Drywall Guide

Choosing Drywall

Thickness

Drywall comes in two common thicknesses for residential use:

Thickness Common Uses
1/2 inch Standard walls, most rooms, attached to studs 16" apart
5/8 inch Ceilings (less sag), garage walls (fire code), soundproofing
💡 For Ceilings

5/8" drywall is recommended for ceilings, especially if your joists are 24" apart. It's heavier but won't sag over time like 1/2" can.

Sheet Sizes

Drywall sheets are 4 feet wide and come in several lengths:

Size Square Feet Best For
4' × 8' 32 SF Standard rooms, easier to handle
4' × 12' 48 SF Fewer seams, needs 2+ people

Special Types

Supplies You'll Need

🛒 Basic Drywall Shopping List
  • Drywall sheets (use our calculator)
  • Drywall screws (1-1/4" for 1/2", 1-5/8" for 5/8")
  • Joint compound (ready-mix is easiest)
  • Paper tape (or mesh tape for beginners)
  • Corner bead (if you have outside corners)
🔧 Tools Needed
  • Drill with drywall bit
  • Utility knife
  • T-square or 4' level
  • Drywall saw (for outlets/cutouts)
  • Taping knives (6", 10", 12")
  • Mud pan
  • Sanding sponge or pole sander

Estimating Materials

Drywall Sheets

Our calculator does this for you, but here's the basic formula:

  1. Calculate total square footage (wall length × height)
  2. Subtract doors (21 SF each) and windows (15 SF each)
  3. Divide by sheet size (32 or 48 SF)
  4. Add 10-15% for waste and cuts

Joint Compound

For a standard "Level 4" finish (smooth enough for flat or eggshell paint):

Paper Tape

Screws

💡 Buy Extra Joint Compound

It's better to have leftover compound than to run out mid-project. Unopened buckets can be returned, and opened ones last for months if sealed properly.

Finishing Tips

The Three-Coat Method

  1. First coat (tape coat): Embed the tape in a thin layer of compound
  2. Second coat (fill coat): Fill in seams, let edges feather out
  3. Third coat (finish coat): Thin coat, wide feathering for smooth finish
⚠️ Let It Dry

Don't rush between coats. Joint compound needs to be completely dry (white, not gray) before the next coat. This usually takes 24 hours, or longer in humid conditions.

Sanding

Ready to Calculate?

Use our free drywall calculator to figure out exactly what you need.

📏 Open Drywall Calculator