Fence Stain & Paint Calculator

Enter your fence size, how many sides and how many coats — get the gallons of stain or paint to buy, adjusted for how thirsty your wood is.

↺ Loaded the fence size from your last calculation. Edit any field to change it.

~125 bare/rough wood · ~175 smooth · check the can.

How much stain your fence needs

Coverage is the whole game with stain. The calculator multiplies your fence face area (length × height) by the number of sides and coats, then divides by the coverage rate printed on the can. It rounds up to whole gallons because you cannot buy a third of a can — and having a little left for touch-ups beats running dry three boards from the end.

Set coverage honestly. The number on the can is a best case on smooth wood. Bare, rough-sawn or weathered wood soaks up far more on the first coat — drop coverage to about 125 sq ft/gal for that coat and you will buy the right amount instead of a gallon short.

Why a picket fence uses more than the math suggests

Length × height treats the fence as a flat wall, but a real fence has picket edges, gaps that expose the back face, rails and posts. On a solid privacy fence the flat-wall estimate is close; on a spaced picket or shadowbox fence, add 10–15% because you are effectively coating extra edges. Treat the gallons here as a floor and round generously.

Stain vs. paint

  • Semi-transparent stain soaks in, shows the grain, and needs re-coating every 2–3 years. Best with two thin coats.
  • Solid stain sits more on the surface, lasts longer, and often covers in one coat on previously finished wood.
  • Paint covers most but can peel on fences that trap moisture; always prime bare wood first (that primer is a separate coat to budget).

Get more from every gallon

  • Stain in the shade — direct sun dries stain before it can soak in, wasting product and leaving lap marks.
  • Back-brush after spraying or rolling to push stain into the wood.
  • Clean and dry the fence first; stain will not absorb evenly into dirty or damp wood.

Estimates only — always confirm coverage on the product you buy.

Frequently asked questions

How many gallons of stain do I need for a fence?

A gallon of fence stain covers roughly 150 to 200 square feet on smooth wood, less on rough or bare wood. A 100-foot, 6-foot-tall fence stained on both sides is about 1,200 square feet per coat — around 7 gallons for one coat at 175 sq ft/gal. This calculator does the math for your exact fence.

How much does the first coat lower coverage?

A lot. Bare, thirsty wood can drink up stain at 100 to 125 sq ft per gallon on the first coat, then 200+ on the second. If you are staining new or unsealed wood, set coverage to about 125 for the first coat.

Do I count both sides of the fence?

Only if you are finishing both sides. Set "sides" to 2 for a fence you can walk around, or 1 if only your side is being stained. Note that pickets, rails and posts add surface area, so treat the result as a solid-face minimum and round up.

One coat or two?

Two thin coats last far longer than one thick coat and give more even color. Semi-transparent stains almost always look better with two. Solid stains and paint often cover in one on previously finished wood.