Wall Stud Calculator
Calculate exactly how many studs, top plates, sole plates, and noggins you need for any partition or stud wall. Includes doors, windows, waste factor, and timber lineal metre totals.
Calculate your stud wall timber
Enter your wall dimensions, stud spacing, and any openings to get an instant count of every timber piece you need — with a full materials list.
Your wall details
Fill in the fields below for an instant materials list
400mm centres are standard for 12.5mm plasterboard. 600mm centres suit non-load-bearing partition walls.
47×100mm is the most common UK partition stud size. Use 47×125mm or 47×150mm for load-bearing walls.
Noggins are horizontal timbers between studs for rigidity. One mid-height row is standard for partition walls.
Standard internal door: 838×1981mm
Standard window: 1200×1050mm
10% is standard. Increase to 15–20% for complex walls with many cuts or openings.
Your Materials List
Stud count, plates, noggins & lineal metres
Enter your wall length, height, and stud spacing, then click Calculate to get a complete materials list with stud count, plates, and noggins.
Stud wall components explained
A stud wall is made up of several types of timber. Understanding each component helps you order the right lengths and avoid waste.
Vertical Studs
The main upright timbers spaced at regular centres (400, 450, or 600mm). They run the full height between sole plate and top plate and carry any load from above.
Sole & Top Plates
Horizontal timbers at the bottom (sole plate) and top (top plate) of the wall frame. They tie the studs together and transfer load to the floor structure and ceiling/joists above.
Noggins
Short horizontal timbers fitted between studs to prevent them twisting and to add rigidity. Also used to provide fixing points for heavy items like shelving, radiators, and TV brackets.
Door Trimmers & Lintels
Door openings require extra studs (trimmers/cripple studs) on each side and a lintel (head) timber above. These transfer load around the opening back to the main frame.
Window Openings
Windows need trimmers, a head timber, a sill timber, and cripple studs below the sill. The opening is deducted from the stud count but the extra framing timbers are added back.
Corner & Partition Posts
Where walls meet at corners or T-junctions, extra studs are added to provide a fixing surface for plasterboard on both faces. A 2-stud or 3-stud corner detail is most common.
Stud spacing quick reference
How many studs do you need per metre? Use this table for a quick manual check of your calculator results.
| Wall length | @ 400mm c/c | @ 450mm c/c | @ 600mm c/c | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 m | 3 studs | 3 studs | 2 studs | Alcove / short wall |
| 2.0 m | 6 studs | 5 studs | 4 studs | Bathroom partition |
| 3.0 m | 8 studs | 8 studs | 6 studs | Standard room |
| 4.0 m | 11 studs | 10 studs | 8 studs | Living room divider |
| 5.0 m | 14 studs | 12 studs | 10 studs | Open plan partition |
| 6.0 m | 16 studs | 15 studs | 11 studs | Large partition |
What affects your stud wall design?
The right stud wall specification depends on its purpose, what’s going on it, and whether it carries any structural load.
Load-bearing vs partition
Load-bearing walls carry floor or roof loads above — these need larger studs (47×100mm minimum), a double top plate, and engineer’s approval. Partition walls only support their own weight.
Acoustic performance
For better sound insulation, use staggered studs on separate sole and top plates, or a double stud wall with an air gap. Mineral wool insulation in the cavity makes a significant difference.
External walls & insulation
External stud walls need deeper timbers (47×125mm or 47×150mm) to accommodate full-fill insulation and achieve the required U-values under Part L of the Building Regulations.
Plasterboard size
Standard 1200mm-wide plasterboard sheets require studs at 400mm or 600mm centres so joints always fall on a stud. 450mm centres suit 900mm-wide boards or timber cladding.
Wet areas (bathrooms)
In bathrooms and wet rooms, use moisture-resistant (MR) plasterboard and consider pressure-treated timber. Extra noggins at tile or panel fixing heights are recommended.
Timber grade & moisture content
Use C16 or C24 graded timber for structural work. Ensure moisture content is below 20% before plasterboarding to prevent later shrinkage, nail-popping, and cracking.
Estimates based on real timber data
Our wall stud calculator uses standard UK framing rules: studs at regular centres plus 1 extra, plates run the full wall length, and noggins fill the bays between studs.
We apply door and window deductions correctly, add the framing timbers around openings, and include your chosen waste factor — so you order the right amount, not a rough guess.
- ✓Correct stud count for 400, 450, and 600mm centres
- ✓Sole plate, top plate, and double top plate options
- ✓Noggin rows calculated for correct bay count
- ✓Door and window openings correctly deducted
- ✓Waste factor and corner posts included
- ✓Total lineal metres for merchant ordering
Stud wall FAQs
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