Crown Molding Calculator

Work out the linear feet and number of pieces of crown molding you need for a room — with a waste allowance for miters — plus an estimate of the cost.

How to measure an area — length times width Length Width
Measure the room — crown follows the full perimeter around the top of the walls, with no gaps at doorways.

How to calculate crown molding

Crown follows the whole perimeter of the room — and unlike baseboard, it never stops for a doorway:

Linear feet = perimeter × (1 + waste %)

Perimeter is 2 × (length + width). Add your waste allowance for mitered and coped corners, then divide by your piece length and round up to whole pieces. Because crown passes above doors and windows, there are no openings to subtract.

Common molding lengths

Piece lengthGood for
8 ftEasy to handle; most rooms
12 ftFewer seams on long walls
16 ftLong, unbroken runs

Tips for cleaner corners

  • Cope inside corners. Coping one piece over a square-cut mate hides gaps better than a compound miter — and handles out-of-square walls.
  • Use a crown jig or chart. Compound miters are easy to cut backwards; mark your spring angle and test on scrap first.
  • Scarf the long runs. Join pieces mid-wall with a 45° scarf joint so the seam nearly disappears.
  • Prime and paint first. Finishing before installing means only the nail holes and seams need touch-up.

Frequently asked questions

How much crown molding for a 14×12 room?
The perimeter is 52 ft. With 10% waste that's about 57 linear feet — roughly 8 pieces of 8 ft molding.
Do I subtract doorways?
No — crown runs continuously around the top of the room, over doors and windows. Use the full perimeter.
How much extra should I buy?
10–15%, more than baseboard, because compound and coped miters waste more material. Lean to 15% if you're new to it.
What length should I buy?
8, 12, or 16 ft. Use the longest pieces on long walls and join runs with a 45° scarf joint to hide seams.

How we calculate this

  • Length = room perimeter
  • A waste allowance is added for miter and corner cuts
  • The total is divided by the stock length and rounded up to whole pieces

Sources:Standard trim-carpentry practice. Last reviewed:June 2026. See our methodology for how we build every estimate.