Worked example
How Much Paint for a 12x12 Room?
This example embeds the paint calculator with a 12 ft by 12 ft room, 8 ft walls, and two coats.

Quick answer
A 12 ft by 12 ft room with 8 ft walls has 384 sq ft of wall area. With two coats and 350 sq ft per gallon coverage, the estimate is about 2.2 gallons before waste, so the whole-gallon equivalent is 3 gallons before adjusting for openings, primer, ceiling, or trim.
Assumptions
- Room footprint is 12 ft by 12 ft.
- Wall height is 8 ft.
- Two wall coats are planned.
- Paint coverage is 350 sq ft per gallon.
- The default example does not subtract doors or windows.
Calculator inputs
Paint Calculator Results
Results update in your browser as you edit inputs. They are planning estimates, not complete shopping lists.
Enter project dimensions to calculate material quantity.
Quick answer: 12x12 room paint estimate
The default example uses full wall area with no door or window deductions. It estimates liquid gallons first, then shows the rounded whole-gallon equivalent.
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Room perimeter | 2 x (12 ft + 12 ft) | 48 ft |
| Wall area | 48 ft perimeter x 8 ft wall height | 384 sq ft |
| Coated area | 384 sq ft x 2 coats | 768 sq ft |
| Liquid paint | 768 / 350 sq ft per gallon | 2.2 gal |
| Whole-gallon equivalent | Round up for practical buying | 3 gal |
Use the paint label coverage for the product you plan to use. Coverage changes with surface texture, color change, primer, and application method.
How openings change the estimate
Doors and windows can reduce wall area, but many DIY estimates leave small openings in the calculation as a cushion.
| Opening assumption | Paintable wall area | Two-coat liquid estimate |
|---|---|---|
| No openings deducted | 384 sq ft | 2.2 gal |
| One 20 sq ft door deducted | 364 sq ft | 2.1 gal |
| One 20 sq ft door and two 15 sq ft windows deducted | 334 sq ft | 1.9 gal |
Large openings can change the result more than small windows. The embedded calculator lets you add door and window counts when you want a tighter estimate.
Common room scenarios in one comparison
These scenarios all use 8 ft walls, two coats, and 350 sq ft per gallon. They replace separate size-only example pages.
| Room scenario | Paintable wall area | Liquid estimate | Whole-gallon equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10x10 room; one door and two windows deducted | 270 sq ft | 1.54 gal | 2 gal |
| 12x12 room; no openings deducted | 384 sq ft | 2.20 gal | 3 gal |
| 12x14 bedroom; one door and two windows deducted | 366 sq ft | 2.09 gal | 3 gal |
Use the embedded calculator for your actual dimensions and opening deductions. Product coverage and container sizes still control the buying decision.
Inputs used in this example
- Room size: 12 ft by 12 ft.
- Wall height: 8 ft.
- Coats: 2.
- Paint coverage: 350 sq ft per gallon.
Expected output
The calculator estimates 384 sq ft of wall area and about 2.2 gallons for two coats before any waste factor.
When to adjust this example
- Add waste or adjust coverage for rough, porous, patched, or strongly colored walls.
- Check actual container sizes before buying paint.
- This example estimates wall paint only, not primer, trim paint, ceiling paint, or tools.
Formula explanation
- Find room perimeter with 2 x (width + length).
- Multiply perimeter by wall height for wall area.
- Multiply by number of coats.
- Divide by coverage per gallon.
Main calculator
Use the full Paint Calculator to change dimensions, waste factor, and optional user-entered unit price.
FAQ
Does this subtract doors and windows?
No. This quick estimate uses full wall area.
Should I round up gallons?
For buying paint, most people round up to the next practical container size after checking the product label.
What this 12x12 room estimate includes
- Included: wall area from the room perimeter, wall height, number of coats, coverage per gallon, and the rounded whole-gallon equivalent.
- Optional: door and window deductions if you add them to the embedded calculator.
- Not included: primer, ceiling paint, trim paint, patching compound, tape, drop cloths, rollers, brushes, or labor.
When to adjust the default
Use a lower coverage value when walls are rough, patched, porous, textured, or going from a dark color to a light color. Add primer as a separate planning line when the product or surface calls for it.
If your 12x12 room has a large closet opening, several windows, or built-ins that remove a meaningful amount of wall area, enter those deductions in the calculator instead of using the full-wall shortcut.
Sources and review notes
Reviewed . These references support the unit conversions and planning assumptions on this page. Confirm the exact product label and local project requirements before buying material.
- Methodology and calculation boundaries HomeMaterialCalc. Site-wide formula, rounding, local-calculation, and user-entered price policies.
- NIST Guide to the SI, Appendix B: Conversion Factors National Institute of Standards and Technology. Length, area, and volume unit conversions used in calculator formulas.
- Paint Calculator and coverage guidance Sherwin-Williams. Coverage-per-gallon planning and the need to confirm product and surface conditions.