Removing a popcorn ceiling costs $1 to $3 per square foot for the removal work itself, with most homeowners paying $1,500 to $3,500 for a complete project including refinishing in an average home. The national average across cost data sources lands around $2,000 for a typical residential project. A small single room runs $250 to $900. A larger home or whole-house removal runs $3,000 to $5,000 or more.
But the real number you need before any work starts isn’t the removal price — it’s whether your ceiling contains asbestos. Popcorn ceilings installed before 1978 often contain asbestos as a fire-retardant additive, and disturbing them during DIY or unprotected removal releases fibers that cause mesothelioma and other serious diseases. A $50 to $200 asbestos test is the most important spending decision in the entire project. If your ceiling tests positive, professional asbestos abatement runs $5,000 to $15,000+ — and DIY removal becomes both illegal and dangerous. This guide breaks down what each removal scenario actually costs, when DIY makes sense, and how to handle the asbestos question without panicking.
Test before you remove anything
If your home was built before 1980, the popcorn ceiling almost certainly contains some level of asbestos unless it was already replaced. Federal regulations restricted asbestos use in ceiling textures starting in 1978, but existing supplies continued to be used into the early 1980s. Homes built between 1985 and present generally don’t contain asbestos in ceiling materials.
Before any removal work — DIY or professional — get the ceiling tested. The process:
- Sample collection: $0 to $50. Some testing labs send you a kit with instructions and pre-paid return shipping. Some require you to scrape a small sample yourself (with proper precautions — wet the area, wear an N95 mask, seal the sample in a plastic bag). Some testing companies send a technician to collect the sample, which costs more but eliminates the small risk of fiber release during sampling.
- Lab analysis: $30 to $150. A certified lab tests the sample using polarized light microscopy. Results typically come back within 3 to 7 business days. The lab reports whether asbestos is present and at what percentage.
- Total testing cost: $50 to $200. Some homeowners test multiple rooms separately, especially in homes where ceilings might have been redone at different times. Each sample tested costs $30 to $50.
The math is simple: $200 for testing protects you from $5,000 to $15,000 in abatement costs you weren’t expecting, and from health risks that don’t show up for decades. There is no scenario where skipping the test is the right call for a pre-1980 home.
If testing comes back negative for asbestos, you can proceed with DIY or professional removal at standard pricing. If testing comes back positive, you have three real options that we’ll cover below.
Five scenarios, five different price points

The scope of your project depends on size, complexity, and whether asbestos is involved.
Scenario 1: DIY removal, small room, asbestos-free — $200 to $600. A bedroom, bathroom, or small living space where the ceiling has tested negative for asbestos. Materials include plastic sheeting to protect floors and walls, a garden sprayer, scraping tools, drywall mud for repair, sandpaper, and primer/paint for refinishing. The work itself takes a weekend for a typical room. Most homeowners with basic DIY experience can handle this scenario successfully.
Scenario 2: Professional removal only, single room — $250 to $900. Professional contractor handles removal but you handle painting and final refinishing yourself. Includes plastic sheeting setup, water-spray scraping, basic drywall repair, and cleanup. A 250-square-foot ceiling at $1 to $3 per square foot lands in this range. Common for homeowners who want to skip the messy removal work but are comfortable painting.
Scenario 3: Professional removal + refinishing, average home — $1,500 to $3,500. Full-service removal across multiple rooms with refinishing to smooth, knockdown, or other modern texture, plus paint. The most common professional package and what most cost guides quote as their headline number. NerdWallet, Bob Vila, and HomeLight all converge on roughly this range as typical. Total project takes 3 to 7 days for a typical home.
Scenario 4: Asbestos abatement (if present) — $5,000 to $15,000+. Required by law in most jurisdictions when asbestos testing comes back positive. Includes containment setup (plastic barriers, negative air pressure), licensed abatement workers in protective equipment, regulated waste disposal, and post-abatement clearance testing. Pricing runs $50 to $150 per square foot of ceiling. A typical 1,500 sqft home with asbestos popcorn ceilings throughout would fall at the higher end. Refinishing after abatement is usually a separate cost.
Scenario 5: Cover-up with new drywall — $10 to $20 per square foot, $2,500 to $5,000+ typical. Installing a new layer of drywall over the existing popcorn ceiling. Avoids removal entirely. Common alternative to asbestos abatement because it encapsulates the asbestos rather than disturbing it. Adds slightly to ceiling height (loses ~½ inch) and slightly reduces room dimensions. The drywall layer needs taping, mudding, and finishing — same as new construction.
The right scenario for your situation depends on three questions: does your ceiling have asbestos, how much square footage is involved, and how much of the work do you want to do yourself.
What to do if asbestos is present

A positive asbestos test isn’t an emergency, but it changes your options significantly. Three real paths.
Path 1: Professional abatement, then standard refinishing — $7,000 to $20,000+ total
Hire a licensed asbestos abatement contractor to remove the popcorn ceiling material under proper containment. After abatement, the ceiling is bare drywall ready for refinishing. Then a separate drywall/paint contractor handles the new texture and paint. The most thorough option but the most expensive. Required if you want the popcorn ceiling fully removed and replaced with a smooth or modern textured finish.
Path 2: Encapsulation with new drywall — $2,500 to $7,500 total
Cover the existing popcorn ceiling with new drywall installed over the top. The asbestos remains undisturbed inside the assembly. EPA approved as a legal alternative to abatement. Significantly cheaper than abatement and produces a final result that looks identical to a new smooth or textured ceiling. Drawback: loses about ½ inch of ceiling height, which matters in homes with already-low ceilings (under 8 feet).
Path 3: Leave it alone — $0
Asbestos in popcorn ceiling material is generally considered safe when undisturbed. The fibers only become dangerous when released into the air through cutting, sanding, scraping, water damage, or impact. If your ceiling is in good condition and you’re not planning sale prep or major renovation, leaving the popcorn ceiling in place is a legitimate option. Many homeowners do this for years or permanently.
What you should not do: attempt DIY removal of asbestos popcorn ceiling. This is illegal in most jurisdictions, dangerous to anyone in the home during and after removal, and creates legal liability if you sell the home without disclosing improperly handled asbestos. The “I’ll just be careful” approach doesn’t work — proper abatement requires negative-pressure containment, certified workers in respirators, and regulated waste disposal that homeowners can’t replicate.
If you’re considering selling the home with original popcorn ceilings, disclose the situation honestly. Many buyers accept popcorn ceilings as part of an older home; some negotiate price reductions to cover removal; some walk away. Transparent disclosure protects you legally and lets buyers make informed decisions.
DIY: when it makes sense
Without asbestos, popcorn ceiling removal is one of the more DIY-friendly major home projects. The work is messy and labor-intensive but technically straightforward.
The basic process:
- Remove furniture from the room or cover thoroughly with plastic
- Cover floors and lower walls with plastic sheeting taped at edges
- Turn off power to ceiling fixtures and remove or cover them
- Wear safety glasses, dust mask (N95 minimum), and old clothing
- Use a garden sprayer to thoroughly wet a small section of ceiling
- Wait 15-20 minutes for the texture to absorb water
- Scrape gently with a wide drywall knife at a shallow angle
- Repeat in sections across the entire ceiling
- Allow to dry thoroughly (24-48 hours)
- Sand smooth, repair any damage with drywall mud, prime, and paint
Time and cost realistic estimates:
- 250 sqft room: $50-$150 in materials, 1-2 days of work
- 500 sqft (multiple rooms): $100-$300 in materials, 3-4 days spread across a weekend
- Whole-house typical (1,500 sqft of ceiling): $300-$600 materials, 1-2 weeks of work
The professional savings math: A 250 sqft room professionally removed and refinished costs $750-$1,500. The same room DIY costs $150 in materials. The savings is real ($600-$1,350 per room) but earned through hours of physical labor, ceiling-height ladder work, and sometimes-unpleasant cleanup.
What can go wrong with DIY:
- Damaging the underlying drywall when scraping aggressively
- Underestimating time required (rushing creates poor results)
- Discovering hidden problems mid-project (water damage, previous repairs, asbestos in homes you assumed were post-1980)
- Inadequate floor protection causing water and texture damage to flooring below
- Working at unsafe heights without proper ladder or scaffolding
DIY is reasonable for homeowners with: weekend availability, basic comfort with ladders and physical work, willingness to handle a messy multi-day project, and confirmation that asbestos isn’t present.
Refinishing options after removal
After the popcorn texture is gone, you have to decide what replaces it. Three common choices at different price points.
Smooth ceiling — $1.50 to $3 per sqft
Most modern look, requires the most skilled work. After removal, the ceiling is sanded smooth, primed, and painted with ceiling paint. Any imperfections show clearly under direct light, so this finish demands quality drywall work. Most popular for contemporary home aesthetics.
Knockdown texture — $1 to $2 per sqft
A subtle textured finish that’s standard in newer construction. Sprayed on as a wet mud, then “knocked down” with a flat blade to create a textured but flatter-than-popcorn surface. Hides minor imperfections. Most common modern replacement.
Orange peel texture — $1 to $2 per sqft
Even more subtle than knockdown — looks like the surface of an orange. Common in newer construction, especially in the Southwest and Southeast. Hides imperfections well.
Skim coat (smooth) — $1.50 to $4 per sqft
Applying a thin layer of drywall mud across the entire ceiling, then sanding smooth. The most labor-intensive smooth finish but produces the highest quality result.
For most homeowners, knockdown texture is the practical choice — modern appearance, hides imperfections, and runs at the lower end of refinishing cost. Smooth ceilings look more contemporary but require either premium drywall work or accepting visible imperfections.
When removal makes financial sense for resale
Popcorn ceilings are widely viewed as dated and undesirable, which can affect home value at sale time.
The honest math on resale value impact: Real estate professionals consistently note that popcorn ceilings reduce buyer interest and can shave 1-3% off home value, especially in higher-end markets where modern aesthetic matters most. For a $400,000 home, that’s $4,000-$12,000 in potential value loss. Removing popcorn ceilings before listing typically recovers 70-100% of the removal cost in higher sale price, plus often results in faster sales.
When removal makes financial sense for resale:
- Home is being prepared for sale within 1-2 years
- The home is in a market segment where buyers expect modern finishes
- The popcorn is asbestos-free (asbestos-positive homes have a different calculation)
- The cost of removal is less than the expected value increase
When removal doesn’t make financial sense for resale:
- You’re planning to live in the home for 10+ years
- You’re in a market where buyers don’t strongly differentiate on ceiling texture
- The asbestos abatement cost exceeds the resale value benefit
- You’re investing in other higher-ROI improvements first
For owner-occupied homes where you’re not planning to sell, removal is purely a quality-of-life decision. Some homeowners hate the look of popcorn ceilings; others don’t notice them. The financial argument for removal in long-term owner-occupied homes is weaker than for sale-prep situations.
Frequently asked questions
How long does popcorn ceiling removal take?
Professional removal of a single room takes 1 to 2 days. A typical whole-home professional removal with refinishing takes 3 to 7 days. DIY removal takes longer because of weekend-only schedules and learning curve — typically 1 to 3 weekends per room.
Can I live in the home during removal?
Yes for asbestos-free removal — the work is messy but not hazardous. Most homeowners can shut off the working room and continue normal use of other areas. Not for asbestos abatement — proper containment usually requires homeowners to vacate during the work and for 24-48 hours afterward until clearance testing confirms safety.
Do I need a permit for popcorn ceiling removal?
Generally no for asbestos-free DIY removal — most jurisdictions don’t permit cosmetic interior work. Yes typically for asbestos abatement — required by EPA and local regulations. Yes typically for major renovations that include ceiling work as part of larger scope. Check with local building department to confirm.
Will my homeowners insurance cover this?
Generally no for routine cosmetic removal. Yes potentially for asbestos abatement if the asbestos was discovered during a covered loss event (water damage exposing it, for example). Asbestos abatement is generally classified as maintenance, which insurance doesn’t cover.
How can I tell if my popcorn ceiling has asbestos?
You can’t, by visual inspection alone. The asbestos fibers are microscopic and look identical to non-asbestos ceiling textures. Testing is the only way to know definitively. Pre-1980 homes should be treated as suspicious until tested; post-1985 homes are generally asbestos-free; 1980-1985 homes are uncertain and should be tested.
What if I already started DIY removal and now suspect asbestos?
Stop immediately. Do not vacuum (standard vacuums spread fibers). Do not sweep dry. Do not run fans or HVAC that could spread fibers. Wet the disturbed material thoroughly to bind any released fibers, leave the room, close it off, and call a licensed asbestos professional for assessment and remediation. The remediation cost will be higher than if proper testing had been done first, but mishandled asbestos exposure isn’t something to gamble on.
Are there scenarios where leaving the popcorn ceiling is the best choice?
Yes. If the ceiling contains asbestos, is in good condition, and you’re not planning major renovation or near-term sale, leaving it alone is legally and practically acceptable. Some homeowners live in homes with original popcorn ceilings indefinitely without health issues because the material is encapsulated and not being disturbed.
Does popcorn ceiling removal disrupt my plumbing or electrical?
No, in most cases. The removal happens at ceiling surface level, below structural framing and electrical/plumbing runs. Light fixtures need to be removed before work and reinstalled after. Recessed lighting cans typically stay in place but get covered during work.
What if I find water damage or other issues during removal?
Common discovery during removal projects. Water stains, previous repairs, and structural issues sometimes hide under popcorn texture. Address these issues during refinishing rather than just covering them up — the cost of fixing them now is much lower than dealing with them later through finished ceilings.
How do I choose a popcorn ceiling removal contractor?
Look for: licensed and insured contractors with specific drywall and ceiling experience, positive recent reviews, transparent quotes that itemize removal vs. refinishing separately, written contracts specifying work scope and cleanup expectations, and references from completed projects you can verify. Avoid contractors who can’t or won’t test for asbestos in pre-1980 homes — that’s a serious red flag about their professional practices.





