Drywall Calculator
Estimate drywall sheets (4×8, 4×10, 4×12, etc.) from wall area with waste built in.
Your Drywall Estimate
- Measure wall area — multiply wall length by wall height for square feet.
- Choose sheet size — larger sheets reduce seams and can reduce waste, but may be harder to handle.
- Set waste factor — use 10–12% for simple installs; increase for many cuts and openings.
- Round up — drywall is purchased by full sheets, and extra helps cover damage and mistakes.
How Much Drywall Do I Need?
Drywall estimating starts with surface area. Multiply wall length by wall height to get square feet, then divide by the square footage of the sheet size you plan to buy. Because drywall gets cut around doors, windows, and corners, a waste factor is standard.
If you are covering ceilings, you can run this calculator using ceiling length and width (treating width as the second dimension). For multi-wall rooms, estimate total wall area by adding each wall section and running the calculator on the combined totals.
Quick Reference: 4×8 Sheets (32 ft²)
Recommended Waste by Layout
Waste is driven by cut complexity. Simple, uninterrupted walls can stay near 10%. If you have many windows/doors, angled ceilings, or soffits, waste can climb to 15–20%. Using larger sheets can reduce seams, but handling and transport constraints matter.
Waste Guidelines
Formulas Used in This Calculator
Sheet quantity calculation:
1 = Adjusted area = base area × (1 + waste %)
2 = Sheets needed = adjusted area ÷ sheet coverage (then rounded up)
3 = Sheet coverage: 4×8 = 32 ft², 4×10 = 40 ft², 4×12 = 48 ft²
Related Calculators
Drywall goes up before paint and trim. Browse the full surface calculator collection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need different drywall for bathrooms?
Bathrooms often use moisture-resistant board in some locations. The sheet count estimate is the same; what changes is the board type you purchase.
Should I subtract doors and windows?
You can, but many estimators keep full wall area and use a normal waste percentage. Openings don't eliminate waste because they create more cuts.
Why does it round up to full sheets?
Drywall is purchased by full sheets, not fractions. Rounding up also builds in a small buffer for damaged corners, miscuts, and future patches.
What size drywall sheets should I buy?
4×8 ft sheets (32 ft²) are standard and easiest to handle alone. 4×12 ft sheets (48 ft²) reduce seams on tall walls and are preferred by professionals for ceilings, but require two people and create more waste on standard 8-foot walls. For ceilings, running sheets perpendicular to joists minimizes sag and is generally recommended.
What thickness drywall should I use?
½ inch is standard for most interior walls and ceilings. ⅝ inch is used for fire-rated assemblies, garage walls shared with living space, and commercial applications. ¼ inch is used to cover existing surfaces or for curved walls. 5/8 inch is also better for reducing sound transmission between rooms.