Drop Ceiling Calculator

Work out how many ceiling tiles and how much grid you need for a suspended (drop) ceiling — panels, main beams, cross tees, and wall angle — plus an estimate of the cost.

How to measure an area — length times width Length Width
Measure the room — length × width. The grid splits the ceiling into 2×2 or 2×4 ft tiles.

How to estimate a drop ceiling

A suspended ceiling is a metal grid hung from the joists, filled with lay-in tiles. Start with the tiles, which come straight from the area:

Tiles = room area ÷ tile area (8 sq ft for 2×4, 4 sq ft for 2×2)

The grid that holds them follows standard spacing: main beams every 4 ft (about area ÷ 48 in 12-ft beams), 4-ft cross tees every 2 ft (about area ÷ 8), and for a 2×2 layout an equal number of 2-ft cross tees. Wall angle trims the perimeter. Round everything up and add a few tiles for cut edges.

Drop ceiling grid at a glance

PartWhat it does
Wall angleL-shaped trim around the room perimeter
Main beams12 ft runners, hung every 4 ft on wire
4 ft cross teesConnect mains every 2 ft
2 ft cross teesSplit 2×4 openings into 2×2 (2×2 layout only)

Good to know

  • Leave headroom. Drop at least 3–4 in below joists and pipes — more for recessed lights — and keep a code-legal ceiling height.
  • Find your level first. Snap a level line for the wall angle; the whole ceiling references it.
  • Plan border tiles. Center the grid so opposite borders are equal — it looks better and avoids skinny slivers.
  • Cost is tiles only here. Add grid, wall angle, and hanger wire — often sold as a room kit.

Frequently asked questions

How many tiles for a 12×10 ft room?
120 sq ft — about 15 of the 2×4 tiles or 30 of the 2×2, plus a few for cut edges.
How much grid do I need?
Roughly area ÷ 48 main beams (12 ft), area ÷ 8 four-foot cross tees, and the full perimeter in wall angle. A 2×2 layout adds the same number of 2-ft cross tees.
How far below the joists should it hang?
At least 3–4 in for the grid, more for lights or access. Keep the finished height to code, often a 7 ft minimum.
2×2 or 2×4 tiles?
2×2 looks more modern and finished; 2×4 is cheaper and faster with less grid. Both use the same mains and wall angle.

How we calculate this

  • Tiles cover 4 sq ft (2×2) or 8 sq ft (2×4) each
  • Grid is estimated as main runners, cross tees, and perimeter wall angle
  • A waste allowance covers border cuts

Sources:Suspended-ceiling manufacturer layouts. Last reviewed:June 2026. See our methodology for how we build every estimate.