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How Much Does Interior Painting Cost?

Average interior painting costs per room and square foot, plus pricing in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.

Last updated: 2026-03-18HireLocal Editorial

Interior painting costs depend on the size of the space, wall condition, paint quality, and labor rates in your area. In the US, expect $2–$6 per square foot of wall area, or $300–$800 per room. A full interior (average 3-bedroom home) runs $3,000–$8,000. In Poland, expect PLN 15–40/m² and in the Netherlands €15–€35/m².

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Average costs by project

  • Single room (walls only): $300–$800
  • Single room (walls + ceiling + trim): $500–$1,200
  • Full interior (3-bed house): $3,000–$8,000
  • Kitchen or bathroom (prep-intensive): $500–$1,500
  • Accent/feature wall: $100–$300
  • Cabinet painting (kitchen): $1,200–$4,000
  • Trim and baseboards only: $500–$2,000 whole house
  • Ceiling painting (per room): $150–$500
  • Stairwell/high-ceiling room: $500–$1,500+

What affects the cost?

  • Wall condition — cracked plaster, peeling paint, or water damage requires extensive prep that can double labor costs
  • Ceiling height — rooms above 9 feet require scaffolding or ladders, increasing time and risk
  • Trim and doors — painting trim, baseboards, and door frames adds 30–50% to a walls-only quote
  • Paint quality — premium paints (Benjamin Moore Aura, Sherwin-Williams Emerald) cost $50–$80/gallon vs $25–$40 for standard
  • Number of colors — each color change requires cleaning equipment and additional masking
  • Furniture moving — pros charge $50–$200 extra for moving and covering furniture in occupied rooms
  • Primer needed — dark-to-light color changes or new drywall require separate primer coats

Costs by country

Costs in the United States

US interior painters charge $2–$6 per square foot of wall area or $25–$75 per hour. Most quote per room or per project. A standard 12×12 bedroom costs $300–$700 for walls only. High-cost cities (NYC, SF, Boston) run 30–50% above national averages. Southern and Midwest states tend to be 20–30% below.

When comparing quotes, confirm what is included: some painters include paint in their price, others quote labor only. Always ask about prep work (patching, sanding, priming) — cheap quotes often skip proper prep, leading to a finish that peels within a year. Licensed and insured painters cost more but provide warranties and liability coverage.

How to save

  • Do your own prep — clearing rooms, removing switch plates, and filling small nail holes can save $200–$500
  • Combine rooms — painters give better rates for whole-house jobs vs single rooms
  • Use one color throughout — fewer color changes means less time and material waste
  • Schedule off-peak — winter months (Nov–Feb) are slow for painters; negotiate 10–20% discounts
  • Buy paint yourself — painters mark up paint 20–40%; buying direct saves money
  • Skip the ceiling — if the ceiling is in good shape, painting walls only cuts cost by 20–30%
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How much does interior painting cost?

Interior painting runs $1.50–$4 per square foot of wall in the US, or $300–$800 per room. A whole-house interior repaint (2,000 sq ft) costs $4,000–$10,000 depending on prep work, ceiling height, and trim complexity. Labor is 70–85% of the total — paint itself is $35–$70 per gallon.

How many gallons of paint for one room?

A standard 12'×12' bedroom (480 sq ft of wall) needs 1.5 gallons for two coats. Add 0.5 gallons if painting trim and ceiling. Calculator: divide square footage by 350 (single coat coverage) and round up. Always buy a quart extra for touch-ups.

How long does interior painting take?

A single bedroom takes 4–8 hours for a pro (1–2 days DIY). A whole house (8–10 rooms) takes 3–5 days for a 2-person pro crew, or 2–3 weeks DIY. Drying time between coats (2–4 hours) doesn't extend total project time if work flows between rooms.

Should I prime before painting?

Always for: new drywall, dramatic color changes (light to dark or vice versa), repairs and patches, stained surfaces, and glossy finishes. Optional for: same-color recoats, low-traffic rooms with previous quality paint. Skipping primer when needed shows through within months.

The trade

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How to become a professional painter: training, certifications like EPA RRP, salary expectations, and career paths in the US, Poland, and the Netherlands.

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