Digital to physical

Match your RGB to find the perfect matching paint color.

Enter red, green, and blue from 0–255—whether from a design app, CSS, or a spec sheet. We’ll map that screen color to the closest real paint shades from major brands so you can buy with confidence.
  • Professional accuracy
  • Paint-ready matches from major brands

Input RGB values

Enter red, green, and blue from 0–255

Enter R, G, and B — your preview appears here

We’ll take you to the RGB URL, then to your paint match results.

Find your perfect paint match from RGB values

Moving from a screen to a wall is harder than it sounds. RGB from a design file or CSS is still a digital signal—monitors vary, and real paint gains depth from light, sheen, and texture.

Our matcher closes that gap: you enter R, G, and B (0–255), and we return close paint colors you can actually buy—so your choices hold up in the room, not just on screen.

Why choose our matching system?

  • DeltaE-aware comparisons tuned for how humans see color difference, not raw RGB distance.
  • Coverage across major paint brands, so you can compare product lines in one place.
  • Three numbers (R, G, B)—no account required to explore your first matches.

Frequently asked questions

How do I find a paint color from RGB values?

Enter R, G, and B as whole numbers from 0 to 255 (same order as red, green, blue in design apps and CSS). Submit to get paint colors from our catalog ranked by perceptual closeness (DeltaE-style). No account is required to try your first match. We recommend treating the list as a shortlist and confirming with a physical sample in your space before you buy full tins.

How accurate are RGB-to-paint matches on a real wall?

We order results using perceptual distance—not raw RGB distance—so the top picks tend to match what people consider “close” when swatches sit side by side. Your monitor, color profile, sheen, and room lighting still change the outcome; a sample on the wall is the trustworthy final check.

How should I enter R, G, and B in the matcher?

Use integers 0–255 per channel, in order: red, then green, then blue—just like rgb(R,G,B) in CSS or sliders in most pickers.

Which paint brands can RGB matching return?

Matches are drawn from our catalog, which evolves and may differ by market. Enter your RGB triplet to see which brands and product names we can suggest where you browse.

Is the RGB on my screen the same as paint from a can?

RGB describes a digital color; paint is a physical film. We bridge that gap by finding the nearest catalog colors to your numbers—but screens and walls are different media, so always validate with a real swatch.

What number range do R, G, and B use—and why 0–255?

That is the usual 8-bit sRGB range used on the web and in most design tools. Sticking to whole numbers in that range keeps your input comparable to CSS and app color pickers.

How does RGB matching relate to your HEX color pages?

We convert your RGB to a canonical HEX internally, then run the same pipeline as our HEX flows. You should see consistent ordering for that color whether you started from RGB or HEX.

Why might another site show a different closest paint for the same RGB?

Different databases, regional availability, and ranking rules produce different answers. We’re transparent: we score perceptual distance against our own dataset; another tool may use other brands or math.

Can I paste values from CSS rgb(), rgba(), or a design app?

Yes—copy the three integers (0–255). Ignore alpha from rgba(). If your file uses another working space, convert to standard 8-bit sRGB RGB first when you need the closest match to what you see on the web.

Does sRGB matter—and should I always order a sample before buying paint?

Our matcher assumes typical sRGB-style triplets. Other profiles can shift appearance. Regardless of profile, we advise ordering a sample (or peel-and-stick swatch) so you can judge undertone, sheen, and your room’s light before full purchase.