The Best Color To paint Your Rooms When Getting Ready To Sell?

The Best Color to paint your rooms when getting ready to sell

With the end of crispy, cold January days, the housing market is heating up for midwinter sales. If you’re planning to sell in 2021, you had better get moving because staging your home properly is the ticket to a quicker sale and the most profit FOR YOU!



You’ll want your house to make a great first impression on potential buyers and according to The Decorologist, color has the most impact on first impressions. So let’s talk paint colors! The following information is not meant for historic or luxury-level homes. This is general information meant for the kind of homes that most of us live in.

Your Paint Palette

Great interior color palettes can be from different hue families and different values of the hue but need to be equally muted. A basic plan for your entire house would include four types of paint colors:

1. An Anchor Neutral

An Anchor Neutral is the common thread that will start in the entry and continue into an adjoining room, up stairs and down a hallway. Of course not all houses are laid out this way. I live in a 1920’s basic bungalow and my front door opens right into my living room which has a large arch opening into the dining room. For my Anchor Neutral I chose a warm neutral for both rooms and an adjoining hallway because it creates such an ordered flow and makes the two rooms appear larger.

  • Lighting conditions
  • Surrounding colors
  • The undertones of immovable features such

    as the flooring, countertop, or cabinetry.

2. A Grounding Basic

A Grounding Basic is a white or off-white for trim, cabinets, or ceiling that works with your Anchor Neutral and the other colors used throughout your house. It can also be a medium/dark gray or black to ground the color palette especially with lots of light colors. Examples of where these darker colors would be used is light fixtures or lamps, a kitchen island, bathroom cabinetry, or doors.

3. Memory Tones

Memory Tones are muted hues, or where gray is added. These muted colors are used in bedrooms, dens, offices, and dining rooms and need to flow well with adjoining halls and rooms that are painted in the Anchor Neutral. In my home, I’ve painted the bedrooms and bathroom in muted blues and greens which reminds me to share with you that blues and greens are favorites among both genders.

4. Accent Shades

An Accent Shade will be your boldest and most dramatic color in your paint palette. These are to be used sparingly to accent architectural features and add personality and as always, this color needs to work well with your Anchor Neutral. Use it in three different areas to create the design principle of repetition. Feature this color in the back of a bookcase, a small office, a media room, or guest bedroom.

As I said earlier, these are basic guidelines for choosing the best paint colors for your rooms when getting ready to sell your house. The art and science of color is much more complex than what I can cover in one blog so if you’re serious about selling your house quickly and for the most profit, please contact me for a color consultation!

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