Kitchen Paint Visualizer
Kitchens are the hardest rooms to color-plan — cabinets, counters, backsplash, and walls all have to agree. Upload a photo and test wall and cabinet colors together, on your real kitchen.
- 1 Upload a photo of your room
- 2 Name a color or describe the feeling
- 3 See it rendered — every color is real and store-mixable
Kitchen Colors People Try First
Tap any color to see its full reference page, or open the visualizer to try it on your own walls.
Your Counters and Cabinets Vote First
Kitchen wall color is never a free choice. Granite flecks, quartz veining, cabinet finish, and backsplash tile all carry undertones that either agree with your paint or argue with it. The beige that looked perfect in a showroom can turn pink next to your counters, and a clean white can go cold against warm oak — none of which a two-inch chip can warn you about.
Because the assistant reads your photo before it suggests anything, it sees those fixed finishes first. Tell it what is staying — "counters and backsplash stay, cabinets might get painted" — and it plans the wall and cabinet colors around exactly that, instead of handing you a generic top-ten list that ignores your actual kitchen.
That is the whole reason to use a kitchen paint visualizer that works on your own photo: the undertone clash shows up on screen, in your light, before you have spent a dollar on samples — let alone two coats and a weekend.
Walls and Cabinets, Tested in One Render
Painted cabinets are the biggest kitchen trend of the decade, and the wall color has to be chosen with them, not after. Ask the chat for the full combination — "sage cabinets with warm white walls," "navy island, white perimeter" — and judge the pairing on your own kitchen photo instead of a magazine’s staged one.
Two-tone layouts preview just as easily: a darker island under a lighter perimeter, or colored lowers beneath white uppers. The render repaints only the cabinets and walls you point it at and keeps your counters, backsplash, hardware, and appliances exactly as they are — so you are only judging the thing you are actually changing.
How to Test Kitchen Paint Colors Before You Commit
Snap one straight-on photo of the kitchen in daylight, with plenty of wall and cabinet in frame, and upload it. Name a color you are curious about, or just describe the feeling — "bright and clean," "warm farmhouse," "moody and modern" — and the assistant suggests shades that fit, then paints them onto your kitchen in a few seconds.
Run it for three or four candidates, narrow to your two favorites, then buy sample pots of only those and brush a real patch beside the cabinets. The visualizer is free while in beta and runs in your browser, with nothing to install — it gets you to a confident shortlist without a drawer full of paper chips.
The Kitchen Paint Colors People Test First
Warm whites still rule kitchen walls — Alabaster, White Dove, and Swiss Coffee read clean without going sterile, and they flatter almost any counter. For cabinets, the colors driving current repaints are muted greens (Evergreen Fog, Pewter Green), deep navy (Hale Navy), and near-black warm neutrals (Urbane Bronze, Iron Ore).
When the counters can’t decide between warm and cool, a greige like Accessible Beige bridges them, and a crisp Simply White perimeter is the safe partner for almost any colored island. Try any of them on your own kitchen — every color shown is a real, named shade with a code, not a screen-only swatch.
Every Brand’s Colors, Not Just One Deck
A single brand’s kitchen visualizer can only show that brand’s colors. This one is brand-neutral: it carries 13 real decks — Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, Behr, Valspar, and more — so you can put a Sherwin-Williams white next to a Benjamin Moore green on the same wall and see which one your counters actually like.
When you decide, take the exact color name and code to any paint store and they will mix it. You are choosing the right color for your kitchen, not the right color from whichever brand happened to build the tool.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a free kitchen paint visualizer?+
Yes — this one is free while in beta. Upload a photo of your kitchen, chat with the color assistant, and render wall or cabinet colors with no payment and nothing to install.
Can it show painted cabinets, not just walls?+
Yes — ask the chat to paint the cabinets ("show the cabinets in Pewter Green") and it renders cabinet color while keeping counters, backsplash, and appliances untouched.
Can it do two-tone cabinets or a colored island?+
Yes — tell the chat the split, like "island in Hale Navy, everything else Simply White," and it renders both in one image, with your hardware and counters left as they are.
How do I match a wall color to my cabinets and counters?+
Let the assistant read your photo first. It picks wall colors whose undertone agrees with your cabinet finish and counter veining, rather than a generic favorite that fights them — then you see the pairing rendered before you buy.
What are the most popular kitchen wall and cabinet colors?+
Warm whites (Alabaster, White Dove, Swiss Coffee) dominate walls; muted greens (Evergreen Fog, Pewter Green), navy (Hale Navy), and near-blacks (Urbane Bronze) lead painted cabinets. The assistant steers within these based on your counters and light.
What color should I paint a small kitchen?+
Lighter, higher-LRV warm whites and soft greiges keep a small kitchen feeling open. Ask the assistant and it will favor colors that make your specific space read larger in its actual light.
My kitchen photo has clutter — does that matter?+
A tidy counter helps, but it does not need to be staged. What matters most is good light and plenty of visible wall and cabinet in the frame.
Are these real, buyable paint colors?+
Every color shown is a real, named color from one of 13 brand decks. Take the name and code to any paint store and they will mix it — you do not have to buy a specific brand.
Sherwin-Williams · Benjamin Moore · Behr · Valspar · PPG / Glidden · Dunn-Edwards · Farrow & Ball · Magnolia Home · Clare · Backdrop · Kompozit · Dutch Boy · C2 Paint · Diamond Vogel
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