By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Drywall & Plastering Intake Forms: What Contractors Need to Capture at Project Intake

A drywall job that gets priced wrong loses money before the first sheet is hung. The homeowner says "a few rooms in the basement." Your crew arrives and finds a 1,200-square-foot unfinished space with nine-foot ceilings, fourteen inside corners, six bulkheads around ductwork, and existing framing that bows two inches over a sixteen-foot span. The estimate you gave over the phone is now meaningless. The materials list is wrong. The timeline does not work. And the client is standing there expecting you to start today.

Drywall is one of the most measurement-dependent trades in construction. Every variable — ceiling height, number of corners, finish level, texture type, board thickness — changes the labor estimate, the materials order, and the final price. A proper drywall intake form captures all of this before your crew loads the truck, not after they are standing in the room doing math on their phone. Here is what that form needs to include.

Service type: what kind of drywall work is this?

Drywall contracting is not one service — it is at least seven, and each has fundamentally different scope, pricing, and material requirements. Your intake form should present clear categories so there is no ambiguity about what the client is requesting:

Project details: the numbers that drive your estimate

Every drywall estimate lives or dies on accurate measurements. These are not details you can approximate — being off by a foot on ceiling height across ten rooms changes your board count, your scaffolding needs, and your labor hours. Your intake form should capture:

Materials: board type, thickness, and finishing products

Material selection in drywall is not cosmetic — it is driven by building code, moisture conditions, fire ratings, and the specific environment where the board is being installed. Your intake form should capture the requirements so your materials order is right the first time:

Drywall type. Standard white board is the default, but it is not appropriate everywhere. Moisture-resistant green board is required in high-humidity areas like laundry rooms. Mold-resistant purple board goes in bathrooms and basements where moisture exposure is persistent. Fire-rated Type X is code-required in garages, furnace rooms, and certain wall assemblies. Type C provides enhanced fire rating for commercial applications. Cement board (not technically drywall, but often part of the same scope) is required behind tile in showers and tub surrounds. Your intake needs to identify which rooms require which board type — and if the client does not know, your form should prompt the question so you can assess it during the site visit.

Thickness. Standard residential walls use 1/2-inch board. Ceilings typically require 5/8-inch to resist sag, especially on 24-inch joist spacing. Fire-rated assemblies require 5/8-inch Type X. Quarter-inch board is used for curved surfaces and overlays on existing walls. Three-eighths-inch is occasionally used for repairs and overlay work. Getting thickness wrong means either a return trip to the supplier or, worse, a failed inspection.

Sheet size. Standard 4-by-8 sheets work for most residential applications. Four-by-12 sheets reduce the number of butt joints on long walls and ceilings but require more crew members to handle and are harder to transport through finished spaces. Your intake should note access constraints — tight hallways, narrow staircases, small doorways — that may limit sheet size.

Corner bead. Paper-faced corner bead is the industry standard for most residential work. Metal bead is more durable but can dent and telegraph through paint. Vinyl bead resists moisture and impact. Bullnose bead creates a rounded edge instead of a sharp 90-degree corner — common in southwestern and contemporary design. The client's aesthetic preference and the room's function both factor into this selection.

Compound type. All-purpose compound works for most residential finishing. Lightweight compound is easier to sand and generates less dust. Setting-type compound (hot mud) sets chemically rather than by drying, which allows faster recoat times but requires more skill to work with. For high-end Level 5 finishes, your compound selection affects the final surface quality significantly.

Tape. Paper tape is the standard for most joints and inside corners. Mesh tape is faster to apply and works well with setting-type compound, but it is less effective on inside corners and does not perform as well under stress. Your finishing crew's preference and the joint type should determine the selection.

Finish level: the specification most clients do not understand

The drywall finish level system — Level 0 through Level 5 — is an industry standard that most homeowners have never heard of. Yet it is the single biggest driver of labor cost in the finishing phase. Your intake form needs to both educate the client and capture the appropriate specification:

The most important thing your intake form can do in this section is capture the gap between what the client expects and what the space actually needs. A homeowner who wants Level 4 walls in a basement that will receive knockdown texture is paying for finishing labor they do not need. A client who wants semi-gloss paint in a hallway with south-facing windows but does not want to pay for Level 5 is going to see every joint line the day the paint dries. Once the drywall is finished, painting is usually the next trade through the door — our painting intake guide covers the surface condition, prep work, and color specification fields that pick up where drywall leaves off.

Texture: the finish that defines the look

Texture selection is partly aesthetic and partly practical — and for repair work, it is entirely about matching what already exists. Your intake should capture:

Demolition and prep: what is coming down before new board goes up

Many drywall jobs begin with removing existing material. The scope of demolition and prep work dramatically affects your labor estimate, your disposal costs, and your timeline:

The demolition and prep scope for drywall work overlaps significantly with what general remodeling contractors need to document. The difference is that a remodeling contractor captures demolition as one line item among many trades, while a drywall intake needs to capture it in detail because it directly determines your hanging schedule and material staging plan.

Pricing: the structure that prevents disputes

Drywall pricing varies more than most clients expect because it depends on so many variables. Your intake form should establish the pricing model clearly:

Asbestos: the question you cannot skip on older homes

Asbestos in drywall-related materials is a genuine health and legal liability. Your intake form must address it for any home built before 1990:

Popcorn ceilings applied before 1990 frequently contain chrysotile asbestos. Federal law does not universally require testing before removal, but many state and local regulations do — and even where testing is not legally mandated, disturbing asbestos-containing material without proper containment exposes your crew, your client, and your business to serious harm and serious liability. Your intake should ask for the approximate year the popcorn was applied and note whether testing has been completed.

Joint compound manufactured before 1978 may contain asbestos. If your scope involves sanding or removing old joint compound — common in renovation and repair work on homes from this era — testing should be part of the intake conversation.

If testing comes back positive, the work requires a licensed asbestos abatement contractor. This is not a drywall scope item. Your intake form should clearly state that positive asbestos results require abatement by a separately licensed contractor before drywall work can proceed, and that abatement costs are not included in the drywall estimate.

Documenting the asbestos conversation at intake — even when the answer is "not applicable" or "testing already completed, results negative" — creates a record that protects your business if questions arise later.

Building your estimate from a complete intake

A drywall estimate built from a thorough intake form is defensible, accurate, and professional. When you can show a client that the price reflects their specific ceiling heights, their specific finish level, their specific texture, and their specific demolition scope — not a rough guess based on square footage alone — you are demonstrating the kind of trade expertise that wins jobs against competitors who quote over the phone without seeing the space.

The intake also protects you from scope creep. When the client says "can you also do that closet" after work has started, you can point to the intake form that lists exactly which rooms were included in the estimate. That is not a confrontation — it is a change order, priced from the same per-square-foot structure that the client already agreed to.

For contractors who work across related trades, the documentation principles here parallel what painting contractors and home remodeling contractors need at intake. The overlap is natural — drywall, paint, and remodeling are sequential phases of the same project. The difference is in the technical specifics: finish levels, texture matching, and board specifications are unique to the drywall trade and require their own dedicated fields.

If you are building documentation across a multi-trade operation, the Trade Services Bundle includes drywall and plastering alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.

Drywall & plastering intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Service type, project measurements, finish level, texture, materials, demolition scope, asbestos documentation, and pricing structure. Built for drywall contractors.

View Drywall & Plastering Forms