August 22nd, 2012
How to Measure the Area of Your House
Categories: Building Materials, Home Building |
One of the most confusing and misleading metrics in the home building and home selling business is area – the “size” of a house.
The problem is that there’s no adopted standard – everyone measures it differently. There has been a move in the last few years to create a universal standard like the one architects use (specified in AIA contracts), but it isn’t mandatory, and isn’t yet widely used.
Many state boards of real estate specify a process to measure house area, but it’s a recommendation, not a requirement. So “house area” means different things to different people.
The one thing that is always true is that area is never measured from the inside of the walls – the area of a house always includes all wall thicknesses interior and exterior.
Not surprisingly, builders and realtors often want to show the largest number they can – so they sometimes measure the entire perimeter of the house on both floors. They may or may not include porches, stairs, and two story spaces. Since you don’t know their basis, it can be very hard to compare one house to another.
A relatively impartial source is your county auditor or assessor – they calculate the size of the house for tax purposes, and therefore measure all houses the same way. And although their measurements aren’t always a true reflection of the size of the house, they use the same protocol – so it’s easier to compare one house to another.
But county records show only the gross areas contained within the perimeter of the foundation, which doesn’t accurately reflect the “livable” space within.
A better way is to list areas separately, rather than combining them into one number; that’s the way we calculate areas at our office:
![]() |
| 1,500 SF or 1,850 SF? Depends on who’s measuring! |
Second floor: 1,000 sf
Subtotal heated areas: 2,500 sf
Finished basement: 800 sf
Total heated areas: 3,300
Screened porch: 200 sf
Open porches: 200 sf
Garage: 600 sf
Total unheated areas: 1,000 sf
To simply say that this house is 3,300 sf or 4,300 square feet, or 4,700 square feet (if you include upper volumes and stairs) would be misleading. It’s more informative to say it’s a 2,500 sf house with a screened porch, garage, and finished basement.
The best you can do right now (other than measuring it yourself) is to ask the builder or selling agent their basis for measurement. You need to know exactly what’s included in that number if you’re comparing homes based on size.







