Formula or decision rule
sum of exterior face areas − excluded openings; then × coats × allowance factor ÷ 400 to 250 ft²/gal- Calculate gables separately instead of treating them as rectangles.
- Keep trim, doors, and siding in separate coating calculations.
- Use the selected exterior product label when available.
Exterior face geometry
| Shape | Area formula | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Rectangle | width × height | wall below eaves |
| Triangle | base × height ÷ 2 | simple gable |
| Opening | width × height | unpainted door or window |
| Coverage range | 250–400 ft²/gal | general exterior planning |
Work through the project
Measure by elevation
Keep front, rear, and side faces separate so gables and additions remain visible in the worksheet.
Inspect before calculating
Mark peeling, bare, damaged, or wet areas because preparation and primer needs cannot be inferred from square footage.
Match the coating system
Confirm substrate compatibility, primer, spread rate, temperature range, and dry-time instructions on the chosen labels.
Safety and scope
- Use appropriate fall protection and professional help for elevations you cannot reach safely.
- Do not sand or scrape suspect lead coating until the applicable U.S. or Canadian guidance is followed.
Sources and scope
Source links reviewed July 16, 2026. A review date is not the document's publication date.
- Sherwin-Williams: Exterior Painting How-TosNorth America · manufacturer guide
Use the selected coating label when it provides a more specific spread rate.
- 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.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: Steps to Lead Safe Renovation, Repair and PaintingUnited States · government guide
Lead rules and certified-contractor requirements may apply; this site does not replace regulatory guidance.
- Health Canada: Lead-based paintCanada · government guide
Paint history is a screening clue, not a laboratory identification.