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Commercial Drywall Finish Levels (L0-L5) in Columbus: Spec Guide for Property Managers and GCs

A spec guide for property managers and general contractors on Gypsum Association GA-214 drywall finish levels (L0 to L5) for commercial buildings in Columbus. Where each level belongs, what it costs, and how to spot Level 3 work billed as Level 4.

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Quick answer: Drywall finish levels (L0 to L5) define how smooth a wall is before paint. Per Gypsum Association GA-214: L4 is the standard for flat/eggshell, L5 is required for semi-gloss, gloss, and critical lighting. Commercial spec: warehouses L1/L2, back-of-house L2, offices L4, retail brand-standard L4 or L5, healthcare/hospitality L5. Mismatched levels are the #1 source of paint failures and callbacks on commercial projects.

In this guide

Updated June 2026. Built from real PaintWerks commercial drywall and paint projects across Central Ohio. Reviewing a drywall spec for a property or tenant buildout? Schedule a free walkthrough or call 614-582-4227.

What GA-214 Actually Says

Gypsum Association document GA-214 defines six levels of gypsum board finish (L0 through L5). The standard is the reference every reputable spec and architect calls out. L0 means no finishing. L1 means tape coat only. L5 means a full skim coat over the entire surface. The middle levels (L2 to L4) progressively add coats of compound and sanding. The Gypsum Association maintains the document at gypsum.org.

The level you spec determines what coat of paint can be applied without revealing every joint. Get the level wrong and you are buying paint that shows every imperfection within a year. Get it right and the finish holds for the life of the building.

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The Six Finish Levels (L0–L5)

Each level adds coats of joint compound and sanding. The higher the level, the smoother the wall — and the more labor in the spec.

L0 — No Finishing

Drywall hung, fasteners visible, no tape, no compound. Used for temporary construction, demolition prep, or when a different cladding is going over the gypsum (tile backer, stone veneer). Never a finished surface. Never gets paint.

L1 — Tape Embedded in Joints

Joint tape set in compound at all flat and inside-angle joints. No additional coats. Used for plenum spaces above ACT ceilings, mechanical rooms, service corridors above ceilings, and warehouse rack areas that will not be painted or viewed at close range. Excess compound is acceptable on the surface. Where it belongs: behind-the-scenes commercial spaces, smoke-rated wall assemblies, sub-ceiling plenums.

L2 — One Coat Over Tape

Tape embedded, then one additional thin coat of compound over the tape and over all fastener heads. Joint compound can show tool marks and ridges. Substrate for ceramic tile, where the tile is the finish surface. Also used in warehouses, garages, mechanical spaces, and back-of-house areas that will get a roller-grade flat paint and be viewed at distance. Where it belongs: tile substrate, warehouses, BOH service areas, mechanical and storage rooms.

L3 — Two Coats Over Tape

Tape plus two additional coats of compound. Joints sanded between coats. Tool marks should not be visible. The surface accepts heavy texture finishes (orange peel, knockdown, popcorn) but is not smooth enough for flat or eggshell paint at standard wall-mounted lighting. Where it belongs: textured commercial walls, painted concrete-block surrounds, multi-family hallways with heavy texture. Rare in modern Class A commercial work.

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L4 — Three Coats, Sanded

Tape plus three coats of compound, sanded smooth between coats. The baseline standard for most painted commercial work. Acceptable substrate for flat and eggshell finishes in offices, retail back-of-house, classrooms, and standard tenant improvement scopes. Not recommended for semi-gloss, gloss, or any critical-lighting condition. Where it belongs: Class B offices, K-12 classrooms, standard retail, multi-family common areas, hospitality back-of-house, medical exam rooms with flat or eggshell spec.

L5 — Full Skim Coat (Critical Lighting)

L4 plus a thin skim coat of compound applied to the entire surface, sanded smooth. Eliminates the difference in suction between the joint compound (porous) and the bare paper face of the gypsum (less porous), which is what causes joint banding to telegraph through under critical lighting and gloss finishes. Required spec for semi-gloss and gloss paints, walls under raking light from windows or wall-washing fixtures, brand-standard retail showrooms, executive offices, healthcare patient rooms with antimicrobial spec, hospitality lobbies, museums, and any wall where the owner expects perfection at 24 inches. Roughly 20 to 35% more labor than L4.

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"Level 4 looks fine in the showroom and fails the first day a window pulls raking light across the wall. Critical lighting is the test, not the bid."

Where Each Level Belongs in Commercial Buildings

Sector-by-sector spec guidance. The level in bold is what we typically see specced in Columbus right now. Lower levels appear in back-of-house and service areas.

Building TypePrimary AreasBOH / Service
Class A officeL4 to L5 (lobbies and exec suites L5)L2 (server rooms, IT closets)
Class B office / coworkingL4L2 (BOH service corridors)
Medical / dental / outpatientL4 to L5 (patient rooms L5, exam L4)L2 (mechanical, soiled utility)
Retail brand-standard (anchor)L5 (per brand spec)L2 (stockroom, BOH)
Retail tenant in-lineL4 (L5 for high-end)L2 (BOH stockroom)
Restaurant / hospitality FOHL5 (lobbies, dining, public)L2 (kitchen, prep, mech)
Senior living / assisted livingL4 to L5 (common areas L5, units L4)L2 (mech, soiled utility)
Education K-12 / daycareL4L2 (custodial, mech)
Multi-family apartmentsL4 (units), L5 common areasL2 (mech, trash chute rooms)
Warehouse / industrialL1 to L2 (drywall sections), CMU elsewhereL0 (above ACT plenum)

2026 Commercial Drywall Finish Cost in Columbus

Fully-loaded drywall finish ranges per square foot of drywall surface (not floor area). These are 2026 Central Ohio numbers and include hang, tape, mud coats, sanding, and final dust-off. Block filler on CMU and DTM on metal are separate (see our commercial painting cost guide).

Finish LevelTypical 2026 RangeTop Cost Driver
L1 (tape only)$0.65 to $1.10 / sfVolume and access
L2 (one coat over tape)$1.10 to $1.65 / sfJoint count + corner work
L3 (two coats)$1.45 to $2.10 / sfTexture coordination
L4 (three coats sanded)$1.85 to $2.85 / sfSanding labor + dust control
L5 (full skim coat)$2.35 to $3.95 / sfFull skim labor + Level 5 verify

Add 15 to 30 percent for after-hours, weekends, or occupied-building phasing. Add 20 to 40 percent for vaulted or high-ceiling work requiring lifts.

How to Verify the Level You Are Getting

The biggest source of paint failures on commercial projects is Level 3 work billed as Level 4 or Level 4 work passed off as Level 5. Three field tests any property manager or GC can run before final coats go on:

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The 4 Most Common Drywall Finish Scams

How a bidder shaves 15 to 30 percent off the drywall line item and what it actually costs you after move-in:

Cross-check any drywall contractor on the Ohio eLicense lookup and ask for project references on similar building types. As a licensed Ohio general contractor, PaintWerks handles drywall, framing, and paint under one contract so the hand-off between trades stops being a buck-passing exercise when something looks wrong.

Frequently Asked Questions

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L4 for standard tenant areas with flat or eggshell paint. L5 for executive suites, lobbies, conference rooms, and any wall where the spec calls for semi-gloss or gloss paint or where raking light is a factor (south or west exterior walls with floor-to-ceiling windows, wall-washing fixtures, etc.).

No. L4 is the GA-214 standard for flat and eggshell paints. L5 is required for semi-gloss, gloss, and critical lighting conditions. If your spec is flat or eggshell in normal indirect lighting, L4 is the right answer and L5 is an unnecessary cost.

Roughly 20 to 35 percent more per square foot of drywall surface. In Columbus 2026 ranges: L4 runs $1.85 to $2.85 per sf, L5 runs $2.35 to $3.95 per sf. The premium pays back in saved repaints and avoided callbacks under critical lighting.

Yes, and most do. A typical Class A office spec calls L5 in the lobby and exec suite, L4 across the open office and conference rooms, L2 in the back-of-house service corridor, and L1 in the plenum above ACT ceilings. Mixing levels by area is normal and lowers total drywall cost without compromising the visible finish.

Under normal indirect lighting, almost none. Under raking light (window at 8am, wall-wash fixture, gloss-painted wall), L4 shows minor joint banding where the seams run. L5 shows nothing. The test is to walk the wall under the lighting the room will actually have in operation, not the construction lighting.

Yes. Most premium paint manufacturers (Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, PPG) explicitly require L5 substrate for semi-gloss or gloss paint warranty. Applying premium gloss paint over L4 voids the warranty even if the failure is visible joint banding.

The drywall contractor is responsible for delivering the specified level. The painter is responsible for confirming the substrate matches the paint spec before applying primer. On a one-contract job (general contractor or design-build) the GC owns the coordination. Multi-contract jobs are where finger-pointing starts — which is why we recommend a signed substrate sign-off between trades before paint starts.

The Gypsum Association maintains GA-214 at gypsum.org. USG (a major drywall manufacturer) also publishes a public reference on the levels. Most architects cite GA-214 in their wall sections — ask for the spec section that calls it out.

Get a Drywall Spec Walkthrough for Your Project

Reviewing a tenant improvement spec, healthcare buildout, or property-wide repaint? We will walk the spec with your architect or project manager, flag the right level for each area, and tell you where the spec is leaving money on the table or where it is under-spec for the paint system. Forty-five minutes onsite. Educational walkthrough, not a sales pitch.

See our full commercial drywall and framing services or schedule below.

Justin Lee is a Licensed Ohio General Contractor and the owner of PaintWerks, a Lewis Center based contractor specializing in commercial painting, drywall, and remodeling across Central Ohio since 2016.

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Justin Lee

PaintWerks Owner · Licensed Ohio General Contractor

Justin Lee is the owner of PaintWerks, a Lewis Center based Licensed Ohio General Contractor serving Central Ohio since 2016. PaintWerks handles residential and commercial painting, drywall, framing, tile, flooring, and full GC work across the Columbus metro.