Calculate gallons of texture paint for textured finishes. Coverage drops to 100–200 sq ft/gal for heavy textures like knockdown, orange peel, or skip trowel.
Textured paint creates visual interest and hides wall imperfections, but it uses significantly more product per square foot than standard flat paint. A heavy knockdown or skip-trowel texture can consume 2–4 times as much paint or texture compound per square foot compared to a smooth wall application. Understanding this coverage difference is critical for accurate budgeting.
This texture paint coverage calculator adjusts the standard coverage rate based on your texture type. Light textures like orange peel use about 150–200 sq ft per gallon, while heavy textures like knockdown or skip-trowel use only 100–150 sq ft per gallon. Sand textures and popcorn-style textures fall in between depending on the particle size and application thickness.
Whether you're applying texture compound to new construction walls or painting over existing textured surfaces, this tool gives you the correct gallon count so you don't run short during the application process.
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.
Textured surfaces require drastically more paint — up to 2–4 times more than smooth walls. Using standard coverage rates for textured surfaces will leave you 50% or more short. This calculator uses texture-specific coverage factors for realistic estimates. Consistent use of this tool across projects builds a library of reference data that improves estimating accuracy over time and reduces reliance on individual experience alone.
Gallons = (Area ÷ Texture Coverage Rate) × Coats
Result: 4.00 gallons
500 sq ft of heavy knockdown texture at 125 sq ft/gal coverage with 1 coat = 500 ÷ 125 = 4.00 gallons. If painting over the same texture with regular paint afterward, an additional 2.50 gallons at 200 sq ft/gal is needed for each coat of color.
Orange peel texture is the lightest, creating a subtle citrus-skin appearance. It covers 150–200 sq ft/gal and is applied with an air sprayer at moderate pressure. Knockdown starts as an orange peel but is flattened with a drywall knife after partial drying, using 100–150 sq ft/gal. Skip trowel is applied by hand with a wide knife, creating an organic, stucco-like pattern at 75–125 sq ft/gal.
When repainting textured walls, the coverage rate depends on the depth of the texture. Light orange peel uses about 15–20% more paint than smooth walls. Heavy knockdown uses 25–40% more. Popcorn ceilings use 40–60% more paint than smooth ceilings.
Orange peel: air sprayer with a fine nozzle. Knockdown: air sprayer plus a 12–18 inch knockdown knife. Skip trowel: a flat 12–18 inch drywall knife. Sand finish: roller or sprayer with sand additive. Popcorn: texture hopper gun with coarse material.
When patching or repairing textured walls, matching the existing pattern is the biggest challenge. Practice on scrap material, adjusting compound consistency and tool technique until you can replicate the pattern. Prime and paint the patch to blend it with surrounding areas.
Painting over existing texture uses about 25–50% more paint than smooth walls. Applying texture compound from scratch uses 2–4 times more product per square foot. The deeper the texture pattern, the more material is consumed.
Light texture (orange peel): 150–200 sq ft/gal. Medium texture (knockdown): 100–150 sq ft/gal. Heavy texture (skip trowel, sand): 75–125 sq ft/gal. These rates apply to the texture compound, not the paint applied over the texture afterward.
Texture compound is applied first to bare or primed drywall. Once the texture is dry (24–48 hours), prime the textured surface, then apply paint. Texture compound is white and acts as a base coat.
Yes. Sand or texture additives can be mixed into paint for a textured finish. This combined approach covers about 100–200 sq ft/gal. The texture is less pronounced than dedicated texture compounds but sufficient for a subtle effect.
Use a 3/4" nap roller for medium textures like knockdown or orange peel. Use a 1" or 1-1/4" nap for heavy textures like popcorn or heavy skip-trowel. The deeper the texture, the longer the nap needed to reach the valleys.
Popcorn texture on ceilings uses about 100–150 sq ft per gallon for the texture compound (applied with a hopper gun). Painting over existing popcorn uses about 150–250 sq ft/gal due to the extremely rough surface doubling the actual surface area.
Not exactly. Texture paint has texture additives mixed into paint for a one-step application. Textured coating (like drywall mud or joint compound) is a separate product applied to create texture before painting. Professional results typically use the two-step approach.
No. Apply and dry the texture compound completely first (24–48 hours minimum). Then prime the texture, let it dry, and finally apply paint. Combining steps produces poor adhesion and inconsistent appearance.