200 IKEA Paint Colors

Every IKEA interior paint color — codes, hex values and cross-brand matches. Filter by color family or search by name, code or hex.

Browse 200 interior paint colours across 16 brands below — filter by brand, search by name, code or hex, and tap any swatch for full details and cross-brand matches.

Showing 121–180 of 200
IKEA121 #8896B3 · IKEA 121 IKEA122 #3A5170 · IKEA 122 IKEA123 #C5BEB1 · IKEA 123 IKEA124 #FFB953 · IKEA 124 IKEA125 #EAE3D3 · IKEA 125 IKEA126 #C6628C · IKEA 126 IKEA127 #D0D4D8 · IKEA 127 IKEA128 #4A72B0 · IKEA 128 IKEA129 #F7F3E6 · IKEA 129 IKEA130 #9B2C2C · IKEA 130 IKEA131 #E3ECDE · IKEA 131 IKEA132 #507A4F · IKEA 132 IKEA133 #C2ADAB · IKEA 133 IKEA134 #856A73 · IKEA 134 IKEA135 #DECDC3 · IKEA 135 IKEA136 #B99F90 · IKEA 136 IKEA137 #B4A18F · IKEA 137 IKEA138 #645850 · IKEA 138 IKEA139 #EBD9C3 · IKEA 139 IKEA140 #A58369 · IKEA 140 IKEA141 #E4DECC · IKEA 141 IKEA142 #C6B294 · IKEA 142 IKEA143 #D9C6AB · IKEA 143 IKEA144 #D9B27D · IKEA 144 IKEA145 #CFC7A2 · IKEA 145 IKEA146 #847763 · IKEA 146 IKEA147 #9D947B · IKEA 147 IKEA148 #676450 · IKEA 148 IKEA149 #CCD0BA · IKEA 149 IKEA150 #A7A58F · IKEA 150 IKEA151 #CCD7CA · IKEA 151 IKEA152 #494F50 · IKEA 152 IKEA153 #B1CBC9 · IKEA 153 IKEA154 #667480 · IKEA 154 IKEA155 #AAB1B8 · IKEA 155 IKEA156 #676973 · IKEA 156 IKEA157 #B7975E · IKEA 157 IKEA158 #7C9195 · IKEA 158 IKEA159 #DDCBCD · IKEA 159 IKEA160 #4D3E45 · IKEA 160 IKEA161 #EFE6C0 · IKEA 161 IKEA162 #7F6F63 · IKEA 162 IKEA163 #423A45 · IKEA 163 IKEA164 #ABB7B9 · IKEA 164 IKEA165 #91D0C5 · IKEA 165 IKEA166 #D1BAA5 · IKEA 166 IKEA167 #D7D2C5 · IKEA 167 IKEA168 #9E9893 · IKEA 168 IKEA169 #B7AE9D · IKEA 169 IKEA170 #827672 · IKEA 170 IKEA171 #E0D3BE · IKEA 171 IKEA172 #6C645D · IKEA 172 IKEA173 #D1C9B8 · IKEA 173 IKEA174 #AFA08C · IKEA 174 IKEA175 #DFD7C1 · IKEA 175 IKEA176 #9D978A · IKEA 176 IKEA177 #D7CFBA · IKEA 177 IKEA178 #69645D · IKEA 178 IKEA179 #B6BBAD · IKEA 179 IKEA180 #81857E · IKEA 180

A color's LRV (Light Reflectance Value) decides how light or heavy it feels on the wall. Browse from the brightest whites down to the darkest near-blacks.

Color temperature changes how a room feels and reads. Warm tones cozy up a space and counter cold light; cool tones calm it down and make small rooms feel larger.

Need a color for a specific space or look? These open the palette generator with curated Benjamin Moore combinations.

Choosing interior paint comes down to three things: light, LRV and undertone. The same color looks warmer in a south-facing room and cooler in a north-facing one, so always judge a paint in the actual space rather than from a chip in the store.

LRV (Light Reflectance Value, 0–100) tells you how light or heavy a color will feel — high-LRV whites and neutrals brighten dim rooms, low-LRV colors add depth and drama. Every color page in this catalogue shows its exact LRV and undertone.

Undertones are the hidden hues beneath the surface — a gray that leans blue, a white that leans cream. They decide whether a color harmonizes with your floors, counters and trim, so check them and test two or three samples on the wall in both daylight and night light.

Four schemes that make a palette work. Use them to pair a wall color with trim, accents and furnishings.

Complementary

Opposite hues on the color wheel (blue + orange). High contrast and energy — use one as the dominant color and the other as a small accent.

Analogous

Three neighbors on the wheel (blue, blue-green, green). Calm and harmonious — the easiest scheme to get right in a home.

Monochromatic

One hue in several values and tints (pale to deep blue). Serene and sophisticated, with depth coming from light and shadow.

Triadic

Three evenly spaced hues. Vibrant and balanced — keep one dominant and the other two as accents to avoid chaos.

The same color in a different finish behaves differently. Match the sheen to the surface and traffic.

Flat / Matte
Ceilings and low-traffic adult bedrooms. Hides wall flaws best, but is the hardest to clean.
Eggshell
The all-rounder for living rooms, dining rooms and bedrooms — soft low sheen with decent washability.
Satin
Hallways, kids' rooms and family spaces that need a wipeable, slightly more durable finish.
Semi-Gloss
Trim, doors, cabinets, kitchens and bathrooms — moisture-resistant and easy to scrub.
High-Gloss
Statement doors, furniture and accent trim. Most durable and reflective, but shows every imperfection.
Built by DSGN.HOUSE Updated 2026

Our color tools run on our own catalogue of 26,000+ real paint colors across 16 brands — Benjamin Moore, Sherwin-Williams, Behr, Dulux, RAL and more — with the color math (HSL and CIELAB matching) computed in-house, not scraped from summaries. Every color you pick maps to a real, buyable paint with its code, so what you see here you can actually take to the store. We review and update these tools and their data regularly.

Created by Denis Kataev, founder of DSGN.HOUSE — a software engineer and digital entrepreneur building professional color-design tools for everyone.

How do I choose the right paint color for a room?

Start with the room's light and purpose: north-facing rooms suit warmer tones, south-facing rooms can take cooler ones. Pick a family, then narrow by LRV and undertone. Always test 2–3 samples on the actual wall in daylight and at night before committing.

What is LRV and why does it matter?

LRV (Light Reflectance Value) measures how much light a color reflects, from 0 (black) to 100 (white). High-LRV colors brighten dim rooms, low-LRV colors add drama and depth. Every color page here shows its LRV.

How do undertones affect a paint color?

Undertones are the subtle hues beneath the main color — a gray can lean blue, green or purple. They're what makes a color clash or harmonize with floors, counters and fixtures, so check undertones before buying.

How many paint samples should I test?

Test two to three finalists at once. Paint large swatches on more than one wall and look at them in morning, afternoon and evening light — color shifts dramatically with light, so never decide from the chip alone.

What paint sheen should I use in each room?

Use flat or matte on ceilings and low-traffic walls, eggshell or satin in living rooms and bedrooms, and semi-gloss on trim, doors, kitchens and bathrooms where you need washability.

Can I match a paint color to another brand?

Yes — every color page here shows the closest match in all 16 brands (Benjamin Moore, Sherwin-Williams, Behr, Valspar, Dulux and more) with each brand's code and a ΔE closeness value, so you can buy the same shade wherever you shop.