Remember the first time you saw an all black house? Or perhaps there was a tangy coral abode on the way to your grandmother’s that let you know you were getting close. The colors builders choose for their new construction homes are influential, often serving as identifiers for those who dwell within them: “We live in the yellow house on Maple Street” or “Ours is the blue house third from the corner.”
Exterior and interior home colors must help a house stand out without making it a spectacle. Staying on top of paint color trends helps builders choose the shades that will appeal to modern homebuyers. The selected hues influence both buyer behavior and perception and should be seen as a strategic design and sales tool. That’s why we’ve broken down the biggest 2026 paint color trends to help home builders decipher what’s in, what’s out, and what their neighborhood palette will look like in the future.
For the past decade, paint color trends have hovered around classic neutrals: gray, white, beige, and the ubiquitous greige. Builders and buyers alike shifted their color preferences toward minimalism more so than maximalism, embracing muted tones that, while timeless, lacked panache. While these neutral hues are expected to remain a safe choice for home builders, warmer hues and biophilic influences are gaining popularity among homeowners seeking living spaces that support mental and physical health through color and design.
When potential buyers tour a builder's model home, they are, of course, analyzing the floor plan, the home's layout, and the available living space. Still, they’re also getting an overall feel of the home, delivered by interior paint and design trends on display. Interior paint colors play a pivotal role in model home conversions, and selecting appropriate, aesthetically pleasing, on-trend colors for each room is an easy way for builders to hold sway over visitors.
More so than any other room in the home, the kitchen remains an emotional anchor for the owners. As such, it’s best to avoid overly personalized colors in spec homes. If a builder wants to play around with dramatic colors, the model home is a prime canvas.
Trending paint colors for kitchens are skewing warmer than in previous years, think cream versus a stark white. Builders who want to maintain the neutral color scheme can opt for soft warm whites, warm taupes, and mushroom tones for contrast. Muted sages make for a grounding, nature-inspired accent color. Two-tone cabinetry is also growing in popularity, with the top cabinets in a warm neutral color and the bottom cabinets in a deeper earth tone. Pantries are also getting an upgrade with moody colors and accents.
A home’s living room is a multifunctional space, serving as a home office during the day and an entertaining space at night and on weekends. The paint on the walls must be versatile, shifting seamlessly with the room’s purpose. Builders should avoid high-contrast grays, which are declining in popularity, and opt for warmer neutrals, which photograph better for listings.
Trending paint colors for living rooms are moving toward luscious yet multifaceted earth tones, including clay and terracotta undertones and desaturated blues for accent walls. As with the kitchen, builders can expect a subtle greige evolution into warmer tones with a soft beige revival.
Ceilings are often an afterthought, if they get any attention at all. But the ceiling paint color has a greater impact on the room's appearance than builders may think; it helps influence the perceived height and warmth of a room. In spec homes, builders are encouraged to stick to warm white paint for ceiling continuity. In model homes, however, builders should embrace design-forward ceilings, creating a fifth wall that, when done correctly, can become the focal point of the room.
Ceiling paint color trends include color-drenched rooms with the walls and ceilings painted in the same tone. If a builder does opt for tonal contrast, they should use subtle, soft, warm whites, avoiding stark white ceilings. Accent ceilings, including solid colors or even patterned wallpapers, work best in dining rooms or studies where a pop of the unexpected can liven up the space.
They say don’t judge a book by its cover, but homebuyers are judging a potential new home by its exterior, and curb appeal is becoming increasingly paramount in the home buying process. A home’s exterior, whether it’s via paint or siding, helps the residence stand out on the street and can be representative of the family who lives there. The monochromatic beige, gray, and white neighborhoods are giving way to pops of earthy hues that bring a varicolored complexion to new construction communities.
Exterior house paint trends that builders should embrace as they plan for new communities include:
When selecting exterior home colors, builders should consider HOA compliance and resale longevity. If there is a paint color synonymous with the time a builder is developing a community (think “Millennial Gray” from the 2010s), it may feel dated within five years. In addition, builders should ensure regional landscaping harmonizes with the selected colors and that those colors hold up against sun exposure.
Paint color trends, like any other, are cyclical. We’re coming out of an era of cooler, neutral shades and entering a time where warmer, natural hues are on full display. So why the shift? Buyers no longer want a home with stark, sterile-feeling grays and bright whites; they want the warmth and coziness of earth tones, taupes, and deep, warm browns, especially as health and well-being become a prominent lifestyle factor when selecting a home.
Outdated paint color trends builders should avoid include cool, blue-gray dominance in new build communities, stark white interiors everywhere, high-gloss finishes, and heavy-contrast trims.
While there is no way to know exactly what trending home paint colors will look like in the future, we’ve put together some predictions that we wouldn’t mind seeing in a model home.
At the end of the day, it’s a builder’s sales team that secures a sale, but when a buyer walks into a home they’re absolutely dazzled by, that sale can be made a whole lot easier. While a home’s finishes are often left out of the selling strategy, on-trend paint, hardware, and home accents help increase the perceived value of the home. What’s more, when a home looks stunning online, it’s more likely to draw virtual customers into the model home to see it in person.
If you’re a builder planning your future communities, it’s time to align your interior and exterior paint palettes with evolving buyer preferences.