Trim Length Calculator
Estimate baseboard, crown, chair rail, casing, shoe molding, and full-room trim packages with opening deductions, miter allowance, returns, waste, and stock board counts.
Pick a common room or project, then adjust the openings, trim profile, board length, pieces, and returns for your exact layout.
Trim length estimate
Enter the room dimensions, openings, trim profile, waste, stock length, pieces, and returns to estimate what to buy.
| Line | Length | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Room perimeter | -- | Gross wall run |
| Item | Result | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Stock pieces | -- | Round up to sticks |
| Trim run | Doors | Windows | Cased openings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseboard | Subtract width | No deduction | Subtract width |
| Crown | No deduction | No deduction | No deduction |
| Chair rail | Subtract width | Partial check | Subtract width |
| Door casing | Two sides plus head | No deduction | Two sides plus head |
| Window casing | No deduction | Four sides | No deduction |
| Finish | Waste | Best for | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paint-grade simple room | 8% to 12% | MDF and pine | Short offcuts can hide well |
| Many corners | 12% to 18% | Crown or chair rail | Miters and copes consume ends |
| Stain-grade casing | 15% to 25% | Oak, maple, poplar | Grain and color matching matter |
| Small returns | 10% to 18% | Shoe, cap, stop | Tiny pieces are easy to lose |
| Stock | Good use | Watch | Planning note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 ft | Doors and windows | More seams | Easy to haul and sort |
| 10 ft | Bedrooms | Some wall seams | Balances handling and yield |
| 12 ft | Common baseboard | Vehicle fit | Often best default length |
| 16 ft | Long walls | Bows and storage | Fewer seams, more handling |
| 20 ft | Large crown runs | Delivery needed | Use only when walls justify it |
| Detail | Typical extra | Why | Use when |
|---|---|---|---|
| Square butt cut | 0.5 to 1 in | End cleanup | Paint-grade casing |
| Mitered corner | 1 to 3 in | Sneak up on fit | Base, chair, crown |
| Scarf joint | 2 to 4 in | Overlap and recut | Long walls |
| Finished return | 2 to 5 in | Small piece handling | Aprons, rails, open ends |
| Crown cope | 3 to 6 in | Spring angle fitting | Out-of-square rooms |
Calculating trim requirement isnt based off calculating the perimeter of the room to be sided with trim. Trim requirements must account for all area of the room that have corner, openings, returns and offcuts. Using only the perimeter measurement will either leave you with not enough trim to complete the project or require you to go back to the store to purchase more trim.
The calculator provide will allow you to determine the length of trim that you should purchase by entering several different input for your project. Each of these input will impact the total length of trim that is require to purchase in order to complete your project. The different type of trim will impact the number of pieces of trim that are purchase.
How to figure out how much trim you need
For instance, if using corner trim, the length of trim required will be the perimeter of the ceiling. However, the length of base trim will require the perimeter of the room to be deduced for the width of each door in the room. Trim for windows will require the addition of trim for each of the four side of each window opening.
However, chair rail trim will only require the subtraction of the width of the window opening to be accounted for. Thus, the count of the number of trim piece will change based upon the type of trim that is to be used in the project. Individuals often dont account for the number of joint that will be created when installing the trim.
Each of the corners in the room will have a joint whether they is inside or outside the room. The length of trim that is accounted for these joint will be entered into the miter allowance field in the trim calculator. For instance, paint-grade baseboard may only require one inch of trim to be allot for each joint.
However, stain-grade casing trim may require three inch of trim to be purchased for each joint. Any trim that is to be installed at the open end of a wall will also require the length of the return to be purchased in addition to the amount required for the walls. These allowances are included into the total length of trim that is required to be purchased in the trim calculator.
The amount of trim that must be purchased will also have to account for any waste that is create in the cutting of the trim. The waste that is accounted for in the trim calculator accounts for the damage to the trim at the factory, bowed board and trim that may be lost in the project itself. Additionally, the type of trim that is to be purchased will impact the amount of waste that is required.
For instance, MDF trim may dent at the end of the trim board so more trim will be necessary to account for this waste. Similarly, finger-joint crown trim will lose additional trim due to the compound miters of the trim. These wastes are accounted for in the trim calculator so that the length of trim to be purchased is realistic.
The length of the trim that is purchased is also impacted by the length of the boards that are to be use for the trim. Longer boards are beneficial in that fewer seam will have to be created in the trim. However, the longer the boards, the more difficult it will be to carry and store those boards.
Shorter boards are easy to transport but may require more scarf joint to allow for the trim to be cut to the appropriate length. The round-up field in the trim calculator allow the individual to decide whether they would like to purchase an additional piece of trim in case of damage or only purchase the amount of trim that is calculated by the trim calculator. The reference table that are provided on this page are helpful in that there are common trim calculations for different type of trim.
For instance, base trim, crown trim or casing trim will have different deduction for openings in the walls. Additionally, the amount of waste that is required for each type of trim will change based upon the level of finish that the trim will receive and the number of corner that must be cut. Finally, the length of the trim stock that is purchased will differ based upon the type of transportation that will be used to transport the trim to the project.
These tables will allow individuals to apply the logic that is used in the trim calculator to their project without having to create the logic for each project that they complete. The number that is indicated in the trim calculator is just a starting point for the number of pieces of trim that are to be purchased. This number is not a complete list of the trim that will be required to complete the project.
It is important to walk through the project that is to be completed with this calculated amount of trim. Depending upon the length of the walls or the number of built-in structure in the project, the calculated amount of trim may have to be adjusted. The trim quantity must be calculated to ensure that the trim will be purchased in enough quantity to complete the project, but in a quantity that will not result in purchasing excess trim for the job.
Thus, the trim quantity is more than the perimeter measurement of the project. The math is not complete until the last piece of trim is cut on the saw.
