20 Stunning Kitchen Cabinet Color Ideas That Will Transform Your Home

20 Stunning Kitchen Cabinet Color Ideas That Will Transform Your Home - Urbizia

Your kitchen cabinets are the single biggest visual statement in your home. Change the color and you change everything. The mood, the size, the vibe, the personality. And the best part? You don't have to gut the whole kitchen to do it.

Whether you're mid-renovation with a blank canvas or just thinking about a weekend refresh with a can of paint, choosing the right cabinet color is where the real transformation begins.

We've done the deep dive — combing through the latest interior design reports, 2026 trend data, and what's actually resonating with real homeowners right now on platforms like Pinterest — to bring you 20 of the most beautiful, trending, and timeless kitchen cabinet color ideas for 2026.

From soft lavender romance to deep moody burgundy, there is something here for every kitchen, every style, and every budget. Let's get into it.

Quick navigation: Jump to Soft & Romantic | Timeless Neutrals | Bold & Dramatic | Modern & Trendy 2026 | How to Choose | FAQ

Why Your Cabinet Color Choice Matters More Than You Think

Here's the thing most people don't realize: your kitchen cabinets cover more visual surface area than any other element in the room — more than the walls, more than the floors, more than the countertops. So when you pick the wrong color, it doesn't just look "a bit off." It affects your entire experience of the space.

The right cabinet color can:

  • Make a small kitchen feel larger (or cozier, if that's your thing)
  • Set the entire mood of your home's most-used room
  • Increase your home's resale value — kitchens are one of the top factors in buyer decisions
  • Tie together your countertops, backsplash, flooring, and hardware into one cohesive look

So this isn't just an aesthetic decision. It's a design strategy.

Paint vs. Reface vs. Replace — A Quick Guide Before You Start

Before you fall in love with a color, know your options:

  • Paint your existing cabinets — Most budget-friendly. Works best on wood or MDF cabinets in good condition. Always sand, prime, and use a high-quality cabinet paint for a durable finish.
  • Reface your cabinets — You replace just the cabinet doors and drawer fronts while keeping the cabinet boxes. Great for when the structure is solid but the look is dated.
  • Replace entirely — The most expensive route, but gives you full control over color, style, layout, and materials.

For most homeowners reading this for color inspiration, painting is the first step. And that's where it gets really exciting.

How to Test a Cabinet Color Before Committing

Never — and we mean never — choose a cabinet color from a screen alone. Lighting changes everything. Here's how to test properly:

  1. Get 2–3 paint sample pots in your shortlisted colors
  2. Paint large swatches (at least A4 size) directly on one of your cabinet doors or on a piece of white cardboard
  3. Observe at different times of day — morning natural light, afternoon sun, evening artificial light
  4. Hold them next to your countertop, flooring, and backsplash samples
  5. Live with them for 48 hours before deciding

Okay — now let's get to the good stuff.

Soft & Romantic Cabinet Colors

These shades bring warmth, elegance, and that effortless "lived-in luxury" feel that Pinterest users absolutely cannot stop saving. They're feminine without being fussy, bold without being overwhelming.

1. Lavender Dream

The vibe: A soft, muted lavender with grey undertones — dreamy, calming, and completely original.

If you've been scrolling through Pinterest lately, you already know lavender kitchens are having a serious moment. And honestly? We get it. This soft purple hue hits that sweet spot between playful and sophisticated. It's unexpected enough to feel special, but soft enough to feel genuinely livable.

Best for: Cottagecore kitchens, farmhouse styles, or any space with good natural light that you want to feel like a haven.

Pair it with:

  • Brass or antique gold hardware (the warm metal pops beautifully against the cool lavender)
  • White marble or cream countertops
  • Open wood shelving for warmth
  • A farmhouse-style sink for that cottage charm

Paint to consider: Look for shades described as "muted lilac," "French lavender," or "dusty purple" with a grey undertone — these age better and feel more sophisticated than bright violet.

Pro tip: Lavender works best in kitchens with white ceilings and natural light. If your kitchen is darker, go one shade lighter than you think you need.

2. Blush Rose

The vibe: Warm, dusty pink with terracotta undertones — luxurious and grounding at the same time.

Blush has evolved. We're not talking about the millennial pink of 2017 here. The 2026 version of blush cabinet color leans warmer, dustier, and more intentional. Think of it as the love child of rose gold and warm clay — and it is stunning.

Best for: Modern transitional kitchens, Scandi-inspired spaces, or homes with warm wood floors.

Pair it with:

  • Matte black hardware for striking contrast
  • Light limestone or quartz countertops
  • Warm white walls and ceilings
  • Rattan or cane accents in pendant lighting or bar stools

Avoid: Pairing blush with cool grey tones. Blush needs warmth around it to shine — keep your surrounding palette in the warm family.

3. Dusty Mauve 

The vibe: A grown-up pink-purple hybrid — sophisticated, moody, and quietly stunning.

Mauve is what happens when you want the romance of lavender and the groundedness of dusty rose in one color. It's one of the most underrated cabinet colors out there, and in 2026 it's finally getting its moment. Designer Mary Beth Sullivan, founder of MB Sullivan Design, has predicted that plum-adjacent tones will take center stage this year as homeowners look for "warm colors without playing it too safe."

Mauve is the perfect entry point into that world.

Best for: Traditional kitchens with detailed cabinetry, or any kitchen you want to feel like it belongs in a boutique hotel.

Pair it with:

  • Polished nickel or brushed silver hardware
  • Calacatta marble countertops (the veining plays beautifully with mauve)
  • A crystal or rattan chandelier overhead
  • Soft white uppers with mauve lowers for a two-tone approach

4. Soft Sage Green 

The vibe: Muted, earthy, nature-forward — the color of slow mornings and fresh herbs on the windowsill.

Sage green has been trending for a couple of years, and the reason it's still here? It genuinely works in almost every kitchen style. This isn't a trend that will age badly. It's the kind of color that becomes part of a home's identity.

It sits perfectly between grey and green, giving your space a calm, earthy quality that feels both fresh and timeless. Interior designers love it. Homeowners love it. Pinterest users obsessively save it.

Best for: Farmhouse, Scandinavian, transitional, and cottage-style kitchens.

Pair it with:

  • Brass or warm gold hardware (this combo is iconic)
  • Open wood shelving
  • A farmhouse sink
  • White or cream subway tile backsplash
  • Natural linen window treatments

Pro tip: Sage green is one of the most forgiving cabinet colors when it comes to lighting. It looks beautiful in both bright and more subdued light — which makes it a safe bet for kitchens that don't have huge windows.

5. Powder Blue

The vibe: Airy, cheerful, and polished — like a summer morning that never ends.

Light blue is back in a major way for 2026. Interior designer Bethany Adams put it simply: "After a dark 2025, I think soft blues are going to be big in kitchens in 2026. They're fresh, pretty, and surprisingly sophisticated."

Powder blue cabinets feel playful without being childish, fresh without feeling clinical. They bring an instant lift to any kitchen.

Best for: Coastal-inspired kitchens, vintage-style spaces, country kitchens, and open-plan living areas where you want the kitchen to feel light.

Pair it with:

  • Brass pulls (a polished, elevated look)
  • White or off-white marble countertops
  • Patterned backsplash tiles in white and blue
  • White upper cabinets for a bright, layered feel
  • Wooden accents for warmth

Timeless Neutrals With a Twist

These aren't your grandmother's beige cabinets. The 2026 approach to neutrals is richer, warmer, and more intentional. These shades feel elevated and personal — not safe or bland.

6. Warm Greige

The vibe: The perfect balance between grey and beige — sophisticated, warm, and endlessly versatile.

Greige is the new grey. As designers step away from the cool, clinical greys that dominated kitchens throughout the 2010s, warm greige has stepped in as the smarter alternative. It has the depth of grey without the coldness, and the warmth of beige without looking dated.

Best for: Literally any kitchen. This is as close to a "can't go wrong" option as it gets.

Pair it with:

  • Warm white walls
  • Natural stone countertops (quartzite, limestone, or travertine)
  • Aged bronze or matte black hardware
  • Light wood flooring

7. Creamy Off-White

The vibe: Warm, airy, and effortlessly elegant — everything a bright white kitchen wants to be, but better.

This isn't stark gallery white. Creamy off-white has a warm, yellow-beige undertone that makes a kitchen feel like it's bathed in golden hour light, even on a grey day. It's one of the most popular kitchen cabinet colors for 2026 precisely because it manages to feel timeless AND current at the same time.

Chantilly White and similar warm whites from major paint brands are having a massive moment right now for exactly this reason.

Best for: Traditional, transitional, and farmhouse kitchens. Also perfect for smaller spaces — the warmth and brightness make kitchens feel larger.

Pair it with:

  • Brushed nickel or chrome hardware for a clean, classic look
  • Dark wood island for contrast
  • Carrara marble backsplash
  • Black window frames for a graphic, modern touch

8. Soft Taupe

The vibe: Quiet luxury — understated, refined, and endlessly sophisticated.

Taupe cabinets are having a "quiet luxury" moment in 2026. They bring warmth without committing to beige, brown, or grey — that ambiguity is exactly what makes them so elegant. Paired with the right marble countertops and sleek hardware, taupe cabinets look incredibly tailored.

Best for: Modern transitional kitchens, high-end renovations, and open-plan spaces where the kitchen flows into a living or dining area.

Pair it with:

  • Polished chrome or brushed gold hardware
  • Calacatta marble countertops
  • A statement range hood in a similar or slightly darker tone
  • White oak flooring

9. Linen White

The vibe: Soft, organic, textural — like white, but with warmth and soul.

Linen white sits in that magical sweet spot between stark white and off-white. It's the color of fresh linen, natural cotton, raw plaster. It has a barely-there warmth that makes a kitchen feel genuinely inviting rather than sterile.

This is the color for people who want a "white kitchen" but don't want it to feel like a laboratory.

Best for: Minimalist kitchens with texture-forward materials (fluted doors, wood accents, concrete countertops).

Pair it with:

  • Natural wood cutting boards and open shelving
  • Terracotta or handmade ceramic accessories
  • Brushed brass hardware in a slightly tarnished finish
  • Limewash or textured plaster walls

10. Mushroom Brown

The vibe: Rich, earthy, and deeply cozy — like a warm hug in cabinet form.

Mushroom is the biggest neutral surprise of 2026. This warm, muted brown with taupe and grey undertones is what happens when you take a classic neutral and give it real depth. Pantone's Color of the Year for 2026 is Cloud Dancer (a soft neutral), reflecting a broader shift toward softer, more welcoming spaces — and mushroom fits perfectly into that story.

Best for: Farmhouse kitchens, rustic modern spaces, and any kitchen with warm wood floors or exposed beams.

Pair it with:

  • Warm brass hardware
  • Cream or warm stone countertops
  • Open wood shelving
  • Linen window treatments

Bold & Dramatic Cabinet Colors

These are the colors that stop people in their tracks. They require a little more confidence to commit to — but the results are extraordinary. If you want a kitchen that people talk about, this section is for you.

11. Deep Burgundy / Wine Red

The vibe: Moody, sensual, and deeply sophisticated — like a fine Bordeaux you can live in.

Burgundy kitchen cabinets dominated 2025, and for 2026 the trend is getting richer and more refined. This is one of those rare colors that works in both traditional and contemporary kitchens — it's bold enough to make a statement but warm enough to feel genuinely livable.

The key to making dark red cabinets work is pairing them with the right materials. Black countertops amplify the moodiness. Marble countertops add a lighter, more luxurious contrast.

Best for: Modern kitchens with good lighting, open-plan spaces, and anyone who isn't afraid of commitment.

Pair it with:

  • Black slate or dark granite countertops
  • Matte black hardware (for a sleek, graphic look)
  • Brass hardware (for warmth and elegance)
  • A grey or charcoal painted backsplash
  • Dark hardwood or concrete flooring

Pro tip: Balance dark cabinets with excellent lighting. Under-cabinet LEDs, pendant lights over an island, and plenty of natural light are essential.

12. Midnight Navy Blue

The vibe: Strong, timeless, and quietly commanding — the classic that never goes out of style.

Navy blue is one of the most enduring kitchen cabinet colors ever. It has a quality that few other bold colors possess: it's dramatic without being risky. It reads differently depending on the light — deep and moody in the evening, rich and sophisticated in the day.

In 2026, the trend leans toward warmer, slightly softer navy tones rather than the icy, pure blues of previous years.

Best for: Traditional kitchens, coastal styles, Hamptons-inspired spaces, and any kitchen with a generous amount of natural light.

Pair it with:

  • Warm white upper cabinets (for a two-tone look that's breathtaking)
  • Brass or gold hardware
  • White marble countertops and backsplash
  • Warm wood flooring or herringbone parquet

13. Forest Green

The vibe: Grounded, natural, and quietly luxurious — like bringing the outdoors in.

Forest green is the color that designers cannot stop recommending in 2026. Smoky jades and grounded greens bring a quiet depth to kitchen cabinets — they sit between blue and green with a soft grey cast that keeps them calm rather than loud.

This is the cabinet color that moves an ordinary kitchen into something people stop and notice. And because it reads differently in different lights — warm and lush in the day, moody and dramatic at night — it has a versatility that few other bold colors offer.

Best for: Traditional kitchens, Shaker-style cabinetry, modern farmhouse, or any space with natural materials.

Pair it with:

  • Brass or antique gold hardware (the definitive combination)
  • Light-coloured countertops — cream quartz, white marble, or pale limestone
  • White uppers if using forest green on lowers only
  • Terracotta tile floors or warm wood

14. Charcoal Black

The vibe: Sleek, sophisticated, and confidently minimal — for people who know exactly what they want.

Charcoal is the color that sits perfectly between grey and black, which is why it's so compelling. It's warm enough to feel like home but dark enough to make a real impression. Unlike true black, charcoal doesn't feel harsh or cold — especially in a matte finish.

This is also one of the most future-proof cabinet colors available. It doesn't follow trends the way brighter colors do. A charcoal kitchen will look intentional and well-considered in ten years exactly as it does today.

Best for: Modern and contemporary kitchens, open-plan loft-style spaces, and anyone who wants drama without color.

Pair it with:

  • Stainless steel appliances (the contrast is impeccable)
  • White or light grey countertops
  • Chrome or brushed nickel hardware
  • White walls and ceiling (to prevent the space feeling too heavy)
  • Statement pendant lighting in brass or black

15. Deep Plum / Eggplant

The vibe: Rich, gemstone luxury — like wearing velvet in kitchen form.

If burgundy is a fine Bordeaux, deep plum is a vintage port — darker, richer, and even more opulent. Interior designer Mary Beth Sullivan predicted that plum would take center stage in 2026 kitchens, and she was right. People are craving colors that feel bold but familiar, colors "steeped in history but that work well in contemporary environments."

Deep plum does exactly that.

Best for: Traditional kitchens with detailed cabinetry, Victorian or period homes, and anyone with a fearless design personality.

Pair it with:

  • Unlacquered brass hardware (the oxidized warmth is incredible against plum)
  • Marble countertops with warm veining
  • A statement chandelier — crystal, brass, or antique iron
  • Natural fiber rugs in cream or taupe

Modern & Trendy

These are the color stories that the design world is specifically excited about right now — approaches that feel fresh, current, and positioned to become classics.

16. Two-Tone White + Colored Island

The vibe: Smart, personalized, and visually dynamic — the best of both worlds.

Two-tone kitchens are one of the top cabinet trends heading into 2026, and the most popular version is beautifully simple: keep the perimeter cabinets in a crisp warm white, then make the island your color statement.

This gives you the light, airy feel of a white kitchen while adding personality through a pop of navy, forest green, deep plum, or even burgundy on the island. It's also a smart choice for anyone who wants to experiment with a bold color without fully committing.

Favorite color combinations for the island:

  • Warm white perimeter + midnight navy island + brass hardware
  • Linen white perimeter + forest green island + brushed gold hardware
  • Cream perimeter + charcoal island + chrome hardware
  • Off-white perimeter + dusty sage island + antique brass hardware

Pro tip: Keep the countertop material consistent across both the perimeter and the island for visual cohesion — changing the material as well as the color can make a kitchen feel chaotic.

17. Terracotta Warm Clay

The vibe: Mediterranean warmth, earthy richness, and authentic character.

Terracotta as a cabinet color is one of the most exciting directions in kitchen design for 2026. This warm, rusty orange-red-brown brings a depth and earthiness that no other color can quite replicate. It feels ancient and modern at the same time.

It pairs naturally with raw materials — stone, wood, clay, plaster — which is part of what makes it feel so rich and layered.

Best for: Mediterranean-inspired kitchens, earthy bohemian spaces, or any kitchen with terracotta tile flooring (the tone-on-tone approach is surprisingly stunning).

Pair it with:

  • Aged brass or iron hardware
  • Raw limestone or butcher block countertops
  • White plaster or limewash walls
  • Handmade ceramic tiles as a backsplash
  • Rattan pendant lighting

18. Smoky Slate Blue-Grey

The vibe: Cool, calm, and quietly interesting — like a London skyline at dusk.

Slate blue-grey is one of the most sophisticated new directions in cabinet colors for 2026. It's not quite blue, not quite grey — it has the emotional quality of both. It brings a sense of quietude to a kitchen, the feeling of a space that thinks before it speaks.

This color works brilliantly in kitchens that receive cool, north-facing light — it actually improves with that quality of light rather than fighting against it.

Best for: Modern and contemporary kitchens, open-plan spaces, urban apartments, and any kitchen with industrial or minimalist influences.

Pair it with:

  • Brushed nickel or chrome hardware
  • Concrete or engineered stone countertops
  • White or pale grey backsplash
  • Warm wood flooring or accents (the wood warmth perfectly counterbalances the cool tone)

19. Champagne Gold-Tinted Cream

The vibe: Effortlessly luxurious, warm, and glowing — like candlelight in cabinet form.

This is one of the most interesting color directions of 2026: cream with a very subtle gold or warm yellow undertone. It's not yellow. It's not white. It's something richer and more intentional than either. In the right light, champagne cream cabinets seem to glow from within.

The Sherwin-Williams Color of the Year, Universal Khaki — a neutral brown with yellowish undertones — is moving in this exact direction. And more homeowners are following.

Best for: Traditional kitchens, grand country house kitchens, and anyone who wants the classic elegance of cream but with a little more personality.

Pair it with:

  • Warm brass or unlacquered brass hardware
  • Calacatta gold marble (the golden veining is sublime with this cabinet color)
  • Warm white walls
  • Oak or walnut flooring

20. Olive Muted Green

The vibe: Earthy, sophisticated, mature — the green that doesn't try too hard.

Olive green is what happens when forest green grows up. It's quieter, more muted, with a yellow-brown undertone that ties it firmly to the natural world. Unlike sage (which leans grey) or forest green (which leans blue), olive leans warm and earthy.

It's also one of the best kitchen cabinet colors for creating harmony with wood elements — olive and warm timber tones are one of the most natural pairings in interior design.

Best for: Organic modern kitchens, warm minimalist spaces, or any kitchen that wants to feel rooted in nature without going too literal.

Pair it with:

  • Warm wood countertops or open shelving
  • Antique brass or raw iron hardware
  • Cream or warm linen backsplash tiles
  • Terracotta or warm stone flooring

How to Choose the Right Cabinet Color for Your Kitchen

Now that you're swimming in inspiration, let's get practical. Here's how to make the right call for your specific kitchen.

Consider Your Lighting First

Lighting is the single biggest factor most people overlook when choosing cabinet colors. A color you love in the showroom can look completely different at home.

  • North-facing kitchens (cool, limited natural light): Lean toward warm tones — creamy whites, warm greige, soft yellows, terracotta. Cool colors like grey or slate blue will feel cold and flat.
  • South-facing kitchens (bright, warm natural light): You have the most flexibility. Both warm and cool tones work beautifully. This is where lavender, powder blue, and sage green truly shine.
  • East-facing kitchens (bright morning light, dimmer afternoons): Choose colors that look good in both bright and subdued light — sage green, warm white, and greige all perform well.
  • West-facing kitchens (warm evening light): Dramatic colors come alive in the golden evening light — navy, forest green, and burgundy are stunning in west-facing kitchens.

Consider Your Kitchen Size

  • Small kitchens: Lighter, warmer tones (soft white, creamy off-white, light mushroom, powder blue) make a space feel larger and more open. If you want color, apply it to lower cabinets or the island and keep upper cabinets light. Note: dark moody tones like inky blue or deep green can also feel surprisingly expansive when paired with warm metals, as designer Zoë Feldman explains — they create a sense of richness rather than confinement.
  • Large kitchens: You can go bold with confidence. Large kitchens can absorb dramatic colors without feeling oppressive — in fact, a large all-white kitchen can feel sterile, while a warm color anchors the space.
  • Open-plan spaces: Think about how the cabinet color flows into your adjacent living and dining areas. Earthy neutrals (greige, warm whites, taupe) tend to bridge spaces most gracefully.

Your Countertop Pairing Guide

Cabinet Color Best Countertop Pairing
Lavender / Mauve White marble, cream quartz
Sage Green Warm white quartz, pale limestone
Navy Blue White marble, warm stone, butcher block
Burgundy / Deep Red Black slate, dark granite, or white marble
Forest Green Cream quartz, white marble, pale limestone
Charcoal Light grey or white stone, concrete
Creamy White Any — this is the most versatile
Terracotta Raw limestone, butcher block, sandstone
Plum / Eggplant Warm marble, cream quartz
Warm Greige Natural stone, travertine, warm wood

Hardware Finishes — Don't Overlook This

Hardware is the jewellery of your kitchen. The right finish elevates any cabinet color:

  • Brushed brass / warm gold — pairs with sage green, navy, plum, forest green, burgundy, lavender. The warm metal pops beautifully against cool and bold tones.
  • Unlacquered / aged brass — stunning with terracotta, deep plum, warm cream. The oxidized quality adds character.
  • Matte black — pairs with white/cream, charcoal, burgundy, navy. Creates sharp, graphic contrast.
  • Brushed nickel — most versatile. Works with virtually every color, particularly good with cooler tones like slate blue-grey, lavender, and charcoal.
  • Chrome — cleanest and most modern. Best with charcoal, white, and slate tones.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most popular kitchen cabinet color right now?

A warm neutrals — particularly warm whites, creamy off-whites, and greige — remain the most popular overall. However, among homeowners looking for something more distinctive, sage green and navy blue are the most-saved colors on Pinterest. Among the bolder options, forest green and deep plum are the fastest-rising choices.

What cabinet color makes a kitchen look bigger?

Light, warm tones are the traditional answer — soft white, creamy off-white, and light mushroom tones reflect more light and help a kitchen feel more open and spacious. If you want upper cabinets light and lower cabinets colored, that's an excellent strategy for small kitchens. That said, designers increasingly point out that deep, rich colors like navy or forest green can actually feel expansive when paired with good lighting and warm metal accents — they create an atmosphere of richness rather than enclosure.

Are colored cabinets still in style?

Absolutely — and more than ever. The all-white kitchen has peaked, and homeowners are actively seeking colors that reflect their personality and feel lived-in. 2026 is specifically characterized by a move toward warm, nature-inspired, and emotionally resonant colors. Colored cabinets aren't just in style — they're the style direction.

Are dark kitchen cabinets going out of style?

No. Dark kitchen cabinets like charcoal, navy, forest green, and burgundy remain firmly on-trend and are actually gaining sophistication. The key is balance: pair dark cabinets with lighter countertops and backsplash, ensure good lighting (natural and artificial), and choose a matte finish for a modern feel. Done well, dark cabinets look incredible and have genuine longevity.

Can I mix cabinet colors in my kitchen?

Yes, and two-tone kitchens are one of the biggest trends in 2026. The most popular approach is lighter upper cabinets with a deeper or colored lower cabinet or island. Keep the countertop and backsplash consistent across both cabinet colors for visual cohesion. Two-tone kitchens also give you a low-risk way to experiment with a bold color without fully committing.

What is the most timeless kitchen cabinet color?

Warm whites and off-whites have the strongest track record for timelessness — they feel fresh, they work with almost any design style, and they photograph beautifully. Navy blue is another timeless option that has appeared in kitchens for decades without ever feeling dated. Sage green is showing strong signs of becoming the new classic.

How much does it cost to paint kitchen cabinets?

Painting kitchen cabinets yourself typically costs $200–$600 in materials (paint, primer, sandpaper, brushes/rollers, tape). Hiring a professional painter typically costs $1,000–$4,000 depending on kitchen size, number of cabinets, and your location. Refacing cabinets (replacing just the doors) costs $4,000–$10,000. Full cabinet replacement starts at $10,000–$15,000 and goes up significantly from there.

Final Thoughts

In 2026, the best kitchen cabinet color is the one that makes you feel something when you walk into the room. Design has shifted away from playing it safe and toward creating kitchens that feel personal, intentional, and genuinely reflective of the people who live in them.

Whether you're drawn to the romantic softness of dusty mauve, the grounded sophistication of forest green, the quiet luxury of warm greige, or the bold confidence of deep burgundy — there is a perfect cabinet color for your kitchen in this list.

Start with your lighting. Consider your countertops. Test your samples. And then trust your instincts.

Your dream kitchen is one coat of paint away.

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