# Home Office Paint Colours: Best Shades for Small Office Walls
> Best home office paint colors (UK: colours) for small rooms — wall colour combinations, light neutrals, calming greens, and warm whites that feel open and focused.
**Category:** Small Office Ideas  
**Primary keyword:** home office paint colours  
**Published:** 2026-05-21  
**Last reviewed:** 2026-05-24  
**Parent pillar:** small-home-office-ideas  
**Canonical URL:** https://smallhomeofficeideas.site/home-office-paint-colours/  
**Markdown URL:** https://smallhomeofficeideas.site/home-office-paint-colours/index.md
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Paint colour in a small home office is not just aesthetic — it affects how the room reads on camera, how much the space feels like a functional work environment, and how much eye strain you experience working at a screen for hours. A light, calm wall colour is the single highest-impact change you can make for under £30. For the full range of small home office ideas including layout, plants, decor, and lighting, see the [small home office ideas guide](/small-home-office-ideas/).

This guide covers the colour properties that matter for a home office, specific shade recommendations by light level, and how to choose a colour that works both in person and on video calls.

## What makes a paint colour work in a home office

Not all light colours work equally. The properties to check before choosing:

**Light reflectance value (LRV):** A number from 0 (pure black) to 100 (pure white) representing how much light the paint reflects. For a small office, aim for LRV 55 or above. Higher LRV colours make the room feel larger and require less artificial light. Most paint brands include LRV in product specs.

**Colour temperature:** Warm undertones (yellow, red, cream) feel cosy and calm. Cool undertones (blue, green, grey) feel focused and clean. For video calls, warm neutrals tend to read better on camera than cool greys, which can look flat.

**Saturation:** Highly saturated colours — bright blue, deep green, rich red — absorb more light and add visual noise for sustained work. Lower saturation versions of the same colours (dusty sage, soft slate, muted terracotta) add character without the drawbacks.

## Best paint colours for a small home office

## By light level: which colour to choose

The right colour depends primarily on how much natural light the room receives. Paint colours look different under daylight, overcast sky light, and artificial light — always test with a sample before committing.

**North-facing or low-natural-light rooms:**
Warm whites and off-whites are the most reliable. They reflect as much artificial light as possible and prevent the room feeling cave-like. Avoid cool greys in north-facing rooms — they amplify the cold quality of north light. Pale yellows (very muted, LRV 70+) can add warmth without looking garish.

**South or west-facing bright rooms:**
These rooms can support more colour. Pale sage, soft blue-grey, and greige all work well because the strong natural light prevents them from feeling heavy. These rooms can also handle a slightly lower LRV — down to LRV 45 — without feeling dark.

**Shared rooms (bedroom or living room with an office zone):**
Match the office wall to the rest of the room. Introducing a different colour just for the desk zone creates an awkward visual break. Instead, choose the main room colour for the walls and use desk accessories (a coloured lamp, a plant, a desk mat) to define the work zone.

## Colour for video call backgrounds

The wall directly behind your head in a video call is the most-viewed surface in your home office. A few principles:

- **Avoid pure white** — overexposure risk if your camera auto-adjusts exposure for your face; a bright white wall can make you appear darker and flatten your face
- **Off-white or light greige** works better than pure white — it gives the camera something to calibrate against without blowing out
- **Sage green or muted blue-grey** photograph well and look professional without being sterile
- **Avoid highly saturated colours** — bright blue, deep red, and rich yellow all create a colour cast on your face in video
- **Dark accent wall behind the chair** creates contrast and depth — works well if the room has enough light so your face is not lost in shadow

For positioning and lighting alongside wall colour, see [video call lighting setup](/video-call-lighting-setup/).

## How to choose between similar shades

Testing is the only reliable method. Paint brand sample pots exist for this reason. Apply a 30 × 30 cm test patch directly on the wall and view it:

- At different times of day (morning, midday, evening artificial light)
- Sitting at your desk in your normal position
- With the monitor on (the blue light affects how warm or cool the wall reads)
- On camera (open your laptop camera or video call app and see how the colour reads)

Never choose a paint colour from a small chip in a paint store under fluorescent lighting — the chip looks nothing like a wall-sized area in your actual room under your actual light.

## Accent walls behind the desk

A dark accent wall directly behind the desk chair is the one situation where low-LRV colours work in a small home office. The reasons:

- It creates a defined visual frame for the work zone
- It reads well on video calls — dark wall behind you creates contrast that makes your face read clearly
- Only one wall is affected, so the room's overall light level is not significantly reduced
- It can give a small desk setup a sense of purpose and gravitas

Popular accent wall choices for home offices: dark blue (navy, denim blue, deep slate), deep forest green, and charcoal. All three photograph well and look intentional on video calls.