Most people pick size first and color last. Then they see the building in daylight and wish they’d spent five more minutes on the palette. Color is cheap to change on paper and expensive to regret in steel. Let’s get it right up front. Start with how the building will be used. If it’s a garage next to a light-colored house, you’ll want it to sit quietly. If it’s a shop you actually want people to notice from the road, you’ll do the opposite. Think about three everyday things: Heat : Lighter roofs and walls reflect more sun. Darker tones look sharp but run warmer unless you insulate and ventilate well. Cleaning : Dust, clay, road spray, and pollen show less on medium tans and bronzes. Jet-black looks amazing day one; it just needs occasional rinsing. Neighbors/HOA : Some streets have rules on bright roofs or street-facing colors. Worth a quick check before you fall in love with something bold. Coatings (so you don’t overpay or under-buy) Your panels aren’t just “painted.” They’re factory-finished. SMP (silicone-modified polyester): Good value. Solid fade resistance on neutrals and mid-tones. PVDF (often sold as Kynar®/Hylar®): Costs more, holds color longer, especially on very dark or vivid colors and in high-UV or coastal areas. Finish choice : Matte or light texture hides panel waves better than glossy, especially on long, flat walls in dark colors. If you’re set on charcoal, black, deep green, or bright brand accents, PVDF earns its keep. A simple way to build a palette that doesn’t clash Use this loose ratio: Walls Walls: ~80% of what you see Roof Roof: ~15% Trim / Doors / Wainscot Trim/doors/wainscot: ~5% to frame edges and add snap Pick the wall color first. Then roof (contrast or complement). Trim last to sharpen lines. Light vs. dark in the real world Light walls (white, light stone, light gray): Cooler interior, brighter feel, easy to keep clean if you add a darker 3–4 ft wainscot where the mower throws rocks and trucks leave scuffs. Dark walls/roofs (charcoal, black, dark bronze, evergreen): Modern and punchy. Plan for insulation, ridge/soffit ventilation, and consider matte to reduce glare and hide oil-canning. Wainscot: small add-on, big favor to your walls That lower band gets the abuse. A darker wainscot hides splash, door dings, and gravel hits. It also makes the building look “finished” without spending much. Easy two-tone that works almost anywhere: Light walls + darker wainscot + darkest trim. Combos that rarely miss (Roof / Walls / Trim) (Names vary by supplier; treat these as directions, not exact paint chips.) Modern shop: Black roof / White walls / Charcoal trim. Classic barn: Evergreen roof / Barn Red walls / White trim. Warm residential: Dark Bronze roof / Sandstone walls / Clay trim (Bronze wainscot optional). Coastal: Galvalume or Silver roof / Light Gray walls / White trim. Commercial pop: Black roof / Charcoal walls / Silver trim with a Royal-blue entry door. Match the palette to your climate Hot & sunny : Light roofs, light-to-medium walls, proper insulation. Coastal/salty: Avoid high-gloss darks unless PVDF; rinse quarterly. Silver/galvalume roofs do well. Snow belt: Medium walls hide splash; darker roofs speed thaw. Red clay/dust: Sandstone/tan walls with bronze/clay wainscot keeps the base looking clean. If this is for a business, tie it to the brand without getting loud Grab two colors from your logo: one subtle (trim or doors), one accent at the entry or canopy. Keep walls neutral so signage stands out. Check local sign/paint rules before you finalize. Practical notes that save headaches later Order real swatches. Look at them outside—morning and afternoon. Phone screens lie. Same batch. Panels, trim, and doors should come from the same color lot to avoid tiny mismatches. Fasteners matter. Ask for paint-matched screws and closures. Little dots ruin clean lines. Plan for add-ons. Save your exact color codes now so a future lean-to or porch actually matches. Touch-ups are tiny. Brush small nicks only; painting big patches looks off and can void appearance claims. Sample palettes by use case Garages & workshops Light Gray walls, Charcoal roof, Black trim (add Black wainscot for a tougher base). White walls, Black roof, Charcoal trim (clean, high-contrast). Barns & Agriculture Barn Red walls, White trim, Evergreen roof (timeless). Pebble Beige walls, Dark Bronze roof/trim (low-maintenance on ranch roads). Commercial & retail Charcoal walls, Black roof, Silver trim, one strong brand accent at the door. Sandstone walls, Bronze roof, Clay trim (warm and professional). Maintenance (so the color stays your color) Twice-a-year rinse is plenty for most. Go quarterly in coastal or heavy-pollen areas. Use mild soap and a soft brush for problem spots. Keep vines off the panels; trapped debris and shade age finishes early. Quick checklist before you order Wall tone chosen first, then roof, then trim (and wainscot if needed). Finish picked (matte/texture for dark or long flats). SMP vs. PVDF decided based on color intensity and environment. Swatches approved outdoors; hardware paint-matched; batch/lot noted. Any HOA or city approvals cleared. See Your Colors Live in the 3D Estimator Picking colors is easy when you can see them on the building. Load the 3D estimator, swap roof/wall/trim, and add a darker wainscot where the scuffs happen. You can spin the model, check it in full view, and save a shareable link for the team. How to try color combos in 60 seconds: Open the estimator and select your state/zip (codes & wind/snow loads change by location). Choose your size and roof style. Click Colors → test Roof / Wall / Trim / Wainscot. Try a matte or darker trim if you’re going bold on the walls. Add doors & windows to see how the frames read with your trim color. Hit Save & Share to copy the link (great for approvals). When it looks right, save a quote, and then we will contact you back with more details. Quick recipes to try: Modern shop: Black roof / White walls / Charcoal trim (+ Black wainscot). Classic barn: Evergreen roof / Barn Red walls / White trim. Low-maintenance ranch: Dark Bronze roof / Sandstone walls / Clay trim (+ Bronze wainscot). Coastal clean: Galvalume roof / Light Gray walls / White trim. Pro tips: View your scheme at two angles (front and eave), then save two links: one with light walls + dark trim, one with medium walls + bronze wainscot. Compare them on your phone outdoors—morning and late afternoon—to see real-world contrast. FAQs Will a black roof make the building too hot? It’ll run warmer. Pair it with roof insulation and ventilation. If comfort is top priority in a hot climate, choose a lighter or reflective roof. Can I match my house? You can usually get close. Share your paint names or a physical chip; your dealer will bring the nearest steel swatch. Aim for “near match,” not auto-body perfect. What if I plan to expand later? Save the exact manufacturer, color names/codes, and finish today. Future you will be grateful. Try your scheme before you buy Load a 3D configurator, spin the building in daylight, swap roof/wall/trim, add a wainscot, and check it against your house or shop. Five minutes there can save years of “I wish we’d gone lighter.” For more details and information regarding metal building Color Options Call at (800) 691-5221 Call Now ×