A drywall calculator estimates the exact number of sheetrock panels, joint compound, tape, screws, and corner bead you need for any room or project. Whether you are finishing a basement, remodeling a bedroom, or building new construction, entering your room dimensions below gives you a complete material list with cost estimate — so you buy the right amount and avoid extra trips to the store.
Drywall Material Estimator
Room Dimensions
Individual Walls
Openings to Subtract
Drywall Settings
How to Use the Drywall Calculator
Estimating drywall materials accurately is one of the most important steps in any finishing or remodeling project. Buying too few sheets means a frustrating second trip to the home center mid-project, while over-ordering wastes money and leaves you with heavy, bulky leftovers. This drywall calculator gives you a complete material list — sheets, joint compound, tape, screws, and corner bead — based on your actual room measurements.
Step 1: Choose Your Input Mode
The calculator offers two ways to enter your measurements. Room Mode is the fastest option for standard rectangular rooms — just enter the room length, width, and ceiling height. The calculator computes the perimeter and multiplies by the ceiling height to get the total wall area. For irregular rooms or hallways, switch to Wall-by-Wall Mode and add each wall individually with its own length and height. This gives you full control over non-standard layouts.
Step 2: Subtract Doors and Windows
Enter the number of doors and windows in the room. A standard interior door opening is roughly 3 by 7 feet (21 square feet) and a standard window is about 3 by 4 feet (12 square feet). If your openings differ from the standard sizes, you can adjust the square footage for each. The calculator subtracts the total opening area from the wall area so you are not buying drywall for spaces you will not be covering.
Step 3: Select Sheet Size and Options
Choose between 4x8, 4x10, or 4x12 foot drywall sheets. Longer sheets reduce the number of butt joints, which saves finishing time and produces a smoother result. Toggle the ceiling option if you are also drywalling the ceiling — the calculator adds the ceiling area (length times width) to your total. Enter your price per sheet to get a cost estimate for the drywall sheets alone.
Step 4: Review Your Material List
Click "Calculate Materials" to see a complete breakdown. The results include the number of drywall sheets (with 10% waste built in), gallons of joint compound, feet of drywall tape, number of screws, and linear feet of corner bead. The material summary table gives you a printable shopping list, while the calculation breakdown shows exactly how each number was derived so you can verify the estimate.
Tips for Accurate Estimates
For the most accurate results, measure each wall at the widest point and round up to the nearest half foot. Remember that inside corners do not need corner bead — only outside corners do, such as where a wall wraps around a column or a half-wall ends. The 10% waste factor accounts for cuts around outlets, corners, and odd shapes, which is the standard allowance used by professional drywall contractors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this drywall calculator free to use?
Yes, this drywall calculator is completely free with no signup, no limits, and no ads. You can calculate materials for as many rooms as you need. All calculations run entirely in your browser — your project dimensions and data never leave your device.
Is my data private when I use this tool?
Absolutely. Every calculation runs locally in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No room dimensions, costs, or personal information are ever sent to a server. Your project details stay completely private on your device.
How many sheets of drywall do I need for a 12x12 room?
A 12x12 room with 8-foot ceilings has 384 square feet of wall area. After subtracting a door and two windows, that drops to about 339 square feet. Using standard 4x8 sheets (32 sq ft each) with 10% waste, you need roughly 12 sheets for the walls. Add 5-6 more if you are also covering the ceiling.
What size drywall sheets should I use?
The most common residential drywall sheet is 4x8 feet. Longer sheets like 4x10 and 4x12 reduce the number of seams and joints, which saves finishing time. Use 4x12 sheets for rooms with high ceilings or long walls to minimize butt joints. This calculator lets you compare all three sizes.
How much joint compound do I need per sheet of drywall?
A general rule is about 0.053 gallons of joint compound per square foot of drywall, or roughly one 3.5-gallon bucket per 450 square feet. This covers three coats of mud over taped joints and screw holes. Factors like the number of seams and your finishing skill level can change the amount slightly.
How many drywall screws do I need?
Plan for approximately 32 screws per standard 4x8 sheet. Screws should be placed every 8 inches along edges and every 12 inches in the field (center of the sheet). The calculator automatically adjusts the screw count based on the total number of sheets and sheet size you select.
What is corner bead and how much do I need?
Corner bead is a metal or vinyl strip installed on outside drywall corners to create a straight, durable edge before taping and mudding. You need one linear foot of corner bead for each linear foot of outside corner. This calculator estimates corner bead based on your ceiling height and the number of wall corners.
Why does the calculator add 10% waste?
A 10% waste factor accounts for cuts around doors, windows, outlets, and odd-shaped areas that produce unusable offcuts. It also covers any damaged sheets or cutting mistakes. Professional drywall contractors typically allow 10-15% waste, so 10% is a conservative, cost-effective estimate for most residential projects.