Quelle Quantité de Peinture Dois-Je Acheter ? Guide Pièce par Pièce
Calculez la peinture pour n'importe quelle pièce en utilisant les taux de couverture, les déductions pour fenêtres, le nombre de couches et les besoins en apprêt. Quantités pré-calculées pour les tailles de pièces courantes.
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.
Révision et méthodologie
Chaque guide est recherché à partir de sources officielles, rédigé par un expert du domaine et révisé de manière indépendante par un professionnel financier certifié.
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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
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