Estimating drywall isn't complicated, but the math has a couple of gotchas that turn an easy job into a second trip to Home Depot. This guide walks through the actual formula, when to use 4×8 vs 4×12 sheets, and how to handle ceilings, openings, and waste.
The basic formula
Drywall is sold by the sheet, and each standard 4×8 sheet covers 32 square feet. The formula:
sheets = (wall area + ceiling area) ÷ 32 × 1.10 (waste)
Example:a 12×14 ft bedroom with 8 ft ceilings and you're doing walls + ceiling. Wall area = 2 × (12 + 14) × 8 = 416 ft². Ceiling = 12 × 14 = 168 ft². Total = 584 ft². ÷ 32 × 1.10 = 20 sheets. Round up and order 20 sheets of 4×8 drywall.
The drywall calculator does this automatically and lets you toggle whether the ceiling is included.
4×8 vs 4×12: when each makes sense
Most home centers stock both. The choice comes down to room size, crew size, and how much taping/mudding you want to do.
4×8 sheets (32 ft²):
- Easier for one person to handle
- Fits through standard doorways without tilting
- More seams to tape and mud
- Default choice for most DIYers
4×12 sheets (48 ft²):
- Roughly 1.5× the price per sheet but cheaper per ft²
- Reduces seams by 33% — way faster mudding, smoother finish
- Heavy: a 4×12 ½" sheet weighs ~70 lbs. Two-person job.
- Won't fit through 30" doorways or tight stairwells without tilting
- Best for ceilings (fewer butt joints) and long unbroken walls
Pros tend to use 4×12 for everything because the time savings on taping more than pays for the difficulty. DIYers should default to 4×8 unless they have a helper.
Should you subtract windows and doors?
For most jobs: no. Leaving the openings in your calculation gives you natural waste tolerance. A typical 36-inch door and a couple of windows account for about 30 ft² of subtracted area — almost exactly the 10% waste factor in the formula. If you subtract them, you have to add the waste back in anyway.
Subtract openings only when they're unusually large: sliding glass doors, bay windows, or picture windows totaling more than 50 ft² combined. Otherwise leave them in and let the math give you natural slack.
Ceilings: the hidden complexity
Ceiling drywall is heavier work than walls — gravity is fighting you. Two practical points:
- Use ⅝-inch on ceilings if you can instead of ½-inch. It sags less over time and holds insulation weight better. Costs 25–35% more per sheet.
- Use 4×12 sheets if possible. Fewer butt joints in ceilings = dramatically smoother finish. Butt joints across a ceiling under raking light are the most obvious finishing flaw in any room.
What drywall actually costs in 2026
- Standard ½" 4×8 sheet: $13–18
- Moisture-resistant (greenboard) 4×8: $18–24
- Mold/mildew resistant (purple): $20–28
- Type X fire-rated ⅝": $20–30
- 4×12 sheets: 1.4–1.6× the 4×8 price
Plus consumables: 25-lb bag of joint compound ($15), 250 ft of paper tape ($5), screws ($30 for a 5-lb box), corner bead, and sandpaper. Budget another $80–120 for a typical room beyond the sheets themselves.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Buying exactly the calculated number of sheets. Always add 1–2 spare sheets — drywall scratches in the truck, gets dropped, gets cut wrong. Stores will accept returns of unused full sheets.
- Mixing sheet thicknesses on the same wall. A ½" next to a ⅝" creates a visible step that mud can't hide. Pick one and stick with it for the whole wall plane.
- Forgetting closet ceilings. Closets are easy to overlook in the room measurement and they need ceiling drywall too.
- Skipping moisture-resistant board in bathrooms. Greenboard goes around tubs/showers and on bathroom ceilings. Standard drywall in those spots will fail within a few years.
Quick FAQ
How many sheets of drywall for a 12x12 room? About 17 sheets for walls + ceiling at 8 ft (or 12 sheets for walls only). The calculator gives an exact number for any room size.
How long does it take to install drywall? A skilled crew of two hangs a typical bedroom in 2–4 hours. Mudding and finishing adds 3 days minimum (apply, dry, sand, repeat). DIY: triple that time.
Can I install drywall over existing drywall?Yes if it's flat and sound, but you'll need longer screws (1¼" to penetrate both layers and bite the stud). It's usually faster to remove the old stuff than to deal with the alignment issues of layering.
Run the numbers: the drywall calculator gives sheet count for walls only or walls + ceiling, with the 10% waste factor built in.