Paint Guide
The basic formula is simple: measure your walls, divide by the coverage rate, and account for multiple coats.
Most interior paint covers 350-400 square feet per gallon on smooth surfaces. Our calculator uses conservative estimates:
| Surface | Coverage | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Walls (smooth drywall) | 350 SF/gal | Most common |
| Ceilings | 400 SF/gal | Flat paint spreads further |
| Textured walls | 250-300 SF/gal | Texture absorbs more |
| New drywall | 300 SF/gal | More porous, needs primer |
Always buy a little extra. Having the same batch (lot number) for touch-ups later is worth the few extra dollars.
Most painting jobs need two coats for even coverage and durability. Here's when you might need more or less:
Primer creates a uniform surface for paint to stick to. You need it in these situations:
| Situation | Primer Needed? |
|---|---|
| New drywall | Yes - drywall absorbs paint unevenly |
| Drywall patches/repairs | Yes - spot prime the patches |
| Dark to light color | Yes - gray-tinted primer helps |
| Covering stains | Yes - use stain-blocking primer |
| Same/similar color, good condition | Usually no |
| Using paint+primer combo | Depends on surface condition |
Unpainted drywall will absorb paint unevenly, leaving visible seams and texture differences. A coat of primer is much cheaper than extra coats of finish paint.
Paint comes in quarts (covers ~90 SF), gallons (covers ~350 SF), and 5-gallon buckets (covers ~1,750 SF).
If you need more than 3 gallons of the same color, a 5-gallon bucket is usually cheaper per gallon and ensures color consistency across the whole room.
Use our free paint calculator to figure out exactly how much you need.
๐จ Open Paint Calculator