Calculate quarter round molding needed in linear feet and pieces. Enter baseboard length and piece size to get an accurate trim material list.
Quarter round molding (also called shoe molding) is the small trim piece installed at the base of the baseboard where it meets the floor. It's especially important for floating floor installations because it covers the required expansion gap between the flooring and the baseboard. Without quarter round, the gap is visible and collects dust and debris.
This calculator determines how many pieces of quarter round you need based on the total baseboard length. Quarter round runs along every foot of baseboard, so the linear footage is the same as your baseboard measurement. The calculator converts this to piece count based on the standard 8-foot lengths in which quarter round is sold.
Quarter round is inexpensive but essential for a finished look. An accurate piece count prevents short buys and ensures you have enough for miter cuts at every corner.
Integrating this calculation into the estimating workflow reduces reliance on rules of thumb and improves the accuracy of material takeoffs and budget projections for every job.
Quarter round costs $2–$5 per 8-foot piece. While inexpensive, each inside and outside corner requires a miter cut that wastes material. This calculator adds waste for cuts so you don't run short on the last room of your project. Having precise numbers at hand streamlines project planning discussions with clients, architects, and subcontractors, building trust and reducing costly misunderstandings on the job.
Total LF = Baseboard LF × (1 + Waste%/100) Pieces = ⌈Total LF / Piece Length⌉
Result: 8 pieces
52 linear feet of baseboard with 10% waste = 57.2 LF of quarter round. At 8 ft per piece: ⌈57.2 / 8⌉ = 8 pieces.
Floating floors require a 1/4” to 3/8” expansion gap at all walls. If your baseboard doesn't cover this gap, quarter round or shoe molding bridges the difference. It creates a tight visual seal between the floor and trim, blocking dust and debris from collecting underneath.
Quarter round projects further from the wall (3/4”) and creates a more rounded look. Shoe molding is slimmer (1/2” projection) and provides a more subtle finish. Both cover the expansion gap effectively. Choose based on aesthetics and the size of the gap.
Start at the most visible wall and work around the room. Use a pneumatic brad nailer for speed. Apply a thin bead of wood glue at miter joints for a permanent bond. Fill nail holes with matching wood putty. Paint or stain touch-up completes the job.
Pine is the most common and can be painted or stained. MDF quarter round is pre-primed and ready to paint. PVC quarter round is waterproof for bathrooms. Hardwood shoe molding matches stained hardwood floors.
Quarter round has a symmetrical 90-degree profile (equal height and depth). Shoe molding is taller than it is deep, giving it a slimmer profile that covers the expansion gap without projecting as far from the baseboard.
It's not always required, but it's strongly recommended for floating floors. The expansion gap between the floor and baseboard is unsightly without it. If baseboard sits directly on the floor (nail-down flooring), quarter round is optional.
Standard quarter round is 3/4” × 3/4”. It comes in 8-foot lengths. Shoe molding is typically 1/2” deep × 3/4” tall. Both serve the same functional purpose.
For inside corners, cut one piece at a 45-degree angle and cope the second piece to fit against the first. Alternatively, both pieces can be mitered at 45 degrees, but coped joints stay tighter over time.
Nail using a brad nailer with 1-inch to 1.5-inch brads. Nail into the baseboard, not the floor, so the floor can expand freely underneath. A small dot of construction adhesive adds holding power on the baseboard.
Plan for 10–15% waste. Each corner miter wastes a few inches, and a room with many corners can use 15% or more in offcuts that are too short to reuse.