Interior painting cost in 2026, per room and per square foot
Paint is one of the cheapest materials in the house — a gallon runs $30–$80. So why does a single room cost $400–$1,200 to paint professionally? The gap between a fair quote and a padded one almost always comes down to prep work, not paint.
Paint itself is one of the cheapest materials in home improvement — a gallon covers roughly 350 square feet and costs $30–$80. Almost the entire cost of a professional paint job is labor, and almost all of that labor is prep work most homeowners never see broken out on a quote: patching, sanding, taping, and priming.
What it costs
What actually drives the price
- Prep work required. Patching nail holes and minor dings is quick; repairing significant drywall damage, dealing with old wallpaper removal, or addressing water stains adds real time and cost before a drop of paint goes on.
- Ceiling height and trim detail. Vaulted ceilings need scaffolding or extension work; intricate trim and multiple accent colors add labor even in an average-size room.
- Number of colors and coats. Dramatic color changes (dark over light, or vice versa) often need an extra coat or a tinted primer to cover properly, which a lowball quote may not include.
- Paint quality. Higher-end paint costs more per gallon but often covers better and lasts longer — the material cost difference across a whole room is usually small relative to labor either way.
The most DIY-friendly project on this site
Interior painting is one of the most DIY-accessible projects in the house, and many homeowners do it themselves successfully. The skill gap between DIY and professional results shows up mainly in prep quality and cut-in lines (the edges where wall meets ceiling or trim) — professionals are simply faster and more consistent at both. If you have the time and patience for careful taping and multiple thin coats, DIY can save the bulk of the cost. High ceilings, extensive repairs, or a whole-home job on a deadline are where hiring out starts to make more sense.
What actually happens during the job
- Prep (30–50% of total time on most jobs). Furniture and floors are covered, walls are patched and sanded, and surfaces are cleaned. This unglamorous phase is where paint jobs succeed or fail.
- Taping and masking (part of prep). Trim, windows, and fixtures get taped off for clean lines.
- Priming, if needed. New drywall, patched areas, or major color changes need a primer coat before the finish color goes on.
- Painting (the fastest visible part). Two coats is standard for full coverage and even color.
- Cleanup and touch-up. Tape removal, final touch-ups, and furniture replacement finish the job.
A noticeably cheaper painting quote is almost always cheaper because it plans to spend less time on prep, not because the painter found a discount on paint. Ask specifically what prep is included — patching, sanding, priming — before comparing price alone.
Mistakes that inflate the cost or hurt the result
- Skipping primer on a big color change. Going from a dark color to a light one (or vice versa) without primer often means paying for extra coats to get even coverage.
- Buying cheap tape. Poor-quality painter's tape can bleed paint underneath or damage surfaces on removal — a small cost difference that affects the whole job's finish quality.
- Not addressing moisture or mold sources first. Painting over an active moisture problem (common in bathrooms or basements) is a short-term fix at best.
- Underestimating cleanup time in occupied rooms. Moving furniture, covering floors, and protecting belongings takes real time that's easy to underbudget for a DIY project.
Frequently asked questions
How many coats of paint do I need?
Two coats is standard for full coverage and even color, even with "one-coat" paints in most real-world conditions. A single coat can work for a very similar color-on-color refresh, but two coats is the safer default to quote and budget for.
How long does paint last before it needs a repaint?
Interior paint in normal-use rooms typically looks good for 7–10 years. High-traffic areas, kitchens, and bathrooms with more wear and moisture often need a refresh sooner, in the 3–5 year range.
Is it cheaper to paint a whole house at once or room by room?
Whole-home painting is usually cheaper per room since the painter has one mobilization and setup rather than several separate visits. Room-by-room makes sense if budget needs to be spread out over time.
What's the difference between flat, eggshell, and satin paint?
Flat hides imperfections best but is hardest to clean; eggshell offers a light sheen with better washability, a common choice for living areas; satin is more washable still and often used in kitchens, bathrooms, and trim.
Should I paint before or after new flooring?
Painting first is standard practice, since it's easier to protect new flooring from paint drips than to touch up paint splatter on finished floors. See our flooring cost guide if you're planning both.
Can I paint over wallpaper?
It's possible with the right primer if the wallpaper is well-adhered, but removal generally gives a better, longer-lasting result. Painting over peeling or bubbling wallpaper will show through and fail faster.
Sources & further reading
- Angi/HomeAdvisor cost data for interior painting, by room and whole-home scope.
- Paint manufacturer coverage rates and durability specifications vary by sheen type and product line — confirm current specifications directly with the manufacturer of the paint being used.
This guide reflects independent research using public pricing data and industry sources, not a professional site assessment. Cost ranges are estimates for planning only and vary by region, home and material choice — always confirm with local, itemized quotes.