Compute liters or gallons, plus weight, based on coverage or film data. Choose pack sizes, export results, and document assumptions for crews on site.
| Scenario | Area | Coats | Coverage / Film | Wastage | Estimated total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walls, roller | 120 m² | 2 | 8.5 m²/L | 8% | 30.49 L |
| Steel, spray | 900 ft² | 1 | WFT 200 µm, solids 60% | 20% | 2.12 gal |
| Ceiling, primer | 75 m² | 1 | 7.0 m²/L | 12% | 12.00 L |
The film-based coverage approximation is commonly used for planning quantities from spec thickness and solids content.
Coating takeoff is more than multiplying area by a datasheet number. Site conditions, profile, porosity, and application method can shift consumption enough to delay work or create costly leftovers. A structured estimate helps supervisors order accurately, stage deliveries, and keep crews productive while meeting specification thickness.
Use the coverage rate method when the product provides a reliable spreading rate for the intended substrate and method. Use the film thickness + solids method when the project is driven by thickness requirements (for example corrosion protection systems) and you have volume solids from the technical datasheet.
Wet film thickness (WFT) converts to dry film thickness (DFT) through volume solids. If solids are 60% and WFT is 200 µm, the expected DFT is 120 µm. The calculator then estimates theoretical coverage using a common planning relationship between DFT and solids, producing a practical m²/L (or ft²/gal) value.
Losses are unavoidable: overspray, roller loading, brush drag, pot residue, and container hold-up. Smooth interior walls may only need 5–10% wastage, while spray on structural steel can exceed 15–25%. If access is difficult or weather is variable, increase wastage to protect the schedule.
Example A (coverage rate): Area 120 m², 2 coats, 8.5 m²/L, wastage 8%. The theoretical volume is 28.24 L and the adjusted total becomes about 30.49 L. With 20 L packs, plan 2 packs and a small contingency for touch-up.
Example B (film method): Area 900 ft², 1 coat, WFT 200 µm, solids 60%, wastage 20%. The calculator derives coverage from DFT and returns about 2.12 gal. If density is 10 lb/gal, the delivered mass is roughly 21 lb, useful for hoisting planning.
Pack rounding is often where budgets drift. Enter pack size to see how many units to order, then export CSV or PDF as a job record. Document your assumptions (method, wastage, and thickness targets) so procurement, QA/QC, and field teams share the same basis of estimate.
Measure net area carefully, separate primers from finishes, and treat edges, welds, and complex geometry as additional area. If possible, confirm a small trial patch and back-calculate actual coverage. Updating the inputs with real consumption quickly improves ordering accuracy across phases.
Use coverage rate for standard architectural work when datasheet spreading rates match your substrate and method. Use film thickness when specifications require a target DFT and you know volume solids.
Interior rolling often ranges 5–12%. Spray application, rough substrates, and complex steelwork commonly range 15–25%. Increase wastage when access, wind, or rework risk is high.
Coating thickness is commonly specified in microns (µm) for protective systems. Using µm keeps the calculation consistent with datasheets and inspection gauges, while the tool still outputs volume in your chosen units.
Porous surfaces absorb binder and reduce coverage. Use a higher wastage factor, consider a sealer/primer coat separately, and verify with a small test area to refine the coverage input.
Yes. Higher temperatures can increase evaporation and reduce working time, raising losses. Cold conditions may require thinning or slower curing. Adjust wastage and follow product guidance for temperature and humidity limits.
Yes. Enter coating density and the calculator will estimate total mass. This supports lifting and transport planning, especially when staging multiple packs on scaffolds or elevated platforms.
Differences usually come from area measurement, assumed wastage, substrate roughness, and whether edges and details are included. Align assumptions, then validate with a trial application and update the inputs.
Measure, calculate, verify, and order coating with confidence always.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.