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Masonry Paint Calculator — Exterior Wall Paint Quantities

Calculate masonry paint for outside walls. Accounts for surface texture, pebbledash, render and brick with UK coverage rates.

Full height of exterior wall

Length of each wall section

Number of wall sections of this size

Each door subtracts 1.8 m²

Each window subtracts 1.2 m²

Include stabilising solution

For powdery, chalky or friable surfaces — apply before painting

Include wastage allowance

Adds 10% extra for uneven surfaces and application losses

10% standard — consider 15% for very rough surfaces

Enter your supplier price for a cost estimate

How We Calculate This

Our masonry paint calculator works by calculating the total exterior wall area, subtracting doors and windows, then dividing by the coverage rate for your surface texture. Exterior surfaces vary enormously in their paint absorption — rough pebbledash uses twice as much paint per m² as smooth render.

The formula

Litres needed = (Net wall area × Number of coats) ÷ Coverage rate per litre × Wastage factor

Net wall area = (Wall height × Wall length × Number of walls) − (Doors × 1.8 m²) − (Windows × 1.2 m²)

For example, a front wall 8m × 6m with smooth render, minus 1 door and 3 windows: Gross area = 48 m². Net area = 48 - 1.8 - 3.6 = 42.6 m². For 2 coats at 6 m²/L: 42.6 × 2 ÷ 6 = 14.2 L, plus 10% wastage = 15.6 L. You'd need 2 × 10L tins or 4 × 5L tins.

Coverage rates by surface texture

  • Smooth Render: 6 m²/L — standard rendered walls with a flat finish
  • Textured Render: 4 m²/L — roughcast or stippled render finishes
  • Pebbledash: 3 m²/L — heavily textured surface absorbs the most paint
  • Bare Brick: 3.5 m²/L — porous brick absorbs significantly

These rates are based on manufacturer data from Dulux Weathershield and Sandtex. Two coats are standard for exterior masonry to achieve full coverage and protection. If the surface is powdery, apply stabilising solution first (coverage approximately 4 m²/L) and allow to dry before painting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Last updated: February 2026

All calculations are estimates. Verify with your supplier.