The percentage between measured quantities and what you actually order - and how carrying the wrong one quietly costs you jobs or margin.
Waste covers cuts that can't be reused, breakage, damaged sheets and layout inefficiency. Too low and your crews run short mid-hang; too high and your bid carries invisible fat that loses work. The right number is project-specific - which is why our takeoffs show waste as its own line you can adjust, never buried in inflated quantities.
| Material | Typical Waste | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gypsum board - simple layouts | 7-10% | Long runs, standard heights, 12' sheets |
| Gypsum board - complex layouts | 10-15% | Chopped-up plans, angles, high ceilings mid-sheet |
| Metal studs & track | 5-10% | Stock lengths vs wall heights drive it |
| Batt insulation | 3-7% | Friction fit is efficient; odd cavities are not |
| Joint compound & tape | 5-10% | Mostly opened-bucket and mixing loss |
| Ceiling grid components | 5-8% | Perimeter cuts dominate in small rooms |
Wall heights that fall just past a stock sheet length (9'-6" walls eat 12' sheets badly). Many short wall segments. Radius walls. Occupied renovations where material handling is constrained. Board types used in small quantities - a few sheets of specialty board can carry 25% effective waste because you can't buy partials.
54" board on 9' walls (two courses, zero horizontal joint waste). 12' sheets on long corridors. Repetitive unit layouts where optimized cuts repeat. Crews that treat the scrap pile as inventory.
Net measured quantity and waste percentage, stated separately, adjustable by you. Any takeoff that hides waste inside its counts is asking you to bid blind. Ours never do - see for yourself on the sample takeoff.
Send your plans - the estimators who wrote these guides deliver your takeoff in 24-48 hours.
Upload Your Plans