Crown Molding Calculator
Calculate how much crown molding you need in linear feet and 8- or 12-foot pieces for any room. Covers standard rooms, multi-room projects, and tray ceilings with inside/outside corner counts.
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Crown Molding (lin ft)
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8 ft Pieces —
12 ft Pieces —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Crown Molding (lin ft)
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12 ft Pieces —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Materials
Crown Molding (lin ft) —
12 ft Pieces —
Inside Corners —
Outside Corners —
Cost & Notes
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How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the room perimeter in linear feet.
- Enter the number of door/window openings.
- Use 15% waste for standard rooms, 20–25% for complex shapes. Extended tabs handle multi-room and tray ceilings. Professional tab adds corner counts and cost.
Formula
Net = Perimeter − (Openings × 3 ft)
Crown Needed = Net × (1 + Waste%)
Pieces = CEILING(Crown Needed ÷ Piece Length)
Example
Example: 60 ft perimeter, 2 openings, 15% waste → (60 − 6) × 1.15 = 62.1 lin ft → 6 pieces of 12 ft crown molding.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Measure the perimeter of the room in linear feet. Subtract 3 ft per door or window opening. Add 15% waste for compound miter cuts on corners.
- Buy 15–20% extra for standard rooms. Complex rooms with many inside and outside corners may need up to 25% extra due to compound angle waste at corners.
- The spring angle is the angle at which the crown molding sits against the wall and ceiling. 38° is standard for most crown profiles. Wide or built-up crown profiles often use 45°.
- Coping is preferred for inside corners on solid wood crown because it compensates for wall irregularities and gaps that appear as wood shrinks. MDF crown can be mitered.
- Poplar is the most popular paint-grade species — it machines cleanly and is dimensionally stable. MDF is the most affordable option. Oak and other hardwoods are used for stain-grade crown.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- Fine Homebuilding – Crown Molding Installation Guide — Fine Homebuilding / Taunton Press
- This Old House – How to Install Crown Molding — This Old House
- NAHB Residential Construction Performance Guidelines — National Association of Home Builders
- The Complete Trim Carpenter by Greg Cheetham — Taunton Press
- Architectural Digest – Trim & Molding Design Guide — Architectural Digest