How to calculate how much drywall you need
Drywall is a surface-area ÷ sheet-area job. Add up all the wall area, include the ceiling if you're covering it, add a little for waste, and divide by the square footage of one sheet.
- Wall area = 2 × (length + width) × height
- Ceiling area = length × width (if covering it)
- Sheets = (total area × (1 + waste%)) ÷ sheet size, rounded up
- Screws ≈ sheets × 40
This counts gross wall area without subtracting doors and windows — the cutoffs around openings usually aren't reusable, so leaving them in builds in a safe margin.
The drywall mistake that telegraphs cracks
Stack your drywall sheets so the end seams line up in one continuous vertical line and that line becomes a weak point — it will crack right through your paint down the road. Stagger the seams like brickwork so no joint lines up with the one above it, and the wall is far stronger.
Hang ceilings first, then walls, and count on about 10% waste for cuts — the sheet count here already builds that in.
Pro move: avoid butt joints in the middle of a wall where you can. The tapered factory edges are much easier to hide.
What size drywall sheet should you use?
| Sheet | Coverage | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 4×8 ft | 32 sq ft | Most rooms, easy to handle solo |
| 4×12 ft | 48 sq ft | Long walls, fewer seams |
| 4×10 ft | 40 sq ft | 9-ft ceilings, less waste |
Longer sheets mean fewer joints to tape and mud, but they're heavy and awkward to carry. Match the sheet to your wall length and how much help you have.
How many screws per sheet of drywall?
Plan on about 40 screws per 4×8 sheet at standard spacing — roughly every 12 inches in the field and 8 inches along edges. A 1-lb box holds several hundred screws, so a typical room takes one or two boxes.
Drywall calculator FAQ
- Should I subtract doors and windows?
- This estimate doesn't, on purpose. The scraps cut around openings are usually too small to reuse, so the full area gives you a realistic count.
- How much joint compound will I need?
- Figure roughly one 5-gallon bucket of all-purpose mud per 400–500 sq ft of drywall across taping and finishing coats. Textured finishes use more.
- Does sheet size change the total square footage?
- No — the area is the same. Larger sheets just cover it in fewer pieces, which can reduce waste and the number of seams to finish.