Paint Coverage Explained: How Much Area Does a Gallon or Liter Cover?
Paint coverage explained — this is one of those things that sounds super straightforward… until you actually try to figure it out.
You look at a paint can and it says something like “covers 350–400 sq ft” or “8–10 m² per liter.”
Cool. Helpful. But also… kind of vague.
- Is that for one coat or two?
- Does that include rough walls?
- Why does it never seem to match real life?
If you want to skip all the guesswork, use the paint coverage calculator to get an exact estimate based on your space.
How Much Area Does Paint Cover?
Most paints typically cover 350–400 square feet per gallon (or 8–10 m² per liter). This is based on smooth walls, previously painted surfaces, and standard roller or brush application. In ideal conditions those numbers are accurate — but most real-world walls are not ideal.
Why Paint Coverage Varies So Much
Surface Texture
Smooth walls give predictable coverage. Textured surfaces like stucco, brick, and rough plaster absorb more paint and create more surface area. Result: you need more paint than the label suggests.
New vs Previously Painted Walls
Fresh drywall is basically a sponge. It pulls in paint, especially on the first coat. That’s why primer matters — without it, you’ll use significantly more paint and still may not get an even finish.
Number of Coats
Coverage on paint cans usually refers to a single coat. Most projects require two coats, so double your estimate. That’s where a lot of the confusion happens.
Application Method
- Roller → standard coverage
- Brush → slightly less efficient
- Sprayer → faster, but more paint waste
Paint Quality
Higher-quality paints cover more evenly and require fewer coats. Cheaper paints can end up costing more because you need more of them.
How to Estimate Paint Using Coverage Numbers
- Measure total wall area (sq ft or m²)
- Divide by paint coverage rate
- Multiply by number of coats
- Add extra for safety
That’s exactly what our paint coverage calculator does — just faster and without the mental math.
Common Misconceptions About Paint Coverage
- “One gallon always covers 400 sq ft” → not on textured surfaces
- “Primer isn’t necessary” → often wrong for new drywall
- “One coat is enough” → rarely for full, even coverage
- “All paints cover the same” → quality makes a real difference
Understand Coverage, Plan Better
The numbers on the can are a starting point — not a guarantee. Real-world conditions always shift things. Use the paint coverage calculator to get a more accurate number for your specific project. It takes a few seconds and saves you from a lot of guessing later.
KŌŌI / KŌŌI Magazine / Living Smarter / Paint Coverage Explained: How Much Area Does a Gallon or Liter Cover?
Alex Carter
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