Wall-Area-Calculator
Use this Wall-Area-Calculator to calculate area in square feet, square meters, and square yards. Enter dimensions for rectangular, triangular, circular, or trapezoidal shapes to plan flooring, painting, or landscaping projects.
Result
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What This Square Footage Calculator Helps You Measure
A square footage calculator is a practical tool for anyone who needs to measure area for flooring, painting, landscaping, or construction. It helps you convert room dimensions into area estimates that you can use to order materials, plan budgets, or compare spaces. Instead of doing manual math, you enter the shape and dimensions, and the calculator returns the area in square feet, square meters, and square yards.
The page is also useful because different shapes require different formulas. A rectangular room is straightforward, but a triangular gable end, a circular patio, or a trapezoidal garden bed needs a different approach. This calculator handles all four shapes in one place, so you do not need to remember each formula or risk mixing them up.
If you work in feet and square feet, the calculator gives results directly. If you work in meters and square meters, the page also shows metric output so you can plan in the unit system that matches your suppliers, contractors, or regional standards. That dual output is useful for mixed teams, international projects, and anyone who quotes work in more than one unit system.
How to Calculate Square Footage
- Select the shape: Choose the shape that matches your area. Rectangle is the most common for rooms and floors. Triangle is useful for gable ends and diagonal cuts. Circle works for round patios and pools. Trapezoid is useful for irregular shapes.
- Enter the dimensions: Provide the dimensions for the selected shape. For rectangles, enter length and width. For triangles, enter base and height. For circles, enter radius. For trapezoids, enter top base, bottom base, and height.
- Set the quantity: If you have multiple identical areas, enter the quantity. The calculator multiplies the single-area result by the quantity to give the total area.
- Review the area: The calculator returns the area in square feet, square meters, and square yards. Use the unit that matches your material or supplier requirements.
If you are calculating manually, start by identifying the shape and then apply the correct formula. For rectangles, multiply length by width. For triangles, multiply base by height and divide by two. For circles, multiply pi by the radius squared. For trapezoids, add the two bases, multiply by height, and divide by two. If you have multiple identical areas, multiply the single-area result by the quantity.
Wall-Area-Calculator Formula
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Length of a rectangle | ft |
| Width | Width of a rectangle | ft |
| Base | Base of a triangle | ft |
| Height | Height of a triangle or trapezoid | ft |
| Radius | Radius of a circle | ft |
| Top base | Top base of a trapezoid | ft |
| Bottom base | Bottom base of a trapezoid | ft |
The formulas above are standard geometric area calculations. For rectangles and squares, the result is exact. For circles, the result uses pi (approximately 3.14159). For triangles and trapezoids, the result is exact for the given dimensions. If you are measuring irregular shapes, break them into simple shapes and add the areas together.
The most important practical choice is the unit system. If your supplier quotes materials in square feet, use feet for all dimensions. If your contractor works in meters, use meters. Mixing units will produce incorrect results, so keep all dimensions in the same unit system before calculating.
That is also why the calculator shows results in multiple unit systems. Once you know the area in square feet, you can see the equivalent in square meters and square yards without doing a separate conversion. That extra view is often more useful than the raw square-footage number by itself.
Worked Examples
- Shape: Rectangle
- Length: 15 ft
- Width: 12 ft
- Quantity: 1
Result: 180 ft2, about 16.7 m2
A 15 by 12 foot living room has 180 square feet of floor area. This is useful for ordering flooring, carpet, or tile.
- Shape: Rectangle
- Length: 5 m
- Width: 4 m
- Quantity: 1
Result: 20 m2, about 215 ft2
A 5 by 4 meter garden plot has 20 square meters of area. This is useful for planning planting beds, paths, and lawn areas.
- Shape: Triangle
- Base: 6 m
- Height: 3 m
- Quantity: 2
Result: 18 m2 total, about 194 ft2
Two triangular gable ends with a 6 meter base and 3 meter height have a total area of 18 square meters. This is useful for estimating siding or paint.
- Shape: Circle
- Radius: 3 m
- Quantity: 1
Result: 28.3 m2, about 304 ft2
A circular patio with a 3 meter radius has about 28.3 square meters of area. This is useful for ordering pavers, concrete, or landscaping materials.
These examples show why shape selection and unit handling matter. A rectangular room is straightforward, but a circular patio or triangular gable end requires the correct formula. Using the wrong shape or mixing units will produce incorrect area estimates that can lead to material shortages or overordering.
Square Footage Planning Chart
This chart gives two ways to read output. The first table groups results into broad planning ranges. The second table is a quick reference chart for common room sizes. It is not a replacement for your actual calculator inputs, but it helps you benchmark whether a result looks small, typical, or large for the space you have in mind.
| Range | Meaning | Planning action |
|---|---|---|
| Under 100 ft2 | Small room or closet | Standard material quantities are usually sufficient. Check material waste allowances. |
| 100 to 300 ft2 | Typical bedroom or living room | Compare material pricing per square foot versus per unit. Waste allowance matters more at this scale. |
| 300 to 600 ft2 | Large room or small apartment | Plan the layout carefully to minimize cuts and waste. Consider ordering an extra box or bundle for defects. |
| Over 600 ft2 | Whole house or commercial space | Coordinate delivery, staging, and installation sequence. Verify material lot consistency to avoid color or texture variation. |
| Room Type | Typical Size | Square Footage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bedroom | 10 x 12 ft | 120 ft2 | Standard bedroom size |
| Living room | 12 x 18 ft | 216 ft2 | Medium living room |
| Kitchen | 10 x 12 ft | 120 ft2 | Standard kitchen |
| Bathroom | 5 x 8 ft | 40 ft2 | Full bathroom |
| Garage | 20 x 20 ft | 400 ft2 | Two-car garage |
If your live result is far below the chart for a similar room type, that usually means the room is smaller than typical or you are measuring a partial area. If your result is much higher, double-check that dimensions are correct and that you are not accidentally including non-floor areas like closets or hallways.
Frequently Asked Questions
References
The formulas and planning guidance on this page follow standard geometric area calculations. The references below are useful if you want to compare area calculation methods, unit conversion factors, or broader construction and landscaping guidance.
Last reviewed: March 2026