Drywall Sheet Calculator

Enter your room size and ceiling height to get the exact number of drywall sheets for the walls and ceiling — waste included, with every formula shown.

Your drywall job

Total length of external corners that need corner bead.

4 × 8 ft sheets (waste included)

19 sheets

Total drywall area
528 ft²
All-purpose joint compound boxes
2 boxes
Joint tape
2 rolls (264 ft)
Drywall screws
586 screws
  • Counts round up to whole units — buy a sheet or two extra for damaged, mis-cut or short pieces.
How this is calculated
  1. Gross wall area

    perimeter × ceiling height

    = 2 × (12 + 12) × 8

    384 ft²

  2. Net wall area (openings)

    gross wall − Σ openings

    = 384 − 0

    384 ft²

  3. Total drywall area

    net wall + ceiling

    = 384 + 144

    528 ft²

  4. 4 × 8 ft sheet count

    ceil((area ÷ sheet area) × (1 + waste% ÷ 100))

    = ceil((528 ÷ 32) × (1 + 10 ÷ 100))

    19 sheets (17 before waste)

  5. Joint compound

    ceil(area ÷ coverage per box)

    = ceil(528 ÷ 461)

    2 boxes

  6. Tape & screws

    area × 0.5 ft/ft² tape · walls × 1 + ceiling × 1.4 screws

    = 264 ft tape · 384×1 + 144×1.4

    2 rolls, 586 screws

How many sheets of drywall do I need for a 12×12 room?

A 12 ft × 12 ft room with an 8 ft ceiling has a perimeter of 2 × (12 + 12) = 48 ft, so the walls are 48 × 8 = 384 ft². The ceiling adds 12 × 12 = 144 ft², for 528 ft² of board. At 32 ft² per 4×8 sheet that is 16.5 → 17 sheets before waste. Add the standard 10% waste and order 19 sheets. The same math runs for every surface above — the calculator just substitutes your numbers.

Drywall sheets by room size (8 ft ceiling, walls + ceiling, before waste)

4×8 sheets cover 32 ft² each. Always round up and add ~10% waste.
Room sizeTotal area4×8 sheets4×12 sheets
8 × 10 ft368 ft²128
10 × 10 ft420 ft²149
12 × 12 ft528 ft²1711
12 × 16 ft640 ft²2014
16 × 20 ft896 ft²2819
20 × 24 ft1,184 ft²3725

Drywall thickness by application

ThicknessTypical use
1/4 inchCurved walls, skim-over a damaged surface
3/8 inchRepairs, double-layer work
1/2 inchStandard walls and ceilings (16 in framing)
5/8 inchCeilings, fire-rated (Type X) and sound walls

Finishing materials per square foot of board

Round every material up to whole boxes, rolls and pieces.
MaterialRatePer 1,000 ft²
Joint compound~1 box / 461 ft²≈ 3 boxes
Paper tape0.5 ft / ft²500 ft (2 × 250 ft rolls)
Screws (walls)1.0 / ft²≈ 1,000 screws
Screws (ceiling)1.4 / ft²≈ 1,400 screws

Common drywall estimating mistakes

  • Forgetting the ceiling. On most rooms the ceiling adds 25–40% more board on top of the walls — and needs tighter screw spacing.
  • Over-subtracting openings. A standard door or window is worth removing, but small windows leave too little usable offcut to count — this calculator only subtracts openings bigger than ~⅓ of a sheet by default.
  • Skipping waste. Cut-offs, butt joints and damaged corners mean you should order about 10% extra board and a spare box of mud.
  • Under-buying compound. A full three-coat finish uses roughly one 4.5-gallon box per 14 sheets — running short stalls the whole job.

Frequently asked questions

How many sheets of drywall do I need for a 12×12 room?+

A 12×12 ft room with an 8 ft ceiling has 384 ft² of wall plus 144 ft² of ceiling = 528 ft². At 32 ft² per 4×8 sheet that is 17 sheets before waste, or 19 sheets with 10% waste.

What size drywall sheet should I use?+

4×8 ft sheets are easiest to carry and hang solo. 4×12 ft sheets cut the number of butt joints to tape on long walls and ceilings, which gives a smoother finish but needs two people.

How much joint compound and tape do I need?+

Plan on about one 4.5-gallon box of all-purpose compound per 450–475 ft² of board for a full three-coat finish, and roughly 0.5 ft of paper tape per square foot of drywall.

How many drywall screws per sheet?+

About 1.0 screw per ft² on walls and 1.4 per ft² on ceilings — roughly 32 screws per 4×8 wall sheet and 45 per ceiling sheet at 12-inch spacing.

How much waste should I add for drywall?+

Add about 10% for cut-offs, butt joints and damaged pieces. Buy a sheet or two extra on top for rooms with lots of openings or odd angles.

Methodology & sources

Wall area is the room perimeter times the ceiling height; the ceiling adds length × width. The net board area is divided by the sheet size, waste is added, and the count rounds up to whole sheets. Mud, tape, screws and corner bead are sized from the same area using published coverage rates — confirm against the product carton.

Last reviewed June 28, 2026. Estimates are indicative — verify against current product specs and local requirements before ordering.

We're committed to keeping these tools accurate and improving them over time. If you'd like to contribute to their accuracy, or you run into any issues or errors, please email us at info@tradesppl.com.