Is the style of your home contemporary, or traditional? Often, front doors that are painted dark, rich hues benefit the style of traditional homes. Contemporary homes on the other hand are well-complemented by brighter, more playful tones.
Different exterior styles often have unique architectural features. Colonial, craftsman, farmhouse or ranch homes may have porches, shutters, windows, and roofing materials that help give the home its character. All of these can uniquely impact the colour you choose for your front door.
While you should of course take the colour of your home into account, pay attention to your neighbor’s homes as well. Ask yourself, “Do I want to stand out? Or fit in?” For instance, if the houses on your street are all a dark colour, painting your door a light colour will definitely pop to passers-by. Just remember, it’s smart to ensure the front door colour you choose still makes sense with your home’s architectural style.
Coordinating your front door with house siding and trim colours is a big factor in a successful colour scheme. Trim is commonly either a darker or lighter shade of the main siding colour. Think about how the door will make the other colours pop or subside depending on how much of an affect you want to have for guests and passers-by.
Accents to your home’s colour scheme include landscaping, trees and flowers, lights that shine on the door at night, and even how much sunshine or shadows hit your door throughout the day.
Sheen and Finish
The colour is crucial of course, but choosing a glossy or flat finish can have a big effect on the result of your front door paint work. A shiny sheen is reflective and is good for darker areas, whereas a flat or matte finish showcases the colour more and it isn’t as vibrant. If you have a dark colour choice, a high gloss is often popular, but with a brighter colour often people choose a lower sheen.
Sheen can also be important for the type of door you have, such as a wooden door with many windows might benefit from a high-gloss to complement the windows. A mid-century modern door with a few windows might benefit from a lower sheen to highlight the prominence of the colour you’ve chosen that covers the vast majority of the door.
Animals that can see colour have access to more information about the world around them, and colour helps us see more nuance and detail in that information. In humans, this means our brains have evolved to have very specific reactions to colour. These universal reactions are the focus of the field of colour psychology, or in other words, how colours make us feel.
If you have ever wondered why big bold reds are so often found in fast food restaurants or why fine dining establishments tend to feature dark, earthy colours, there’s plenty of science behind why these specific colour choices are made. While no degree is needed to paint a front door, the study of colour psychology can be a helpful way to narrow down a specific colour you’re looking for.
Here, however, we’re looking specifically for front door colour inspiration. What will help the most is to focus how your basic primary and secondary front door colour choices are known to make people feel differently.
A colour of intensity that conveys strong reactions including:
Yellow is an optimistic colour, perhaps because of its association with sunlight. It conveys emotions such as:
Blue is a deep colour people associate with the life-giving nature of water and the vastness of the sky. Emotions people feel with blue include:
Green is the colour of nature and life, inspiring unique emotions including:
Orange is a colour of energy and associated often with harvest. This brings emotions such as:
Purple is a colour of depth and strength that conveys the following feelings:
Pink is a bright colour associated with much more than baby girls. It elicits feelings such as:
Brown is the colour of the earth, so unsurprisingly it conveys feelings including:
Black is timeless colour that represents strength and authority:
Where you live has a huge impact on color trends and the type of color you can use to blend in or stand out on your block. Here are some tips for homes in different geographical regions.
Northern climates often have seasonal changes that influence the appearance of exterior wall and door colours. Lighting will be different in summer and winter. The green cast of summer foliage can reflect on doors differently than it will in winter with a white landscape.
Homes in warm climates near the ocean often have light coloured exterior paint because there’s so much sunshine. Bright front doors in sea tones like light blue and orange can be good options here.
In cold climates there is more dense tree shade and green foliage in general, not to mention a lot of snow in the winter. It can be good to think about how your door reflects light from green trees and white snow. This means a high gloss paint sheen (maybe change to “sheen” instead of “paint” since this is a wood stained door?) can be a good idea if you have a colourful door.
In the sundrenched southwest United States, there are lots of homes with earth toned exteriors, and front door styling complements that by either having bright blues, greens, and pinks, or by going subdued with brown wood stains.
A strong consideration for curb appeal is the size of your home and where the door is on the home in relation to other features that stand out.
If you have a home that is quite large, a bright door can draw attention well to the entryway
With small homes, front doors stand out more in the design, so bright colours aren’t always as popular, but rather choosing a complementary colour palette that integrates trim and main body colour is the best way to go.
Proximity of home to the street is a consideration. A home set further back from the street may benefit from brighter door colour. The door will appear smaller and the colour less bold from a distance.
For privacy reasons, a home closer to the street may not want a strong front door colour which may draw passersby attention at a shorter distance. If the home is not parallel to the curbside, it could have the door on a corner or an entryway that juts out from the main structure. These alignments have different effects on where the door is in relation to the street, and makes colour choices different from traditional lot layouts.
Inside or outside; paint or stain: Let’s figure out how much you’ll need to make amazing happen.
CalculateEvery project is unique: Keep small wrinkles from becoming big problems by letting the Behr Technical Experts lend a hand.
Get Expert HelpSo many colours and so many ideas: Visit Behr’s Colour Studio for inspiration, colour tools, design advice and everything you need to find your project’s perfect colour.
Colour Studio