ft/gal | 1 primer + 2 paint coats | Primer, drywall porosity, sanding, dust removal | Always prime new drywall before finish paint. |
| Ceiling painting | 300–400 sq ft/gal | 1–2 coats | Texture, stains, height, masking, roller type | Textured ceilings often use more paint than smooth ceilings. |
| Exterior siding | 250–350 sq ft/gal | 2 coats | Surface type, prep, scraping, caulking, height | Rough stucco, brick, and weathered wood reduce coverage. |
| Trim and doors | 300–450 sq ft/gal | 1–2 coats | Enamel paint, sanding, caulking, brush work | Trim labor is usually higher per square foot than walls. |
| Cabinet painting | 250–400 sq ft/gal | Primer + 2 coats | Cleaning, sanding, primer, enamel, spraying | Cabinet cost is driven more by labor than paint gallons. |
| Garage painting | 250–400 sq ft/gal | 1 primer + 2 coats | Drywall condition, ceiling height, exposed surfaces | Unfinished garage drywall can absorb more primer. |
| Rental repaint | 300–400 sq ft/gal | 1–2 coats | Touch-ups, speed, wall damage, color change | Same-color repaints may need less material than color changes. |
| High color change | 250–350 sq ft/gal | Primer + 2 coats | Dark colors, bright colors, coverage limits | Use tinted primer when changing from dark to light or light to dark. |
| Rough masonry | 150–300 sq ft/gal | Primer + 2 coats | Porosity, texture, block, stucco, brick | Use masonry-specific primer and paint when required. |
How to Use the Paint Cost Calculator
Paint Cost Calculator Guide
A paint cost calculator helps estimate the total price of a painting project before buying materials or hiring a painter. Paint cost is more than the price of a gallon. The real total can include primer, number of coats, surface area, paint coverage, labor, supplies, repairs, masking, sanding, caulking, waste, and taxes.
This calculator is designed for interior painting, exterior painting, room painting, ceiling painting, wall painting, rental repainting, office painting, garage painting, trim work, and renovation projects. It gives a practical estimate for paint quantity, primer quantity, material cost, labor cost, supplies, prep work, and total project cost.
What This Paint Cost Calculator Does
The tool calculates net paintable area, required paint gallons, required primer gallons, rounded gallons to buy, paint material cost, primer cost, supplies cost, prep cost, labor cost, tax, and total estimated cost. It can be used as a house painting cost calculator, interior paint cost calculator, exterior paint cost calculator, room painting cost calculator, wall paint cost calculator, and paint estimate calculator.
The default workflow is intentionally simple. You only need area, coats, paint price, and labor rate to get a fast estimate. Advanced inputs are optional, so first-time users are not forced to answer questions they may not know.
Why Painting Cost Estimating Matters
Painting looks simple, but small estimating errors can create budget surprises. A project that seems like “just one room” may require primer, two coats, multiple roller covers, painter’s tape, plastic, patching compound, caulk, sanding supplies, trays, brushes, and extra time for trim or ceilings.
Paint quantity also depends on color change, surface texture, surface porosity, paint quality, and application method. Smooth primed drywall may approach the high end of a paint’s coverage range, while rough stucco, block, brick, textured ceilings, and patched drywall may use much more paint.
Paint Cost Formula Explained
The basic paint quantity formula is:
Paint gallons = paintable area × number of coats ÷ coverage per gallon
After the base gallons are calculated, the calculator adds a waste allowance and rounds up because paint is normally purchased in full gallons. Primer is calculated separately using primer coats and primer coverage. Material cost includes paint, primer, supplies, and prep. Labor cost is calculated by multiplying the paintable area by the labor rate per square foot.
For example, if you have 480 square feet of paintable wall area, 2 coats, and paint coverage of 350 square feet per gallon, the base need is 2.74 gallons. With 10% waste, the estimate becomes about 3.02 gallons, so you should buy 4 gallons if purchasing only full gallons.
Paint Coverage and Gallons
Most interior wall paints cover roughly 300 to 400 square feet per gallon under typical conditions. The actual coverage can be lower on textured walls, porous drywall, masonry, rough siding, new drywall, dark color changes, or surfaces that have not been properly primed.
Higher-quality paint may cost more per gallon but can reduce labor and improve coverage. Cheap paint may need an extra coat, which can increase both material and labor cost. For hired work, the extra labor for another coat often costs more than upgrading to better paint.
Primer and Paint Cost
Primer is not always required, but it is important for new drywall, patched areas, stains, bare wood, masonry, glossy surfaces, major color changes, and surfaces with uneven absorption. Primer helps paint bond, improves coverage, and can reduce flashing.
Use primer when moving from dark to light colors, painting over stains, sealing new drywall, painting raw wood, coating masonry, or covering repaired areas. For dramatic color changes, tinted primer can reduce the number of finish coats needed.
Interior vs Exterior Paint Cost
Interior painting cost is usually driven by wall area, ceiling area, trim, doors, repairs, furniture movement, masking, paint quality, and number of coats. A simple bedroom repaint may be inexpensive, while a room with damaged walls, high ceilings, built-ins, doors, and trim can cost much more.
Exterior painting cost can be more variable because of ladders, height, weather, pressure washing, scraping, sanding, caulking, priming, siding type, stucco texture, brick porosity, and safety requirements. Exterior paint also needs to withstand UV, moisture, temperature changes, and weather exposure.
Practical Applications
DIY Painting Uses
Contractor and Landlord Uses
Common Paint Cost Mistakes
A common mistake is estimating only paint gallons and forgetting labor, supplies, primer, and prep. Another mistake is assuming one coat is enough. One coat may work for same-color touch-ups, but most full repaints look better with two coats.
Another issue is ignoring surface condition. New drywall, porous plaster, patched walls, rough siding, brick, stucco, textured ceilings, and bare wood all affect coverage. If you use standard coverage on rough or porous surfaces, you may underbuy paint.
Tips and Best Practices
Measure carefully before buying paint. For walls, multiply each wall’s width by height and add the totals. Deduct large windows and doors if they are not being painted. For ceilings, use room length times room width. For exterior projects, separate siding, trim, doors, shutters, and masonry because each surface may need different paint and labor.
Buy all paint for the same color at once when possible. Paint batches can vary slightly. If using multiple gallons, box the paint by mixing gallons together in a larger container to improve color consistency.
Expert Recommendations
Use a 10% waste allowance for typical painting projects. Increase waste for textured surfaces, rough masonry, exterior siding, dark color changes, inexperienced application, or complex spaces. Choose primer intentionally rather than skipping it to save money. Skipping primer can lead to flashing, poor adhesion, stains bleeding through, and extra finish coats.
For professional estimates, separate materials, labor, prep, and supplies. This makes the quote easier to explain and helps avoid underpricing. For DIY estimates, include tools you do not already own because brushes, rollers, trays, poles, tape, plastic, sandpaper, patching compound, and caulk can add meaningful cost.
Conclusion
This paint cost calculator provides a practical estimate for paint gallons, primer gallons, material cost, labor cost, supplies, prep work, and total painting cost. It is useful for interior walls, ceilings, exterior surfaces, rentals, remodels, and DIY planning. Final cost depends on paint quality, surface condition, coats, coverage, labor rates, repairs, supplies, and local pricing.