Most painters price interior work at $2–$6 per square foot of floor area (or $200–$600 per room) and exterior at $1.50–$4.50 per square foot of wall, as of 2026. You build it from labor hours, paint and materials, and prep, then add overhead and margin. Prep condition, coats, trim, and height move it more than raw square footage.
Typical 2026 ranges for residential work. Prep condition, coat count, trim and detail, and height move every line. Per-room and per-square-foot figures are starting points you adjust for the real surface.
| Scope | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Interior, per sq ft (floor area) | $2–$6/sq ft | Walls; trim/ceilings often extra |
| Interior, per room | $200–$600/room | Standard bedroom to large living room |
| Exterior, per sq ft (wall area) | $1.50–$4.50/sq ft | By substrate and condition |
| Trim, doors, windows | Priced separately | Detailed, slow work |
| Prep (patch, sand, scrape) | Its own line | Can dominate labor on rough surfaces |
| Extra coat | Add to material + labor | Dark-to-light, deep colors, bare spots |
National ballparks for residential painting; metro and high-end work runs higher. Always estimate from real labor hours, your paint cost, and the surface in front of you.
Square footage is where painters start and where they get into trouble. The same room can be a two-hour roll job or a two-day patch-and-prime nightmare. The painters who stay profitable price from labor hours and surface condition first, then sanity-check against per-room or per-square-foot rates — never the other way around.
Per-room pricing is fast and customers grasp it instantly — "$350 a bedroom, $550 the living room." It works well for standard interior spaces and makes a proposal easy to read. The range is wide ($200–$600 a room) because room size, ceiling height, and trim vary so much.
Per-square-foot (interior $2–$6/sq ft of floor area) is more accurate across a whole home or irregular spaces, and it scales cleanly. Most experienced painters do both: estimate internally by labor hours and wall area, then present either a per-room breakdown or one clean project price. Whichever you show, treat the headline figure as a starting point you adjust for prep, height, and detail.
Interior is priced on floor area; exterior is priced on wall area and condition — and for good reason. Exterior work front-loads setup and risk:
So a one-story repaint in good shape prices far below a two-story home with heavy scraping and mixed substrates — even at the same square footage. Quote exterior only after you've walked the whole envelope.
This is where jobs are won or lost on margin:
Paint quality moves cost two ways: better paint costs more per gallon, but it often covers in fewer coats and lasts longer, which can offset some labor and warranty risk. Rather than guessing, offer a good / better / best paint tier and let the customer choose, with the price reflecting both the material and the coat count it requires.
It's an honest, easy way to give options without discounting your labor rate. Just be clear about what each tier buys — sheen, durability, washability, warranty — so the customer is choosing on value, not just price.
Labor is the biggest line in almost every paint job, so estimate it directly. Walk the space, estimate the hours for prep, priming, cutting-in, and rolling or spraying, multiply by your loaded labor rate, then add paint and materials, overhead, and margin. The per-room or per-square-foot number is your cross-check, not your quote.
The classic mistake is bidding the easy surface and eating the prep. Build a small contingency into rough-condition jobs, document the surface condition in your estimate, and price the work you'll actually do — not the work you hope it'll be.
A painting estimate has a lot of moving parts — rooms, coats, trim, prep, paint tiers — and a clear proposal closes more jobs. Claver for painters lets you save line-item pricing for rooms, trim, and surfaces, present good/better/best paint options the customer can compare, take a deposit before you buy material, and invoice the balance on completion — so the bid you wrote is the money you collect. See it on the painting page or the feature tour.
Save line-item pricing, present good/better/best paint options, take deposits, and invoice on completion. Claver Pro is free forever — start in minutes, no card required.