Repair Cost Tools

Interior Paint Cost Calculator

Estimate gallons, labor, and room painting cost from wall area and paint quality. Use this free calculator to build a realistic planning range before you request bids, price materials, or decide whether the project belongs on your DIY list.

Last updated: May 2026 · Educational estimate only

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Estimates are educational starting points only. Local labor, materials, permits, access, and project complexity can change actual prices.

What this estimate is good for

This calculator is designed for early budgeting. It gives you a planning range based on the most common cost drivers for this project category. It is not a contractor quote and it does not inspect your home, but it can keep you from walking into a bid conversation blind.

For interior paint cost calculator, the biggest swing factor is usually wall area, ceiling height, prep work, trim detail, color changes, and paint quality. Two homeowners can describe the same project and still receive very different prices once access, materials, demolition, local labor, hidden damage, permits, and finish level are included.

Cost intelligence

How this estimate is built

Repair Cost Tools uses a transparent planning model for this calculator. The current assumption is a typical cost of $1.15 per wall sq ft, adjusted by the project details you select.

  • Planning spread: about 22% on either side of the typical modeled result.
  • Minimum project allowance: $650 when applicable.
  • Basis: two-coat interior painting with standard prep.
  • Sources reviewed: Homewyse, HomeGuide, HomeAdvisor, Angi.
  • Last reviewed: June 2026.

Read the full cost methodology.

Cost planning table

Use this table to think through the budget level before you compare written bids. The calculator above gives the number; the table below helps explain why a project may land lower or higher.

Scenario What it usually means Budget impact
Small/basic version Simple scope, easy access, budget material Lower range
Typical homeowner project Average scope, standard material, normal difficulty Mid range
Larger or complex project Premium material, hidden repairs, difficult access Higher range

Before you request quotes

Before you request bids, take photos, write down the project size, note access issues, and decide which parts of the scope are must-haves versus optional upgrades.

  • Take clear photos from several angles.
  • Write down the project size, room count, fixture count, square footage, or linear footage.
  • List what should be included: demo, haul-off, materials, cleanup, permits, and repairs.
  • Decide what can be downgraded if the conservative estimate is too high.

Before you use the calculator

Measure wall length and ceiling height, subtract large openings only if you want a tighter estimate, and count doors, trim, and ceilings separately. If you are not sure, start with a conservative number and run the calculator twice: first with a basic scope, then with a higher difficulty or better material. The spread between those results is often the budget cushion you should protect.

Common cost factors

  • Project size: larger projects cost more overall, but crews may lower the unit cost when setup time is spread across more work.
  • Material grade: budget, standard, and premium selections can change the total more than homeowners expect.
  • Labor difficulty: tight access, stairs, second stories, heavy hauling, detailed cuts, old-home surprises, and occupied rooms all slow the job down.
  • Demolition and disposal: removing old material, hauling debris, and dump fees should be clearly listed in the bid.
  • Local requirements: permits, inspections, HOA rules, utility coordination, and code upgrades can add time and cost.

Hidden costs to watch for

Watch for drywall repairs, heavy texture, stain blocking, primer, caulking, trim sanding, furniture protection, and extra coats for dark color changes. Ask every contractor what is excluded from the number they give you. A low quote that leaves out prep, repair work, permits, delivery, disposal, or finish materials is not really a low quote.

DIY or hire a professional?

Painting can be DIY-friendly, but tall rooms, cabinets, detailed trim, exterior prep, or time-sensitive jobs usually justify a pro. A project can look affordable on paper and still be a bad DIY candidate if it touches safety, waterproofing, electricity, gas, structural framing, roof penetrations, or code compliance.

How to compare bids

Get at least two written estimates with the same scope. Compare material brands or grades, prep work, disposal, cleanup, warranty terms, timeline, payment schedule, and what happens if hidden damage is found. Do not compare only the final number.

  • Confirm the exact square footage, linear footage, room count, or fixture count being priced.
  • Ask whether permits, haul-off, delivery, and cleanup are included.
  • Ask what would trigger a change order.
  • Confirm who buys materials and who is responsible for measuring errors.
  • Keep the final payment tied to completion, cleanup, and punch-list items.

Quick bid checklist

ScopeDoes the bid describe exactly what is included?
MaterialsAre brand, grade, size, finish, or model details listed?
ExclusionsWhat is not included in the price?
Change ordersHow are hidden problems priced?
WarrantyWhat labor and material warranty applies?
CleanupWho handles hauling, disposal, and final cleanup?

Frequently asked questions

Is this Interior Paint Cost Calculator an exact quote?

No. It is an early planning estimate. Actual quotes depend on local labor, material choices, access, permits, hidden damage, and contractor availability.

How can I make the estimate more accurate?

Measure carefully, choose the closest material or difficulty level, and run both a basic and conservative version. Then compare the result against written local bids.

Why can contractor bids be far apart?

Bids often include different scope. One contractor may include demolition, disposal, prep, permits, cleanup, warranty, and repairs while another leaves those items out or prices them later.

Planning tip

Use the low end of the calculator as a basic planning number and the high end as a stress-test number. If the high end would strain the budget, pause before signing a contract. Build a cushion for surprises, especially on older homes or projects where damage may be hidden behind walls, floors, siding, roofing, or cabinets.