English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have always done my own painting.Now people want to hire me to paint their rooms.I know there is a formula that professional painters use to estimate the cost.Are there any professional painters out there that can help me?

2006-08-24 12:51:47 · 7 answers · asked by Cheese 5 in Home & Garden Decorating & Remodeling

I am looking for a formula to estimate what to charge the customer to paint a room.

2006-08-24 13:03:00 · update #1

7 answers

I am a remodeling contractor and when I need a room painted for a customer...
I figure square footage...
Divide square footage by coverage per gallon...
Write down price...
Make an educated guess of how long it would take to paint room...
Figure labor costs, including insurance, special equipment needed and the like...
Combine all the costs...
Add overhead margin...
Add profit margin.

2006-08-25 16:45:30 · answer #1 · answered by CHAD 2 · 0 0

How long does it take you to paint a room for yourself? Add about 20% to that, and multiply that by your Hourly rate ($20 to $30 per hour). Then multiply that by the number of rooms. Add in your material costs plus 20%, and that's your bid rate.

2006-08-24 13:19:51 · answer #2 · answered by uncle bob 4 · 0 0

(length x height x 2) + (width x height x 2) for a rough estimate of sq. feet of coverage. Multiply that by the number of coats needed...usually 2 coats for light colours but up to 4 coats for dark colours. Check the price and coverage of the specific brand and colour of paint they want to use per gallon. Add the cost of rollers, spackle, cleaners, sandpaper...at least one per different colour. That's your material cost.

Estimate how long it will take you to paint one coat based on the square footage....base your hourly rate on that....then multiply 'hourly rate' x 'time to do one coat' x 'the number of coats needed' + 'time needed to wash, spackle and sand for prep to paint. Then add the cost of all materials and taxes. To that add 10% buffer just in case there are unforseen problems and expenses.

2006-08-24 13:16:25 · answer #3 · answered by markus 4 · 0 0

Wall length X Height X number of walls, coverage will be on the side of the can depending on type of surface.

2006-08-24 12:58:04 · answer #4 · answered by macdyver60 4 · 0 0

ever considered newspapers on partitions in previous residences? to insulate and canopy wall? take some newspapers and soak in tea or rit dye (brown) and lay on floor or clothesline to dry. Take them after dry and gently mist em with spray water or starch in case you like, and Iron em. then glue them overlapping and so on (ripped is fantastic) into wall length sheets. Then tape them up with double stick tape (bottle of goof off will get rid of residue) and carry over all wall surfaces. Then take some ribbon and unmarried B+W photograph or crossstich trend and carry around room. you need to use timber print touch paper on all modern-day steel issues too to make it look "organic' too. have relaxing. Wait, the e book case...only use widespread one and placed a curtain over front, perchance a classic flour sack print. flow to farmers shop and get some steel buckets too, dunno why yet they arrive in obtainable.

2016-12-14 11:20:27 · answer #5 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

length of wall x height of wall = sq ft of wall....add up all the sq to get total of room's walls....1 gal of paint will cover about 200 sq ft......

lic. gen. contractor

2006-08-24 14:06:58 · answer #6 · answered by bigg_dogg44 6 · 0 0

just to let u know, a gallon covers just over 400sq.ft. and a quart does just over 100sq.ft.

2006-08-26 11:49:44 · answer #7 · answered by .nicole. 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers