¿Cuánta Pintura Necesito? Guía Calculadora por Habitación
Calcula la pintura para cualquier habitación usando tasas de cobertura, deducciones por ventanas, número de capas y necesidades de imprimador. Cantidades pre-calculadas para tamaños comunes de habitación.
The Core Paint Formula
Paint is sold in quarts (1 qt) and gallons (1 gal). Coverage rates assume one coat on a smooth, primed surface:
Gallons needed = Total paintable area (sq ft) ÷ Coverage rate (sq ft/gal) x Number of coats
For walls: paintable area = wall area — door area — window area
Use our paint calculator to run all room dimensions at once.
Standard Coverage Rates by Paint Type
| Paint Type | Coverage per Gallon | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard latex (flat) | 350-400 sq ft | Most common, good for ceilings |
| Eggshell / satin finish | 350-400 sq ft | Walls, washable |
| Semi-gloss | 300-350 sq ft | Trim, doors, bathrooms |
| High-gloss | 250-300 sq ft | Doors, cabinetry |
| Premium (Benjamin Moore Aura, SW Emerald) | 400 sq ft | Better hide, often 1-coat capable |
| Primer (water-based) | 300-350 sq ft | Always prime before topcoat on new surfaces |
Calculating Wall Area
The standard wall calculation method:
- Measure the perimeter of the room (add all wall lengths)
- Multiply perimeter by ceiling height to get gross wall area
- Subtract 21 sq ft per standard door (3 ft x 7 ft)
- Subtract 15 sq ft per average window (3 ft x 5 ft)
Formula: Wall area = (Perimeter x Height) — (Doors x 21) — (Windows x 15)
Example — 12x12 room, 8 ft ceiling, 1 door, 2 windows: Perimeter = (12+12+12+12) = 48 ft Wall area = 48 x 8 = 384 sq ft Deductions = 21 + (2 x 15) = 51 sq ft Net paintable wall area = 333 sq ft
At 350 sq ft/gallon for 2 coats: 333 x 2 ÷ 350 = 1.9 gallons — buy 2 gallons.
Pre-Calculated Room Sizes
These estimates assume 8 ft ceilings, 1 door, 2 windows, 2 coats of wall paint, and standard coverage (350 sq ft/gal). Ceiling is calculated separately.
Walls Only (2 Coats)
| Room Size | Net Wall Area | Gallons Needed | Buy This Much |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 x 8 ft (small bedroom) | 213 sq ft | 1.22 gal | 2 quarts |
| 10 x 10 ft (bedroom) | 261 sq ft | 1.49 gal | 2 gallons |
| 12 x 12 ft (bedroom) | 333 sq ft | 1.9 gal | 2 gallons |
| 12 x 16 ft (master bedroom) | 397 sq ft | 2.27 gal | 3 gallons |
| 14 x 14 ft (living area) | 381 sq ft | 2.18 gal | 3 gallons |
| 16 x 20 ft (living room) | 477 sq ft | 2.72 gal | 3 gallons |
| 20 x 24 ft (great room) | 597 sq ft | 3.41 gal | 4 gallons |
When in doubt, round up. Most retailers accept returns on unopened paint gallons, and leftover paint is useful for touch-ups.
Ceiling Paint
Ceilings are calculated separately from walls. Use flat ceiling paint (lower sheen hides imperfections). One coat is often sufficient for white-on-white repaints; two coats for new construction or color changes.
Ceiling area = Length x Width (no deductions)
| Room Size | Ceiling Area | Gallons (1 coat) | Gallons (2 coats) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 x 10 ft | 100 sq ft | 0.28 gal | 0.57 gal |
| 12 x 12 ft | 144 sq ft | 0.41 gal | 0.82 gal |
| 12 x 16 ft | 192 sq ft | 0.55 gal | 1.1 gal |
| 16 x 20 ft | 320 sq ft | 0.91 gal | 1.82 gal |
| 20 x 24 ft | 480 sq ft | 1.37 gal | 2.74 gal |
Ceiling paint is typically cheaper than wall paint — $25-$40/gallon vs $35-$70/gallon for premium wall paint. Use ceiling white (slightly different sheen than regular flat) for best results.
Primer: When You Need It and How Much
Primer is a separate product from paint. “Paint-and-primer-in-one” products exist but perform like thick paint — they’re not true primers.
Use dedicated primer when:
- Painting bare drywall or new construction
- Covering stains (water stains, smoke, crayon) — use shellac-based primer
- Dramatic color change (especially dark to light)
- Painting over glossy surfaces
- Covering repairs (spackle, joint compound)
Primer coverage: 300-350 sq ft per gallon (one coat is usually sufficient)
Primer cost: $15-$30/gallon (water-based), $20-$35/gallon (oil-based), $25-$40 for shellac-based stain-blocking.
For a 12x12 room with 333 sq ft of net wall area: 1 gallon of primer, then 2 gallons of wall paint.
Number of Coats
Two coats is the industry standard for interior painting. Here’s when you need more or fewer:
One coat is fine:
- Same color or near-match repaints
- Using a premium high-hide paint ($55+/gal) over a similar color
- Light touch-up work
Two coats are standard:
- All new painting projects
- Color change (same tone family)
- Repainting after repairs
Three coats may be needed:
- White or very light colors over dark (navy, forest green, charcoal)
- Bold reds, oranges, and yellows (low pigment hide — a known industry issue)
- Going from any color to a bright white without priming first
Reds and oranges are notorious. Consumer Reports testing found that even premium paints needed 3-4 coats to fully cover a true red. Budget accordingly: a red accent wall that’s 200 sq ft could require 1.7 gallons instead of the expected 1.1 gallons.
Paint Cost Comparison by Brand (2026)
| Brand / Line | Price per Gallon | Coverage | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Behr Premium Plus (HD) | $30-$38 | 350 sq ft | Good |
| Sherwin-Williams SuperPaint | $60-$68 | 400 sq ft | Very good |
| Sherwin-Williams Emerald | $84-$92 | 400 sq ft | Excellent |
| Benjamin Moore Regal Select | $65-$74 | 400 sq ft | Very good |
| Benjamin Moore Aura | $90-$102 | 400 sq ft | Excellent |
| PPG Diamond | $35-$45 | 350 sq ft | Good |
| Valspar Signature (Lowes) | $33-$40 | 350 sq ft | Good |
The price-per-square-foot difference between Behr ($30) and Benjamin Moore Aura ($96) is about $0.17/sq ft on a 12x12 room — roughly $22 extra. Premium paints offer better coverage, better color retention, and a finish that holds up to cleaning. For high-traffic areas and kids’ rooms, the upgrade is worth it.
Trim, Doors, and Accent Walls
Trim and Baseboards
Trim paint (semi-gloss or gloss) is calculated differently. Baseboards are roughly 0.5 ft wide — multiply the room perimeter by 0.5 ft for baseboard area. Window and door casings add roughly 20 sq ft per opening.
A 12x12 room: perimeter 48 ft x 0.5 ft = 24 sq ft baseboards + 2 windows + 1 door = 24 + 40 + 20 = 84 sq ft of trim area. One quart of trim paint handles this with coverage to spare.
Accent Walls
An accent wall in a 12x12 room is one 12 x 8 ft wall = 96 sq ft. Subtract window if present: 96 — 15 = 81 sq ft.
For 2 coats at 350 sq ft/gallon: 81 x 2 ÷ 350 = 0.46 gallons. Buy 1 quart (covers ~100 sq ft/coat) and expect it to be tight, or buy 2 quarts for comfortable coverage.
Full Room Summary: 12x12 Master Bedroom
| Item | Area | Coats | Gallons Needed | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walls | 333 sq ft | 2 | 1.9 gal | 2 gal |
| Ceiling | 144 sq ft | 1 | 0.41 gal | 1 qt |
| Trim/baseboards | 84 sq ft | 2 | 0.48 gal | 1 qt |
| Primer (walls) | 333 sq ft | 1 | 0.95 gal | 1 gal |
Total materials: 2 gal wall paint + 1 gal primer + 1 qt ceiling + 1 qt trim Estimated DIY cost: $85-$180 depending on brand
Frequently Asked Questions
How many square feet does a gallon of paint cover?
350-400 sq ft on smooth, primed surfaces. Expect 250-300 sq ft on rough or unprimed surfaces like bare drywall. Premium paints with higher pigment loads maintain 400 sq ft/gallon even over dark colors.
Do I need primer before painting?
Yes for bare drywall, significant color changes, stain coverage, and any surface that’s never been painted. No for same-color repaints over sound existing paint. Priming before a dramatic color change saves money on paint overall.
How many coats of paint do I need?
Two coats is standard. One coat works for same-color repaints. Three coats may be needed for dark-to-light changes or when painting bold reds and oranges, which have poor hide even in premium formulations.
Should I buy by the gallon or quart?
Gallons at $35-$70 are almost always better value than quarts at $15-$25. Buy quarts only for small accent areas under 100 sq ft or trim work on a single room.
How much does it cost to paint a room?
DIY for a 12x12 bedroom: $85-$180 in materials. Professional painting of the same room runs $380-$750 including labor, prep, and paint.
TL;DR
- Coverage rate: One gallon of interior latex covers 350-400 sq ft on a smooth, primed surface — plan on 2 gallons of wall paint for a standard 12x12 room with two coats.
- Deduct openings: Subtract 21 sq ft per door and 15 sq ft per window from gross wall area before calculating gallons needed.
- Two coats is the standard: Budget for three coats only when covering bold reds, oranges, or dark colors going to white — these colors have poor hide even in premium formulations.
- Buy gallons, not quarts: A gallon at $35-$70 covers 400 sq ft; a quart at $15-$25 covers only 100 sq ft — quarts make sense only for trim or accent areas under 100 sq ft.
- Pro vs. DIY cost gap: A 12x12 bedroom costs $85-$180 in DIY materials versus $380-$750 for professional painting — the labor premium is 3-5x the materials cost.
Revisión y Metodología
Cada guía se investiga con fuentes oficiales, es escrita por un experto en el tema y revisada de forma independiente por un profesional financiero certificado.
Prueba Estas Calculadoras
Cargando calculadora
Preparando Paint Calculator...
Sources
- Paint Coverage and Application Guide - Benjamin Moore
- How to Calculate How Much Paint You Need - Sherwin-Williams
- Paint Coverage Rates and Best Practices - PPG
- Paint Coverage Testing and Analysis - Consumer Reports
Guías Relacionadas
How to Calculate Concrete for Any Project: Slabs, Footings, and Posts
Concrete is sold by the cubic yard. A standard 10x10 ft patio at 4 inches thick takes 1.23 cubic yards -- but ordering the right amount requires knowing how slabs, footings, and post holes each get calculated differently.
8 min de lecturaAre Solar Panels Worth It in 2026? ROI by State
A 10 kW solar system costs $28,000 before the federal tax credit and $19,600 after. In California, that system pays back in 6.2 years and generates $89,000 in savings over 25 years. In Louisiana, payback stretches to 14 years. Location is everything.
9 min de lectura