Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Item | Width | Height | Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Front wall | 6.00 | 2.50 | 15.00 m² |
| Back wall | 6.00 | 2.50 | 15.00 m² |
| Door (opening) | 0.90 | 2.10 | 1.89 m² |
| Window (opening) | 1.20 | 1.20 | 1.44 m² |
| Net paintable area | 26.67 m² | ||
Formula Used
1) Total wall area = Σ (wall width × wall height)
2) Openings area = Σ (opening width × opening height)
3) Net paintable area = max(0, total wall area − openings area)
4) Paint needed = (net area × porosity factor × coats ÷ coverage) × (1 + waste%/100)
5) Primer needed = (net area × porosity factor ÷ primer coverage) × (1 + waste%/100)
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your units and masonry surface type.
- Enter the number of coats and coverage rate.
- Add each wall segment with width and height.
- Add openings like doors and windows to subtract.
- Choose primer and container size, if needed.
- Press Calculate paint to see totals and downloads.
Coverage Benchmarks for Masonry Surfaces
Smooth rendered walls often spread paint efficiently, while rough brick or block increases consumption. Typical masonry paints list coverage around 8–12 m² per liter per coat on moderately smooth surfaces. For heavy texture, expect effective coverage to drop by 15–30%. Use the calculator’s coverage field to match your product label and convert to your preferred units.
Porosity and Absorption Factors Explained
Masonry can drink in liquid on the first pass. The calculator’s porosity factor acts as a planning multiplier: 1.00 for dense, sealed or previously painted walls; 1.10–1.20 for aged render; 1.25–1.40 for bare brick, block, or repaired patches. If you see chalking, sanding and binding primer can reduce absorption and stabilize the base before topcoats.
Coats, Film Build, and Color Changes
Most exterior and garden boundary walls need two coats for durability and uniform sheen. Deep color shifts or stain-blocking situations can require a third coat. The calculator multiplies net paintable area by the number of coats, so you can model 2 versus 3 coats and compare the increase in liters and cost. Remember that darker colors may cover less and need extra film build.
Waste Allowances and Jobsite Reality
Even accurate measurements cannot remove real-world loss. Roller saturation, edging, cut-ins, and textured joints typically add 5–15% waste. Wind, sun, and hot masonry can shorten open time and increase re-rolling. Use a higher waste percentage when working above head height, painting fences with many edges, or when you anticipate touch-ups after curing.
Container Planning and Purchase Checks
Buying to a container size prevents shortages and mixed batches. The calculator can round up to common can volumes and estimate cost per liter. When close to a can boundary, purchase one extra small can rather than opening a second large one. Keep the batch code consistent, and store sealed leftovers for future repairs on the same wall.
Measure each wall segment separately and subtract doors, vents, and windows; this yields a realistic net area for ordering.
FAQs
1) What coverage rate should I enter?
Use the paint label’s stated coverage for masonry, per coat. If the wall is rough, reduce the rate by about 15–30% to avoid under-ordering.
2) Should I always subtract openings?
Yes. Subtract doors, windows, vents, and large service panels. Small cracks and joints are usually covered by the waste allowance rather than detailed subtraction.
3) When do I need a primer?
Use primer on bare, powdery, patched, or highly absorbent masonry. A compatible primer improves adhesion and can reduce topcoat consumption, especially on chalking surfaces.
4) How many coats are typical outdoors?
Two coats are common for exterior walls and garden structures. Choose three coats for major color changes, intense UV exposure, or when the first coat dries unevenly.
5) What waste percentage is reasonable?
For straightforward walls, 5–10% is typical. Use 10–15% for heavy texture, lots of edging, windy conditions, or if you expect touch-ups.
6) Why does the calculator round up cans?
Paint is purchased in fixed container sizes. Rounding up prevents running out mid-job and helps keep batch codes consistent across the whole surface.