How Many Sheets of Drywall Do You Need?
Calculate drywall sheets, joint compound, tape, and screws for any room. The complete drywall materials list.
Drywall Sheet Count Formula
Calculate wall area: Perimeter × Height. Subtract doors (21 sq ft each) and windows (15 sq ft each). Add ceiling area if finishing the ceiling. Divide total by sheet size (32 sq ft for 4×8, 48 sq ft for 4×12). Add 10% for waste and cuts. For a standard 12×14 bedroom with 9-foot ceilings: about 16-18 sheets of 4×8 drywall.
The Complete Materials List
Beyond drywall sheets, you need: Joint compound (1 gallon per 100 sq ft for 3-coat finishing), paper tape (1 roll per 250 sq ft), drywall screws (1 screw per 4 sq ft, 1-1/4" coarse thread for wood studs), and corner bead (one per outside corner). Optional: mesh tape for simple joints, setting-type compound for first coat (stronger but harder to sand).
Hanging Tips for DIYers
Hang ceiling first, then walls. Stagger joints — never align joints on adjacent sheets. Score and snap (do not saw) drywall. Pre-mark stud locations on the floor and ceiling. Use a drywall lift for ceiling sheets ($40-50/day rental). Drive screws just below the surface without breaking the paper face.
Using 4×12 sheets instead of 4×8 eliminates 33% of horizontal joints on standard 8-foot walls. Fewer joints means less taping, less compound, less sanding, and a smoother finished wall. The sheets are heavier and harder to handle but the finished result is noticeably better.