Coverage figures are from manufacturer publications. Actual results vary with surface condition, application method, and product. Always check the label of your specific paint.
Paint coverage guide

How Many Square Feet Does a Gallon of Paint Cover?

One gallon of paint covers 350–400 sq ft per coat on smooth primed drywall. The actual number depends on the surface texture, porosity, application method, and the specific product. Here is what the major brands publish — and how to apply the right number for your project.

Coverage by paint type and surface condition

Surface / product type Coverage per gallon Notes
Smooth, primed drywall350–400 sq ftStandard; use 350 as planning default
Light texture / orange peel300 sq ftMore surface area per sq ft of floor
Heavy texture / unprimed250 sq ftHigh absorption or deep texture
Primer (bare drywall)200–250 sq ftPorous surface absorbs primer
Primer (sealed surface)250–300 sq ftLess absorption on primed or painted

Coverage by brand (manufacturer-published)

Brand Published coverage Source
Sherwin-Williams350–400 sq ft/galSW Paint Calculator FAQ
Benjamin Moore400 sq ft/galBM Paint Calculator
Behr350–400 sq ft/galBehr How-To Guide
KILZ Primer200–300 sq ft/galKILZ Calculator

Always verify against the specific product label — formulations change. These are the planning figures current as of 2026.

Try the calculator with your room

Room Dimensions

Openings & Coats

Gallons to buy (walls)
Exact gallons needed
Paintable wall area
Gross wall area

How the math works

Step 1 — gross wall area

gross_wall = 2 × (length + width) × ceiling_height

Step 2 — subtract openings

paintable = gross_wall − (doors × 20) − (windows × 15)

Each standard 36×80 in door = 20.0 sq ft. Average window = 15 sq ft (industry convention). Paintable area is clamped to ≥0.

Step 3 — gallons

gallons_to_buy = ⌈ (paintable × coats) ÷ coverage ⌉

Coverage defaults to 350 sq ft/gal — the conservative figure used by Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore and Behr field guides. Always round up to whole gallons; running out mid-job risks a dye-lot mismatch.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the claimed 400 sq ft/gal coverage actually happen in practice?

400 sq ft/gal is achievable under ideal conditions: perfectly smooth, factory-primed drywall applied with a quality 3/8-inch nap roller using proper technique. Most real jobs land at 350 sq ft/gal or less because of texture, suction variation, overlapping roller strokes, and tray loss. 350 is the safe planning number.

Why does primer cover less area than paint?

Primer penetrates and seals porous surfaces (bare drywall, raw wood). The absorption is by design — it's what makes primer work. Topcoat paint applied over sealed primer sits on top rather than soaking in, which is why it achieves 350–400 sq ft/gal versus primer's 200–300 sq ft/gal.

Does paint brand affect coverage — Sherwin-Williams vs Benjamin Moore vs Behr?

The published ranges are nearly identical (350–400 sq ft/gal for all three), but formulation quality varies. Premium lines (SW Emerald, BM Aura, Behr Marquee) tend to have better pigment load and may cover in fewer coats. Budget lines may need an extra coat for color change. Coverage per gallon is similar; coats needed differs.

How does wall texture affect coverage?

Heavier texture increases the real surface area beyond the flat footprint. A smooth flat wall gets 350–400 sq ft/gal. Light orange-peel or knockdown texture: ~300 sq ft/gal. Heavy texture or unprimed surface: ~250 sq ft/gal. The interior paint calculator on this site lets you choose the right coverage for your surface.

How do I account for multiple colors in one room?

Calculate each color's wall area separately. For an accent wall (one wall of a 12×12 room): that wall is 12 × 8 = 96 sq ft. Two coats at 350 sq ft/gal = 0.55 gallons → buy 1 gallon. For the remaining three walls: 384 − 96 − openings (50 sq ft) = 238 sq ft for two coats = 1.36 gal → buy 2 gallons.

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