# Wallpaper Calculator — How Many Rolls Do I Need?

> Calculate exactly how many wallpaper rolls you need for a room, accounting for pattern repeat waste, openings, and roll size. Free and instant.

- **Category:** Construction & Home
- **Interactive calculator:** https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/wallpaper-calculator/
- **Price:** Free, no sign-up required

## Overview

This calculator tells you exactly how many wallpaper rolls to buy for a room, including extra material lost to pattern-repeat alignment. Use it before any decorating project where you need to avoid running short mid-job or over-ordering an expensive patterned paper.

## How to read your result

The headline figure is the total number of rolls to purchase. The bar chart beneath compares rolls needed with no pattern repeat (straight match) against rolls needed with your actual repeat (drop match), so you can see at a glance how much the pattern design adds to the order. Supporting stats show strips per roll and total strips required.

## Method

The number of strips required is the ceiling of wall perimeter divided by roll width. Each strip must be cut long enough to cover wall height plus one full pattern-repeat increment so that the design lines up with the adjacent strip; strip length equals wall height plus pattern repeat in feet. Strips per roll is the floor of roll length divided by strip length. Total rolls is the ceiling of net strips (after deducting opening strips) divided by strips per roll. The formula follows the method published by Inch Calculator and the strip-waste approach described by WallCover.

## Example

- **Setup:** Room 10 ft × 10 ft (40 ft perimeter), 8 ft walls, rolls 21 in wide × 27 ft long, 24 in pattern repeat.
- **Result:** The 24 in repeat reduces each roll from 3 usable strips to 2 (each strip needs 10 ft of roll length to align, leaving only 27 ft ÷ 10 ft = 2 strips). With 23 strips needed across the perimeter, the order rises from 8 rolls (no repeat) to 12 rolls — 4 extra rolls consumed by pattern waste.

## Frequently asked questions

### What is pattern repeat and why does it matter?

Pattern repeat is the vertical distance before a motif restarts on the wallpaper. When hanging adjacent strips, each strip must be shifted to align the pattern, wasting part of the roll. A larger repeat wastes more material per strip and therefore increases the number of rolls needed.

### Should I enter a perimeter or room dimensions?

For a standard rectangular room enter the length and width and the calculator derives the perimeter automatically. Use the perimeter mode if the room has an unusual shape — just measure along each wall and add the lengths together.

### How do I deduct doors and windows?

Enter the total area of openings (doors, windows) in square feet in the openings field. The calculator converts that area into whole strips and subtracts them from the strip count before calculating rolls.

### Why should I buy more rolls than the exact result?

Professional decorators recommend adding one or two rolls as a buffer for cutting errors, future repairs, or dye-lot variation between print runs. If the result is not a round number the calculator already rounds up to the next full roll.

### What roll dimensions should I use?

Standard European double rolls are typically 20–21 in wide and 33 ft long. US single rolls are commonly 27 in wide and 15 ft long. Check the label on the roll you plan to buy and enter those figures for an accurate estimate.

## Related calculators

- [Paint Calculator](https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/paint-calculator/)
- [Flooring Calculator](https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/flooring-calculator/)
- [Drywall Calculator](https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/drywall-calculator/)
- [Roofing Calculator](https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/roofing-calculator/)

## Sources

- https://www.inchcalculator.com/wallpaper-calculator/
- https://www.wallcover.com/blog/wallpaper-roll-calculation

---

Interactive version: https://youcalc.com/en/construction-home/wallpaper-calculator/ · From YouCalc — https://youcalc.com
