Paint Coverage Calculator: Litres Needed by Wall Area & Coats

Quick Answer: A standard emulsion paint covers approximately 12–14 m² per litre on a smooth, previously painted surface. On bare plaster, new plasterboard, or heavily textured surfaces, coverage drops to 6–10 m² per litre. Always calculate area, account for wastage (10% minimum), multiply by number of coats, and divide by the manufacturer's theoretical coverage rate to find litres required.

Summary

Paint quantity estimation is one of the most common sources of error in decorating quotations — both over-estimating (buying too much and tying up cash) and under-estimating (causing delays mid-job when paint runs out). An accurate calculation requires measuring wall and ceiling area correctly, understanding the difference between theoretical and practical coverage, and accounting for surface porosity and texture.

Theoretical coverage is the rate printed on the paint tin, typically measured in m²/litre (or sometimes m²/5L can). This assumes a smooth, non-porous, sealed surface in ideal conditions. Practical coverage is always lower than theoretical — by 20–40% on typical UK surfaces. A new plaster wall can absorb 30–50% more paint than the same surface after priming.

The UK decorating market uses both litres per coat and total litres for the job. When quoting, always specify the number of coats included — a two-coat application on new plaster may look the same as a one-coat re-paint to a customer, but requires twice the paint and significantly more labour time.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table — Coverage by Surface Type

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Surface Type Coverage (m²/litre) Notes
Smooth sealed emulsion (recoat) 12–14 Best case; existing good condition
New plasterboard (primed) 10–12 After 1 coat of appropriate primer
New plasterboard (bare) 4–6 Highly porous; mist coat required
New plaster (cured, mist coat) 6–8 First mist coat absorbs heavily
Artex / textured ceiling 5–8 Heavy texture at lower end
Pebble dash / rough render 4–6 High absorption; brush or roller
Masonry paint on smooth render 8–10 Good sealed render
Eggshell/satinwood (sealed surface) 10–11 More viscous than emulsion
Oil-based primer 8–10 Timber, MDF
Water-based primer/undercoat 10–12 Timber, previously painted
Stain blocker (Zinsser BIN shellac) 5–8 Shellac has lower spreading rate
Exterior masonry paint 6–10 Depends on substrate porosity

Worked Examples

Example 1: Standard Bedroom Re-Paint (2 coats emulsion)

Room: 4.2m × 3.6m × 2.4m ceiling height

Wall area:

Ceiling area: 4.2m × 3.6m = 15.12 m²

Total area: 34.64 + 15.12 = 49.76 m²

Paint required (2 coats, sealed emulsion at 12 m²/litre):

Purchase: 2 × 5L = 10L. This gives a small surplus, which is useful for touch-ups.


Example 2: New Plaster Throughout (mist coat + 2 full coats)

Room: Same dimensions as Example 1 (49.76 m² total area)

Mist coat (thinned 20% with water, coverage ~6 m²/litre):

2 full coats (coverage 10 m²/litre on now-primed plaster):

Purchase: 3 × 5L = 15L (10L for mist coat comes from this)

Total paint budget for this room: approximately 20L of emulsion (mist coat + 2 finish coats)


Example 3: Full Exterior Masonry Job

House: Semi-detached, two-storey

2 coats masonry paint on sound existing render (8 m²/litre):

Purchase: 5 × 5L = 25L


Example 4: Interior Doors and Woodwork

Job: 6 internal doors (both sides), door frames, and skirting — undercoat + 2 coats satinwood

Door coverage (each door, both sides, per coat): approximately 0.5L Door frames (each, per coat): approximately 0.15L Skirting 25m run (per coat): approximately 0.5L (coverage approximately 50m run/litre for 100mm skirting)

Per coat total: (6 × 0.5) + (6 × 0.15) + 0.5 = 3.0 + 0.9 + 0.5 = 4.4L

3 coats total (1 undercoat + 2 topcoat): 4.4 × 3 = 13.2 litres Plus 10% wastage: 13.2 × 1.1 = 14.5 litres

Purchase: 3 × 5L = 15L (1.5L surplus for touch-ups)

Detailed Guidance

Measuring Wall Area Accurately

Standard room method:

  1. Measure the room length and width with a tape measure.
  2. Calculate perimeter: (length + width) × 2
  3. Multiply by ceiling height to get gross wall area
  4. Measure and deduct each window and door opening (floor-to-ceiling height for doors; actual frame dimensions for windows)

Complex rooms:

Stairwells: Stairwells are the most challenging area to estimate. Measure the height from the staircase floor to the ceiling above (often 5–6m in a Victorian terraced house) and the total horizontal length of wall. For a standard straight staircase, the triangular area calculation: (base × height ÷ 2). Add the rectangular areas of landings and walls above each landing.

Accounting for Surface Condition

Surface condition is the most variable factor in paint coverage calculation. Experienced decorators develop an intuition for this — a new decorator should err on the side of buying more and returning unopened tins.

Condition multipliers (apply to theoretical coverage):

Colour Coverage — Dark to Light

Covering a dark colour (deep grey, navy, dark green) with a white or light colour is one of the most common causes of paint quantity underestimation. The theoretical number of coats assumes adequate opacity — but most standard emulsions have limited opacity in pale colours.

Rule of thumb for dark-to-light coverage:

Some trade paints (Dulux Trade, Johnstone's Trade) have significantly better opacity than retail equivalents, reducing the number of coats needed for colour changes.

Spray Application — Adjusting Quantities

Airless spray (the most common professional application method for large areas) uses more paint than roller application due to:

Spray coverage adjustment: multiply roller-calculated quantity by 1.20–1.30 (20–30% more paint for airless spray). For HVLP spray, the factor is similar.

Always mask thoroughly before spraying — overspray material is wasted and creates additional cleanup work.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many litres of paint for a standard 3-bed house?

As a rough rule of thumb for a full re-paint (ceilings and walls, 2 coats, excluding woodwork):

These are for re-paints of sealed surfaces in similar or matching colours. Add 50–100% for new plaster or significant colour changes.

Should I buy more paint than I need?

Yes — always buy slightly more than calculated. Trade practice is to leave 1–2 litres with the customer for touch-ups, and running short mid-job is a professional embarrassment and costs time. Unopened paint in original unopened tins can often be returned to trade merchants within 30 days. Opened tins cannot be returned.

Does the finish type (matt, silk, satinwood) affect coverage?

Yes. Matt emulsion typically covers slightly better than silk (12–14 m²/L vs 11–13 m²/L for silk) because the flattening agents in matt paint reduce penetration. Satinwood and eggshell are more viscous and typically cover 10–12 m²/L. Gloss paint covers 10–12 m²/L on prepared woodwork. Always check the specific manufacturer's data sheet for the product you are using.

How do I measure an Artex ceiling accurately?

You cannot accurately calculate Artex coverage from area alone because the texture increases the effective surface area significantly. The industry approach is to calculate flat area and then apply a reduction factor: for light stipple Artex, multiply the calculated litres by 1.3 (30% more paint); for heavy texture or swirl Artex, multiply by 1.5–1.8. Test on a small area first and measure actual coverage achieved.

Regulations & Standards