CP

Benjamin Moore red paint colors

156 red paint colors from the Classics + OC + HC + CC deck. LRV ranges from 25 (lightest) down to 0 (darkest). Click any swatch to see how it cross-matches at the 10 other US paint brands.

Red is divisive as a wall color, which is exactly why it works so well in the right room — a dining room, a powder room, or a single accent on cabinetry. The family splits into three practical groups: bright reds (crimson, vermilion), deep wine-toned burgundies, and brick reds that lean warmer and earthier.

All 156 red paint colors from Benjamin Moore

Grouped by undertone (warm → cool)
2077-30 · #BC427F · LRV 18
2076-30 · #B4447B · LRV 17
1364 · #924E6A · LRV 14
1356 · #9E5774 · LRV 17
2077-20 · #AB3162 · LRV 12
2075-10 · #663347 · LRV 7
2076-20 · #A0365F · LRV 12
1357 · #7D485A · LRV 10
2083-30 · #974C64 · LRV 14
1349 · #B24668 · LRV 15
2077-10 · #9C284B · LRV 9
2076-10 · #8D2D48 · LRV 8
CW-355 · #734450 · LRV 10
2079-20 · #B83153 · LRV 13
1350 · #AF405B · LRV 14
2078-20 · #AC3D58 · LRV 14
1351 · #9D3C53 · LRV 11
CC-32 · #693541 · LRV 6
CSP-1200 · #9F233D · LRV 11
2083-20 · #833F4D · LRV 9
1343 · #AD364E · LRV 12
1344 · #963F50 · LRV 11
2078-10 · #9D3448 · LRV 10
2080-30 · #AD485B · LRV 16
CSP-435 · #83434F · LRV 11
2079-10 · #AA253C · LRV 11
2085-30 · #A64E5D · LRV 16
2086-20 · #C0324A · LRV 14
1337 · #B04253 · LRV 15
2082-30 · #8C5059 · LRV 13
CW-350 · #8C5059 · LRV 13
1329 · #BB4254 · LRV 15
CW-345 · #9F4552 · LRV 14
2081-30 · #BE5A67 · LRV 19
1330 · #A5414D · LRV 12
2083-10 · #73383F · LRV 7
CC-66 · #9C2E3B · LRV 11
2084-30 · #B2525D · LRV 16
CSP-1195 · #A02432 · LRV 11
2087-30 · #D35361 · LRV 21
2081-20 · #AE4853 · LRV 15
2000-30 · #E04C5B · LRV 22
2080-20 · #9E3B45 · LRV 12
2001-30 · #E14B5A · LRV 22
2086-10 · #B32735 · LRV 12
1336 · #BC4550 · LRV 16
1266 · #85595D · LRV 13
2004-30 · #CA4F5A · LRV 19
2081-10 · #A14048 · LRV 12
CC-68 · #A63841 · LRV 13
2003-30 · #D44C57 · LRV 20
1313 · #D85C66 · LRV 23
1316 · #A54048 · LRV 12
AF-295 · #8B383E · LRV 9
HC-61 · #754B4E · LRV 10
2085-20 · #853F44 · LRV 9
HC-181 · #990A14 · LRV 10
PM-18 · #990A14 · LRV 8
2087-20 · #C53D46 · LRV 16
1315 · #BD3A42 · LRV 14

Hex values are display approximations from Benjamin Moore's published swatch tools — not guaranteed to match a physical sample under controlled lighting. Order a brand-direct sample before specifying.

Benjamin Moore red paint colors by room

4 rooms

Rooms where red paint commonly works. Each link jumps to that room's curated picks across every brand — Benjamin Moore included — so you can compare Benjamin Moore red paint colors alongside the alternatives in context.

Other Benjamin Moore color families

Red paint colors at other US brands

About Benjamin Moore red paint colors

The Character of Benjamin Moore's Reds

Benjamin Moore is the brand designers reach for when undertone matters, and that strength carries straight into the red family. Across these 156 reds you get warm, true reds like Neon Red (2087-10), berry-leaning tones like Holly Berry (1321), and earthy, browned-out reds like Burnt Russet (042) and Harvest Brown (2104-30). The colors read clean and predictable, which is the whole reason this deck is trusted on real walls.

Reds are the trickiest family to get right because they shift hard under different light. Benjamin Moore's reputation for nuanced, dependable undertones is exactly what helps here, so a red that looked good on the chip is far more likely to look good on your wall.

How to Choose by LRV

LRV (Light Reflectance Value) tells you how light or dark a color is, on a scale where higher reflects more light. This red slice runs from 0 at the darkest to 25 at the lightest, so even the brightest red here is still fairly deep. That is normal for reds, and it means none of these will read as a soft, airy color.

Use LRV to set the mood. Badlands (1293) at LRV 25 is the most open and forgiving of the group, while Harvest Brown (2104-30) at LRV 9.7 and the deepest reds near 0 will feel rich and enveloping. Red Parrot (1308) at 15.4 and Old Claret (2083-30) at 14 sit in the middle, with real punch but less weight than the darkest tones.

Best Rooms and Uses

Deep reds shine where you want warmth and drama rather than brightness. Dining rooms, libraries, studies, and front doors are classic homes for a color like Neon Red (2087-10) or Old Claret (2083-30), and the browned reds like Burnt Russet (042) work well in cozy, low-light spaces. An accent wall is the safest way to use the darkest tones if a full room feels like too much.

For smaller hits of color, the lighter end is your friend. Badlands (1293) or Tawny Day Lily (2012-10) can carry a powder room, an entry, or a built-in without closing the space down the way a near-black red would.

Pairing With Trim, Ceiling, and Coordinating Colors

Reds love a crisp, clean white to frame them, and Benjamin Moore's off-whites are the brand's calling card. Chantilly Lace (OC-65) gives the sharpest contrast on trim and ceilings, while White Dove (OC-17) or Simply White (OC-117) keep things a touch softer and warmer next to a red wall. Their OC (Off-White) line is built for exactly this job.

For a deeper, layered look, pair a red with a moody coordinating color rather than another bright. Hale Navy (HC-154) is a reliable partner for a warm red, and a greige like Revere Pewter (HC-172) calms the room and lets the red be the star.

How These Colors Are Sold and Matched to Other Brands

Benjamin Moore is sold only through independent dealers, not big-box stores, and every color is mixed to order at the counter. The lines run good to best: ben (around $56 a gallon), Regal Select (around $75), and Aura (around $95), the flagship one-coat paint that holds deep reds especially well since reds can be hard to cover. The codes are worth knowing: OC is Off-White, HC is the Historical Collection, AF is Affinity, and CC and the four-digit numbers are part of the broader Color Preview deck.

If you already love a red from another brand, any Benjamin Moore dealer can color-match it into a BM base, and the reverse works too. You can also cross-match these reds to the featured Kompozit deck or other US brands, though a true match should always be confirmed with a drawdown sample rather than trusting a screen, because red is the family most likely to shift between formulas.

Benjamin Moore red paint — frequently asked questions

What is the lightest red Benjamin Moore makes in this family?+

In this slice, Badlands (1293) is the lightest at an LRV of 25. It is the most open and forgiving red here, which makes it a good pick for smaller rooms or spaces with limited light. Everything else in the family reads deeper than this.

Are these reds too dark for a whole room?+

The darkest reds, near an LRV of 0 and including Harvest Brown (2104-30) at 9.7, will feel rich and enveloping on every wall. They work beautifully in dining rooms, studies, and libraries, but if that feels like too much, use them on a single accent wall instead. Lighter picks like Badlands (1293) are easier to spread across a full room.

What white trim goes best with a Benjamin Moore red?+

Chantilly Lace (OC-65) gives the cleanest, sharpest contrast against a red wall. If you want something a little softer and warmer, White Dove (OC-17) or Simply White (OC-117) are reliable choices. All three come from Benjamin Moore's well-regarded off-white line.

Where can I buy these colors?+

Benjamin Moore is sold only through independent Benjamin Moore dealers, not big-box stores. Every color, including all of these reds, is mixed to order at the counter. You can choose among ben, Regal Select, and the flagship Aura depending on your budget and how much coverage you want.

Can I match a red from another brand to Benjamin Moore?+

Yes. Any Benjamin Moore dealer can color-match a red from another US brand, including the Kompozit deck, into a BM base, and they can match a BM red the other way too. Because red shifts more than most colors between formulas, always confirm the match with a small drawdown or sample before committing to gallons.

What do the codes like OC and HC mean?+

OC stands for Off-White, HC is the Historical Collection, and AF is the Affinity collection. The CC labels and four-digit numbers like Red Parrot (1308) come from Benjamin Moore's larger Color Preview deck. The codes just tell you which collection a color lives in; they do not change how the paint is mixed.

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