How Much Paint for a 8x10 Room
Figuring out paint quantities before heading to the store prevents costly mid-project runs and color-matching headaches. This calculator shows exactly how many gallons of standard paint you need for a 8x10 room with 8ft ceilings, including primer estimates and recommendations for extra coverage.
Quick Answer: A 8x10 room with 8ft ceilings needs 1 gallons of paint for 1 coat(s).
| Wall Area | 288 sq ft |
| Total Coverage Needed | 288 sq ft |
| Paint Needed | 1 gallons |
| Recommended (with 10% extra) | 2 gallons |
| Primer (if needed) | 1 gallons |
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Make This Estimate Useful in the Real World
This page gives a planning baseline for 8x10 room paint quantity planning. Use it to compare quotes, spot missing scope, and pressure-test budget assumptions before you commit.
What to verify in contractor quotes
- Confirm wall measurements and ceiling height (8ft) from at least two spots
- Separate walls, ceilings, trim, and doors into distinct paint calculations
- Match finish and coverage assumptions to the product you will buy (Standard)
- Add a touch-up reserve and keep lot numbers for color consistency
- If hiring a painter, verify whether the contractor uses your supplied paint or includes materials
Inputs that most change the final price
- Wall area (288 sq ft) and room geometry
- Number of coats (1)
- Coverage per gallon (texture and finish can reduce coverage)
- Primer needs for color changes, patches, stains, or new drywall
Common reasons quotes exceed estimates
- Textured walls and porous surfaces can require 10-20% more paint
- Deep color changes may need tinted primer or an additional finish coat
- Window/door deductions are often overestimated, causing under-buying
- Different brands and finishes vary in real coverage despite label ranges
Need the formulas? Review the methodology, our editorial policy, or contact us with a quote breakdown to help improve the model.
Paint Calculation Formula
Here's how we calculated paint needs for your 8x10 room:
- 1. Calculate wall area: 2 × (8 + 10) × 8 = 288 sq ft
- 2. Subtract openings (est.): Windows and doors reduce area by ~15%, but we include this as overage for better coverage.
- 3. Multiply by coats: 288 × 1 = 288 sq ft total
- 4. Divide by coverage: 288 ÷ 375 = 0.8 gallons
- 5. Round up: 1 gallons (always round up to avoid running short)
How to Measure Your 8x10 Room for Paint
Accurate measurements are the foundation of a good paint estimate. Here's how to measure your room step by step, using your 8x10 room as an example.
- 1Measure each wall's length. Use a tape measure along the base of each wall. Your 8x10 room has walls measuring 8 ft and 10 ft. Record each measurement, as rooms are not always perfectly rectangular.
- 2Measure the ceiling height. Measure from floor to ceiling in at least two spots, as floors can be uneven. Your room has 8ft (8 ft) ceilings. Standard 8ft ceilings are the most common.
- 3Calculate total wall area. Add wall lengths: 2 × (8 + 10) = 36 linear feet. Multiply by ceiling height: 36 × 8 = 288 sq ft.
- 4Account for windows and doors. Subtract ~15 sq ft per standard window and ~20 sq ft per door. However, most painters include this area as buffer for extra coverage, which is what our calculator does.
- 5Divide by coverage rate. At 375 sq ft per gallon with 1 coat(s), your 8x10 room needs 1 gallons. Add 10% extra (1 gallon) for touch-ups, bringing your recommended purchase to 2 gallons.
Coverage by Paint Finish Type
Different paint finishes have slightly different coverage rates. The finish you choose affects how many gallons you need for your 288 sq ft of interior walls.
| Finish | Coverage/Gal |
|---|---|
| Flat/Matte | 400-450 sq ft |
| Eggshell | 350-400 sq ft |
| Satin | 350-400 sq ft |
| Semi-Gloss | 350-375 sq ft |
| High-Gloss | 300-350 sq ft |
Our calculator uses 375 sq ft/gallon as a conservative average across all finishes. For most interior walls, eggshell or satin finishes offer the best balance of looks and practicality.
What Affects Paint Coverage
The standard 375 sq ft per gallon is a reliable starting point, but several factors can increase or decrease actual coverage on your 288 sq ft of wall area.
- Wall texture: Smooth drywall allows full 375+ sq ft coverage. Textured, stucco, or rough surfaces reduce coverage by 10-20% because the paint fills into grooves and peaks.
- Paint quality: Standard paint has standard pigment levels, reliably covering 350-400 sq ft per gallon.
- Color change: Painting light over dark (or vice versa) reduces effective coverage dramatically. Going from dark to light may require 3 coats instead of 1, increasing paint needs by 200%.
- Application method: Rollers provide the most even coverage. Brushes use slightly more paint per square foot. Sprayers are fastest but can use 20-30% more paint due to overspray.
- Primer usage: Applying primer before painting (especially on new drywall or repairs) improves adhesion and allows the paint to achieve full coverage more efficiently. For this 8x10 room, priming uses about 1 additional gallons but can reduce the number of paint coats needed.
Paint Buying Tips for 8x10 Rooms
- Buy all at once. Purchase all 2 gallons from the same batch to ensure color consistency. Different production runs can have subtle color variations that become visible when sections meet.
- Consider 5-gallon buckets. For 1 gallons, individual cans are more practical, but check if the 5-gallon price is close—you will have extra for touch-ups.
- Test before committing. Buy a sample quart or peel-and-stick swatch first. Paint a 2x2 ft area and view it at different times of day. Standard paint costs $42 for this room—a $5 sample prevents expensive mistakes.
- Check return policies. Most major retailers accept unopened paint returns within 30 days. Buy 2 gallons and return any unused cans rather than risk running short mid-project.
- Store extras properly. Keep your extra gallon sealed tightly in a cool, dry place (50-80°F). Stored properly, latex paint lasts up to 10 years for future touch-ups and repairs.