Bath Salts
What Bath Salts Actually Looks Like
Bath Salts is a pale, misty green that sits in that quiet zone between green and gray. It reads as a cool, washed-out sage in most rooms, light enough to feel almost like a neutral but clearly green when you hold it next to a true white or a warm beige. It is not a bold color. It is the kind of green that lets furniture and textiles do the talking while still giving a room a distinct, settled mood.
Bath Salts Undertones
The hex value places this color firmly in cool-green territory, with blue pulling through the green base. In strong natural light it can brighten toward a clean celadon. In lower or north-facing light it may quiet down and lean slightly gray-green. There is very little warmth here, so rooms that already run cool should be considered carefully before committing.
Where Bath Salts Works Best
This color is a natural fit for bathrooms, where its cool, spa-like quality reinforces a sense of cleanliness and calm. It also works well in bedrooms and reading nooks where a relaxed, restful atmosphere is the goal. Because it is light and reflective, it can handle smaller rooms without crowding them. Use it in spaces that get at least some natural light so the green reads clearly rather than going flat.
Where to put Bath Salts
This is the most intuitive room for Bath Salts. The cool green reinforces the feeling of clean water and fresh air, and the high light reflectance keeps tiled or smaller bathrooms from feeling dim. Pair with bright white fixtures and warm wood or brass hardware to keep the space from feeling clinical.
In a bedroom, Bath Salts creates a genuinely restful backdrop. It is light enough not to overwhelm, and the cool green tone signals calm rather than energy. Layer in warm-toned textiles, such as oatmeal linen or soft terracotta, to balance the coolness and add visual interest.
A cool, pale green can help reduce visual fatigue during long work sessions. Bath Salts is subtle enough not to compete with screens or task lighting, and its relatively high reflectance means the room stays bright without feeling stark.
What to Pair With Bath Salts
No Benjamin Moore coordinating colors were specified for Bath Salts 624 in our database, so pairings here are drawn from general color principles. Crisp whites on trim will sharpen the green and keep it from feeling washed out. Warm wood tones in furniture or flooring add contrast and prevent the room from reading too cold. Soft linen, natural cotton, and stone textures sit comfortably alongside it.
You Might Also Like
Colors that clash with Bath Salts
Bath Salts is a cool green, and placing it adjacent to warm yellows or oranges in an open floor plan creates a jarring temperature clash that makes both colors look off.
If the room already has cool north light, cool-toned flooring, and chrome or nickel fixtures, Bath Salts can tip the space from calm into cold and flat.
Common questions
Bath Salts has an LRV of 76.84, which puts it firmly in the light category. That level of reflectance means it will not darken a small room, and in spaces with decent natural light it will feel open and airy. In a windowless room, though, the green undertone can go a bit flat, so consider how much daylight the space actually gets.
It can, but tread carefully. Cool tile plus a cool green can read as sterile rather than spa-like. Balance it with warm-toned grout, wood accents, or aged brass fixtures to keep the room feeling approachable.
A satin or semi-gloss finish is practical for bathroom walls because both handle moisture and allow for easy cleaning. Satin gives a softer, more muted look while semi-gloss adds a bit more sheen and makes the green appear slightly brighter.
Yes. Bath Salts 624 is available in both interior and exterior finishes through Benjamin Moore.
