Floor Paint Coverage Calculator | Estimate Gallons

🎨 Floor Paint Coverage Calculator

Estimate gallons needed for any floor coating — epoxy, concrete paint, deck coating & more.

Quick Presets
📏Units & Measurements
📐Floor Shape
🚫Subtract Obstructions
🏺Coating & Application
✅ Coverage Results
Net Floor Area
sq ft
Total Gallons Needed
gallons (incl. waste)
Containers Required
units
Coverage Rate
sq ft per gallon
Gross Floor Area
Obstructions Subtracted
Net Paintable Area
Primer Gallons
Top Coat Gallons (before waste)
Waste Added
Total Gallons
📊Floor Coating Type Reference
Coating TypeSq Ft / GalTypical CoatsDrying TimeDurability
Concrete Floor Paint (latex)300–4001–22–4 hrs recoat3–5 years
Epoxy Floor Coating (water-based)200–300212–24 hrs recoat5–7 years
100% Solids Epoxy150–20028–16 hrs recoat10+ years
Polyaspartic Floor Coating250–3001–21–3 hrs recoat7–10 years
Concrete Sealer (penetrating)200–40012–4 hrs3–5 years
Polyurethane Floor Finish400–5002–32–4 hrs recoat5–10 years
Deck Paint200–30024–6 hrs recoat3–5 years
Wood Floor Paint / Stain300–4001–22–4 hrs recoat2–5 years
🧹Concrete Condition Prep Guide
Floor ConditionPrep StepsAcid Etch NeededPrimer Needed
New / Bare ConcreteClean, degrease, acid etch, neutralize, dryYesYes — strongly recommended
Previously Coated (Good)Clean, light sand / scuff, degreaseNoOptional
Previously Coated (Worn/Peeling)Strip old coating, grind or shot-blast, repair cracksMaybeYes
Bare WoodSand smooth, remove dust, seal knotsNoYes — wood primer
Previously Painted WoodScrape loose paint, light sand, cleanNoIf bare spots exposed
🖌️Application Method & Coverage Adjustment
MethodBest ForCoverage AdjustmentNotes
9–18" RollerLarge open floor areasBaseline rateMost common for floor coating
Brush (edges)Perimeter, corners, tight spots–10% efficiencyUse for cut-in before rolling
Squeegee / NotchedSelf-leveling epoxies+5% efficiencyEnsures uniform coat thickness
Airless SprayerLarge warehouses, sealers+10–15% efficiencyHigher overspray waste outdoors
🏠Typical Floor Size Reference
Space TypeTypical SizeApprox. Sq FtCoating Notes
1-Car Garage12 × 22 ft~264 sq ft1 gal water-based epoxy per coat
2-Car Garage20 × 22 ft~440 sq ft2 gal per coat typical
3-Car Garage30 × 22 ft~660 sq ft3 gal per coat typical
Warehouse Bay40 × 60 ft~2,400 sq ft10 gal per coat typical
Standard Basement20 × 30 ft~600 sq ft2–3 gal per coat typical
10×10 Room10 × 10 ft100 sq ft1 qt per coat typical
Basketball Half-Court47 × 50 ft~2,350 sq ftPolyurethane recommended
Residential Deck12 × 16 ft~192 sq ft1 gal deck paint per coat
💡Coverage Tips
Surface Porosity: Porous or rough concrete absorbs significantly more coating. Use the 15% waste factor and consider a diluted seal coat first to reduce absorption before applying your main coating.
Temperature & Humidity: Apply floor coatings when the slab temperature is between 50°F and 90°F and humidity is below 85%. Cold concrete slows cure time and hot surfaces cause rapid evaporation, both reducing effective coverage.
⚠️ Safety Note: Floor coatings and solvents produce fumes. Always ensure adequate ventilation when applying any floor coating product. Wear chemical-resistant gloves, eye protection, and a respirator rated for organic vapors. Keep ignition sources away from solvent-based products. Read all product safety data sheets before application.

Whether you want to count exactly the right amount of Floor Paint? The cause is harder than it looks. The amount depends on many factors, and a wrong guess can mean either having to buy extra tins during the work, or sitting before new piles of leftover paint.

Before jumping into the painting of floors, here are some useful tips that are worth keeping in mind.

How Much Floor Paint Do You Need

The amount of paint is measured in square feet, what seems quite easy. On a perfectly flat surface one gallon of 100-percent solids Floor Paint covers around 1600 square feet, when one applies it in one millimeter thickness. Everything else differs from that base (the thicker the coat), the less area one gallon will cover.

It is a simple change, nothing more.

Average Floor Paint gives between 380 and 480 square feet on smooth concrete. But here is where it gets hard: rough concrete or many unfilled crack lines dip a lot into that number quickly. That counts especially for garage floors and basement floors.

A standard garage for two cars has around 450 square feet. One gallon at four millimeters thickness gives you around 400 sqaure feet, more or less. Consider two coats, and you need between two and three gallons total.

If you go down to three millimeters, the amount jumps to around 500 square feet each gallon instead.

Also bigger packages are available. Some paint kits for garage floors come in 4.5-gallon tins and cover up to 900 square feet with one coat. There are also other products that reach around 500 square feet, designed to protect garages, basements and other indoor concrete surfaces with a finish that guards against damages and marks.

Most usual paint covers between 300 and 400 square feet each gallon. The math is quite simple: divide your whole square area buy the coverage number (say 350 square feet each gallon), and that shows how many gallons you need. Then multiply by the number of coats that you plan, and round upward.

Done.

The thickness directly affects how far the paint will stretch. Different Floor Paint types work differently, and the same happens with various finishes, everything turns on the kind and brand that you choose. The surface itself matters a lot too.

Whether you spray, brush or roll does make a difference, also the condition of the floor, whether it is rough, smooth or porous. The number of coats adds yet one morefactor to the whole.

Rolling works best for covering big flat spaces evenly. Before starting on the whole floor, always test the grip on a little bit first. Applying paint too thin is one of those mistakes that will come back to haunt you, the finish will not hold up as it should.

Floor Paint Coverage Calculator | Estimate Gallons

Author

  • Thomas Martinez

    Hi, I am Thomas Martinez, the owner of ToolCroze.com! As a passionate DIY enthusiast and a firm believer in the power of quality tools, I created this platform to share my knowledge and experiences with fellow craftsmen and handywomen alike.

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