How to paint rooms, walls, and ceilings with professional results—from prep to final coat.
Let’s be honest—most DIY paint jobs fail for the same reasons: poor prep, wrong materials, and rushed application. It’s rarely the paint itself.
You can buy premium paint, follow the color trends, and still end up with streaky walls, uneven coverage, and peeling corners if you skip the fundamentals.
Professional painters don’t just “paint walls.” They control surface conditions, apply consistent coats, and understand how materials behave.
This guide breaks down exactly how to do that—step by step.
Before anything else, you need to know how much paint to buy. Guessing here is how people end up making emergency store runs mid-project.
Use this formula:
Example:
Or just use the paint calculator and skip the math.
Prep work is where most people cut corners—and where the biggest quality difference happens.
Skipping prep is like painting over problems instead of fixing them.
Not all paint is the same. Picking the wrong finish is one of the easiest ways to ruin a room’s look.
For most walls, eggshell or satin is the safe choice.
Cheap tools = visible brush marks and uneven texture.
Start by painting edges around ceilings, corners, and trim.
The goal is consistent coverage—not speed.
Most projects require:
If you’re going from dark to light, assume at least 2–3 coats.
Typical room:
Interior painting isn’t difficult—but it’s also not forgiving. The difference between amateur and professional results comes down to preparation, technique, and patience.
If you calculate correctly, prep properly, and apply consistently, you’ll get results that actually last.
For accurate estimates, use the paint calculator.
Related guides: Paint Calculation Guide