Pipe surface area for paint, coating, and insulation
The outside surface area of a pipe is what you have to paint, coat, wrap, or insulate, and it drives how much material a job needs. It depends only on the outside diameter and length — wall thickness does not change the outside skin. This calculator returns external and internal area, area per foot, and an estimate of coating required.
The formula
External surface area = pi x outside diameter x length. Internal area uses the inside diameter instead. Because area scales directly with diameter, a 6 in pipe takes 50 percent more coating per foot than a 4 in pipe of the same length.
Estimating coating
Divide the external area by the coverage rate of your product. Paints and coatings list coverage in square feet per gallon (often 300 to 400) or square metres per litre. The calculator does this division for you so you can size the order; add a margin for overspray, a second coat, and fittings.
Internal area
Internal surface area matters for linings, passivation, and heat-transfer estimates. Enter the wall thickness and the calculator finds the bore and its area; leave wall at zero to treat the pipe as a thin tube where inside and outside area are nearly equal.
Where this fits
For the fluid a pipe holds, see the pipe volume calculator; for the steel weight of the pipe itself, the pipe weight calculator.
Worked example
A 4 in pipe, 10 ft long, has an external area of about 10.5 square feet. At 350 square feet per gallon that is roughly 0.03 gallons of coating per coat — small for one length, but it scales fast across a rack of pipe.
FAQ
Does wall thickness change the outside area?
No. The outside skin is set by the outside diameter alone. Wall thickness only affects the inside area and the bore.
Should I include the pipe ends?
For coating a long run the end rings are negligible. For short stubs or flange faces, add the ring area separately.
