These Paint Colors Could Increase Your Home’s Value by Up to $5,000

These Paint Colors Could Increase Your Home's Value by Up to $5,000

By Jessica Bennett | BHG.Com

Troy Warren for CNT #HomeGarden

See which paint colors offer the biggest boost to your home’s sale price (and which to avoid).

Paint has the power to completely transform a room, and compared to other home remodeling projects, it’s a relatively quick and inexpensive update. Depending on the color you choose, the pay-off from a few cans of paint can be huge, and if you’re looking to sell your home, it could amount to a few thousand dollars.

New research from real estate marketplace Zillow suggests that certain paint colors can increase the amount a buyer is willing to offer on a home by as much as $5,000. Based on this analysis, which involved nearly 1,300 recent or prospective U.S. homebuyers, paint company Behr teamed up with Zillow to unveil paint color recommendations that could boost your home’s value.

Blue Bathroom Paint Colors 

Most notably, light-blue bathrooms are a strong favorite that can result in a big return on investment for your home. Survey participants noted they’d be more interested in touring and buying a home with a light blue bathroom—and willing to pay 1.6% more than expected. On a $290,000 home (which is about the typical home value in the U.S.), that’s a boost of nearly $5,000. To capitalize on this preference, Behr suggests painting your bathroom a soothing color like Ethereal Mood MQ3-52.


 

Blue Bedroom Paint Colors 

Blue also proved advantageous in primary bedrooms, but survey respondents gravitated toward deeper, moodier shades that help foster a cozy atmosphere. When used in the bedroom, dark blue paint colors like Sojourn Blue M500-5 were associated with a $1,500-increase in the home’s value (based on a $290,000 home).


 

Neutral Living Room Paint Colors 

In common spaces like the kitchen and living room, however, it pays to keep things neutral. In the kitchen, crisp white paint colors like Polar Bear 75could add more than $500 to your home’s value, while light-gray living rooms were linked to a $200 boost in the offer price.

“Color can evoke a strong emotional and psychological response to a space,” said Erika Woelfel, vice president of color and creative for Behr, in a press release. “Blues, grays, greens, and whites are timeless, calming colorsthat allow potential buyers to see a home as a fresh, clean slate. They can then picture themselves, and their personal furnishings, filling the space to make memories in years to come.”

Paint Colors That Could Decrease Home Value 

The Zillow report also includes paint colors that could have a negative effect on a home’s perceived value. Across nearly every room, bright, boisterous hues were least attractive to the buyers surveyed. Bright red kitchens, for example, corresponded to a nearly $1,500 decrease in the average price buyers were willing to offer for the home, while buyers were least likely to want to purchase a home with a bright yellow kitchen.

Of course, choosing paint colors is highly personal, and you should feel empowered to select shades you love and that suit your decorating style. But if you’re thinking long-term about your home’s value, it might be worth opting for colors that will appeal to a wide array of potential buyers.

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By Troy Warren

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