CP
TOOL · FREE BETA

Bathroom Paint Visualizer

Test bathroom paint colors on your own walls — upload a photo and the assistant works around your tile, vanity, and fixtures, rendering real colors you can buy at any paint store.

  1. 1 Upload a photo of your room
  2. 2 Name a color or describe the feeling
  3. 3 See it rendered — every color is real and store-mixable
OPEN THE VISUALIZER →

Bathroom Colors People Try First

Sherwin-Williams · SW 6204 · LRV 63
Sherwin-Williams · SW 6211 · LRV 59
Benjamin Moore · 2121-70 · LRV 91
Benjamin Moore · HC-144 · LRV 60
Sherwin-Williams · SW 7005 · LRV 84
Sherwin-Williams · SW 9130 · LRV 30
Benjamin Moore · HC-154 · LRV 8
Behr · N480-1 · LRV 74

Tap any color to see its full reference page, or open the visualizer to try it on your own walls.

Small Rooms Punish a Wrong Color

A bathroom is the least forgiving room you will paint. The walls are small, the surfaces are glossy, and mirrors bounce every undertone back at you twice — so a color that reads soft in the hallway can turn loud and chalky the second it goes up here. Add tile, a stone or laminate counter, and a vanity that are all staying put, and the wall color is boxed in before you have even picked up a chip.

That is the whole point of a bathroom paint visualizer that reads your own photo: it sees the fixed finishes first and only suggests bathroom paint colors that actually agree with them. You catch the clash on screen, in your own small room, instead of after two coats and a Saturday.

Working Around Tile, Vanity, and Fixtures

Most bathrooms keep their tile and vanity and just change the paint, so the new color has to flatter what is staying — not fight it. Tell the chat what stays — "white subway tile and a wood vanity stay, walls and trim are open" — and it renders colors chosen to sit comfortably next to those exact finishes, instead of a generic top-ten list that ignores your real room.

The render only touches paintable surfaces: walls, ceiling, trim, and the vanity if you ask. Your tile, counter, mirror, fixtures, and lighting stay exactly as photographed, so you are judging only the thing you are actually changing — never a faked-up bathroom that looks nothing like yours.

Check It Under Your Actual Bathroom Light

Bathrooms are usually lit by warm artificial bulbs, with little or no daylight, and that shifts color more than in almost any other room. A crisp white can warm up and yellow, and a cool gray-green can flatten out — none of which a paint chip held in the store can warn you about.

Because the visualizer paints your color onto your photo, taken under your own bulbs, you see the shade the way you will actually live with it. Snap one straight-on photo with plenty of wall in frame, upload a photo, and you are testing the color in the real light before you paint, not under showroom daylight.

The Spa Colors and Warm Whites People Test First

Soft blue-greens carry the spa bathroom look for a reason — Sea Salt, Rainwashed, Palladian Blue, and Light Drizzle read calm and clean without going cold, and they tend to play nicely with white and gray tile. When people want bright and fresh instead, warm whites like Chantilly Lace and Pure White keep a small space feeling open and airy.

For something with more depth, a muted green like Evergreen Fog gives a half-bath character without going dark. Try any of them on your own room — every color shown is a real, named shade with a code, not a screen-only swatch, so you can shortlist with confidence before you buy.

For Windowless Baths and Dark Powder Rooms

Windowless bathroom colors are their own puzzle: with no daylight to balance the warm bulbs, you want shades with steady, predictable undertones so they do not turn muddy. The assistant leans toward reliable warm whites and gentle blue-greens for small or windowless spaces, then shows them in your real light so you can trust what you see.

A windowless powder room is also the best place to be bold, because you are not fighting daylight at all. Small bathroom colors do not have to mean pale — ask for the moody powder room look in a deep navy like Hale Navy or a rich green, and the render shows whether your fixtures and lighting carry it before you commit.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free bathroom paint visualizer?+

Yes — this one is free while in beta. Upload a photo of your bathroom, chat with the color assistant, and render wall, trim, and vanity colors with no payment and nothing to install. It runs right in your browser.

Will it work around my existing tile and vanity?+

Yes — tell the chat what is staying and it renders bathroom paint colors chosen to agree with your tile, counter, and vanity. Those finishes are left exactly as photographed; only the paintable surfaces change.

Does it repaint tile or fixtures?+

No — tile, counters, mirror, and fixtures all stay as they are. The tool changes paintable surfaces only: walls, ceiling, trim, and the vanity if you ask it to.

What colors work best in a windowless bathroom?+

Soft, light colors with reliable undertones tend to win — warm whites like Chantilly Lace and Pure White, and gentle blue-greens like Sea Salt and Rainwashed. The assistant steers away from windowless bathroom colors known to go muddy under warm artificial light, and shows the rest in your actual room.

Can I try a dark powder room color?+

Yes — a moody powder room in a deep navy like Hale Navy or a rich green is a designer favorite, and a windowless space is a forgiving place to go bold. Render it on your own room first to make sure your fixtures and lighting carry it.

What are the most popular spa bathroom colors?+

Soft blue-greens lead the spa bathroom look — Sea Salt, Rainwashed, Palladian Blue, and Light Drizzle — with warm whites like Chantilly Lace and Pure White for a brighter, airier feel. The assistant narrows within these based on your tile and light.

My bathroom is small — what should I paint it?+

Lighter, soft colors keep small bathroom colors feeling open, while a deep shade can make a tiny powder room feel intentional. Describe the feeling you want and the assistant favors colors that flatter your specific space in its real light.

Are these real, buyable paint colors?+

Yes — every color shown is a real, named shade from one of 13 brand decks, including Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, Behr, and more. Take the name and code to any paint store and they will mix it, so you are choosing the right color, not the right brand.

VISUALIZE BY BRAND

Sherwin-Williams · Benjamin Moore · Behr · Valspar · PPG / Glidden · Dunn-Edwards · Farrow & Ball · Magnolia Home · Clare · Backdrop · Kompozit · Dutch Boy · C2 Paint · Diamond Vogel

VISUALIZE BY ROOM & SURFACE

Living room · Bedroom · Kitchen · Exterior · Cabinets · Trim · Brick · Siding · Front door

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