Owner-Builder Knowledge Series · San Diego

When Does a Garage Ceiling or Wall Need 5/8-Inch Type X Drywall?

Not every garage needs Type X drywall. But when habitable space is above or adjacent, the board type, thickness, and finish requirements change significantly. Here’s how to read the code requirement for your specific garage configuration — and what it means for your project scope.

✔ CRC R302.6 Reference ✔ ADU & Garage Conversion Experience ✔ San Diego County Licensed
The Short Answer

Under California Residential Code R302.6: if a garage wall is adjacent to a habitable room, the garage side needs a minimum of 1/2” Type X gypsum. If habitable space is directly above the garage, the ceiling needs 5/8” Type X — and in most ADU-over-garage configurations, a full 1-hour rated assembly. The board must also be properly fastened and have finished joints to fulfill the fire-separation requirement.

Quick Reference: What Does Your Garage Need?

Four common garage configurations and their minimum drywall requirements under CRC R302.6. This is a simplified guide — verify against your approved plans and confirm with San Diego County building services for your specific project.

Garage Configuration
Minimum Drywall Requirement
Stand-alone detached garage, no habitable space above or adjacent
No fire-separation requirement under CRC R302.6 — check local jurisdiction and permit scope
Garage wall shared with habitable room (attached garage, house wall)
1/2” Type X gypsum board on the garage side of the wall (CRC R302.6)
Garage ceiling with bedroom, living room, or habitable space directly above
5/8” Type X gypsum board on the garage ceiling (CRC R302.6) — often requires 1-hour rated assembly
ADU directly above the garage (new construction or conversion)
Full 1-hour rated ceiling assembly per GA-600 or UL-listed system, fire-rated door, finished joints required

Garage Wall Adjacent to Habitable Space

When a garage shares a wall with any habitable room — a bedroom, living room, hallway, or any conditioned space in the house — CRC R302.6 requires the garage side of that wall to have a minimum of 1/2” Type X gypsum board. This is the fire-separation requirement between the vehicle storage area and the living space.

  • Minimum board: 1/2” Type X gypsum (not standard 1/2” drywall — Type X has a different core formulation and is marked on the back of every sheet)
  • Door between garage and house: minimum 20-minute fire-rated door, solid wood 1-3/8” minimum, or solid or honeycomb steel — CRC R302.5.1
  • No opening between garage and sleeping rooms — there is no path through which garage air (exhaust, CO, vapors) can enter sleeping areas
  • Joints must be finished: tape and at minimum two coats of joint compound complete the fire-separation function of the assembly

The requirement is for the garage side of the wall. The house-side face is standard drywall as part of the living space finish. Both faces together form the separation assembly.

Garage Ceiling With Habitable Space Above

When any habitable room — bedroom, office, living room, or ADU unit — is directly above a garage, the garage ceiling becomes a fire-separation assembly. CRC R302.6 requires:

  • Minimum 5/8” Type X gypsum board on the garage ceiling, applied as a continuous membrane with no gaps or unprotected openings
  • Any penetrations through the ceiling (pipes, wires, HVAC ducts, recessed lights) require UL-listed firestops rated for that specific penetration type — standard canned lights are not permitted without fire-rated housings
  • For ADU-over-garage configurations: most plans will call for a complete 1-hour rated ceiling assembly per GA-600 or an equivalent UL-listed system — this specifies framing, board type, layers, fastener schedule, and joint treatment together
  • Finished joints are required: the ceiling must be taped and coated, not just hung

⚠ Why Finished Joints Matter on Garage Drywall

The most common shortcut on garage separation work: the drywall gets hung and the joints are left bare. The thinking is that no one sees the garage ceiling or the inside of the garage wall, so finish work isn’t worth the cost. Under California code, this reasoning is incorrect.

The fire-separation assembly was tested with finished joints — tape bedded in joint compound fills the gap at the seam and contributes to the thermal barrier. Bare, open joints leave a path for hot gases. The requirement to tape and finish is part of the code-required assembly function, not a cosmetic upgrade. If your drywaller bids “hang only” on a garage separation, the job is not code-compliant as bid.

How a Garage-to-ADU Conversion Changes the Drywall Scope

Converting a garage to habitable ADU space involves a significant change in what the drywall installation needs to accomplish. A simple fire-separation project becomes a full interior installation with multiple performance requirements running simultaneously.

Standard Garage Separation

1/2” Type X on garage-side wall
Fire-separation function only
Tape and finish required
One face of shared wall
Minimal insulation requirements

ADU Conversion — Full Scope

1-hour rated ceiling assembly above
Fire + thermal + sound requirements
Title 24 insulation compliance
Water-resistant backer in bathroom
Backing for fixtures, full finish

The scope shift matters for budgeting and scheduling. A garage-to-ADU conversion is not a “garage drywall” project — it is a full residential interior with fire-rated components. Material type, labor hours, and finishing requirements are all different from a standard garage separation job.

5 Garage Drywall Mistakes That Come Up at San Diego Inspections

Using standard 5/8” drywall instead of 5/8” Type X

Standard and Type X are not the same board. Type X contains glass fibers and other additives in the core that improve fire resistance. The markings are different. Inspectors check the board edge markings at final — installing the wrong board means the assembly has to be torn out and replaced.

Using 1/2” Type X where 5/8” Type X is required

For garage-to-habitable-space ceiling separations — especially in ADU-over-garage configurations — the ceiling typically requires 5/8” Type X, not 1/2”. Using 1/2” on a ceiling where 5/8” is specified in the rated assembly means the assembly does not meet the code requirement, regardless of how it is installed.

Leaving joints unfinished on the garage-side face

Tape and finish is required for fire-rated assemblies — it is not optional cosmetic work on garage separation walls and ceilings. Unfinished joints are an incomplete installation, and the assembly does not perform as rated without them.

Installing standard recessed lights in a Type X ceiling

Cutting a standard recessed light housing into a fire-rated garage ceiling creates an unprotected opening in the assembly. UL-listed fire-rated housings are required, or the ceiling design must provide a rated membrane above the light location. This is a frequent conflict between lighting plans and fire-separation requirements on ADU projects.

Treating an ADU conversion as a simple fire-separation job

A garage-to-ADU project has fundamentally different drywall requirements than a standard garage separation. The scope includes fire-rated assemblies, Title 24 thermal compliance, potentially sound control, water-resistant backer in wet areas, and full finish on all surfaces. Bids and schedules that treat it as a simple garage job will run short on material, labor, and time.

Garage Separation or ADU Conversion in San Diego?

SGP Drywall installs Type X fire-separation assemblies and full ADU interiors across San Diego County. We know the difference between a garage separation and a conversion scope — and we bid, material, and schedule them accordingly.

Related Resources

Scroll to Top