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TOOL · FREE BETA

Living Room Paint Visualizer

Upload a photo of your living room and see it repainted in real, buyable colors — matched to your sofa, your floor, and your light, with everything but the paint untouched.

  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 →

Living Room Colors People Try First

Sherwin-Williams · SW 7029 · LRV 60
Benjamin Moore · HC-172 · LRV 55
Sherwin-Williams · SW 7036 · LRV 58
Benjamin Moore · HC-173 · LRV 63
Behr · 790C-2 · LRV 75
Sherwin-Williams · SW 9130 · LRV 30
Benjamin Moore · OC-20 · LRV 69
Sherwin-Williams · SW 7048 · LRV 8

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

The Room Everyone Sees Deserves a Test Drive

The living room is the highest-stakes paint decision in the house — it connects to everything, it holds your biggest furniture, and guests judge it first. That is exactly why a living room paint visualizer that works on a photo of your real room beats any showroom image: the sofa you already own, the rug you are keeping, and the direction your windows face all change how a color reads.

Upload a photo and the assistant reads those fixed pieces first, then suggests living room paint colors that work with them — not against them. Warm wood floors push toward different neutrals than cool tile, and a north-facing room needs warmer tones than a sun-soaked one, so the shortlist you get is built for your space, not a generic top-ten list.

How to See Paint Colors on Your Living Room Walls

Snap one straight-on photo in daylight with plenty of wall in frame and upload it. Name a color you are curious about, or just describe the feeling — "warm and cozy," "bright and airy," "calm modern" — and the assistant suggests living room color ideas that fit, then paints them onto your walls in a few seconds. It is free while in beta and runs in your browser, so there is no app to download.

Run it for three or four candidates, narrow to your two favorites, then buy sample pots of only those and brush a real patch on the wall. The render gets you to a confident shortlist before you paint, but the final call always ends with paint on your actual wall in your actual light — that is the honest last step no screen can replace.

Accent Walls and Open Floor Plans, Rendered Together

Living rooms rarely carry just one decision: there is the main wall color, the trim that frames it, and often an accent wall behind the sofa or around the fireplace. The chat handles all of it — ask for "greige walls with crisp white trim," then "show the fireplace wall in a deep green," and the render updates while your furniture, floor, and light stay exactly as photographed.

Open concept spaces add their own puzzle, because the living room color flows straight into the kitchen and dining area with no door to stop it. Tell the assistant the layout is open and it will keep the palette continuous across the sightline, so an accent wall reads as intentional rather than as the spot where someone ran out of one color.

The Living Room Colors People Try First

Greige still rules living room walls — Agreeable Gray, Revere Pewter, and Accessible Beige read warm and flexible, flattering almost any sofa and floor without committing to a strong color. Softer neutrals like Edgecomb Gray, Silver Drop, and Pale Oak keep a room light and open, which is why they top the list in rooms that need to feel bigger.

When people want a little more personality, muted green-grays like Evergreen Fog lead the way, and dark warm neutrals like Urbane Bronze are the go-to for a fireplace or feature wall. Try any of them on your own living room — 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 visualizer can only show that brand’s colors. This one is brand-neutral: it carries 13 real decks and roughly 19,000 named colors — Sherwin-Williams, Benjamin Moore, Behr, Valspar, and more — so you can put one brand’s greige next to another brand’s on the same wall and see which one your sofa and floor 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 living room, not the right color from whichever brand happened to build the tool.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free living room paint visualizer?+

Yes — this one is free while in beta. Upload a photo of your living room, chat with the color assistant, and render wall colors with no payment and nothing to install. It does ask you to sign in with Google so your renders are saved to your account.

How do I see paint colors on my living room walls?+

Upload one daylight photo with plenty of wall in frame, then name a color or describe the feeling you want. The assistant paints it onto your real walls in a few seconds, and you can swap colors as many times as you like before you commit.

What living room colors are most popular right now?+

Warm greiges (Agreeable Gray, Revere Pewter, Accessible Beige) and soft light neutrals (Edgecomb Gray, Silver Drop, Pale Oak) lead living room walls. Muted green-grays like Evergreen Fog and dark accents like Urbane Bronze are common on fireplace and feature walls.

Will the visualizer change my furniture or floors?+

No. Only paintable surfaces change — walls, plus trim or ceiling when you ask. Your sofa, rug, floor, windows, and decor stay exactly as photographed, so you are only judging the thing you are actually changing.

Can I do an accent wall?+

Yes — tell the chat which wall, like "show the wall behind the sofa in a deep green," and it renders just that change while the rest of the room stays put. It is one of the most popular things people test here.

Does it work for an open concept living room?+

Yes. Tell the assistant the space is open to the kitchen or dining area and it keeps the palette continuous across the sightline, so the color flows naturally instead of stopping at an invisible line.

How accurate is the preview?+

Good enough to narrow a shortlist honestly, not to replace a sample. Always test your final one or two colors with sample pots on the actual wall before you paint the whole room.

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.

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

Bedroom · Kitchen · Bathroom · Exterior · Cabinets · Trim · Brick · Siding · Front door

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