Drywall

Drywall panel planning

USG lists Sheetrock Brand Gypsum Panels in 48-inch widths with multiple lengths. Panel type and thickness are code- and application-specific; this worksheet calculates face area only and never selects a fire-, moisture-, or ceiling-rated assembly.

First answer

Divide net surface area by the face area of the exact panel size, round up, and then confirm the layout because an area-only count cannot account for every cut and seam.

Formula or decision rule

whole panels by area = ceiling((gross surface area − excluded openings) ÷ panel face area)
  • A 48-inch-wide panel is 4 feet wide.
  • Use the exact listed length of the selected panel.
  • Layout review may require more whole panels than the area quotient.

USG product-page size examples

USG product-page size examples
WidthListed lengthArea expression
48 in8–12 ft options4 ft × selected length
48 in95–102 in options4 ft × converted length
Thickness1/4 or 3/8 in for this listed productselect for approved use

Work through the project

  1. Separate surfaces

    Make distinct wall and ceiling schedules so panel orientation and required type remain visible.

  2. Choose a real stocked panel

    Use the manufacturer product page and local availability rather than an assumed universal sheet.

  3. Draw the layout

    Place seams, openings, edges, and full-length opportunities before treating the area quotient as a purchase count.

Safety and scope

  • Use the panel and assembly required by local code and the specific location.
  • Plan safe handling for full-size panels and control cutting dust according to product instructions.

Sources and scope

Source links reviewed July 16, 2026. A review date is not the document's publication date.

  1. USG: Sheetrock Brand Gypsum PanelsNorth America · manufacturer data sheet

    Panel availability and code-required type vary; verify the chosen panel before purchasing.

  2. National Institute of Standards and Technology: NIST Guide to the SI, Appendix B — Conversion FactorsUnited States · government standard

    Code retains exact defining constants where NIST identifies an exact relationship.