Bermuda Pink
What Bermuda Pink Actually Looks Like
Bermuda Pink is a light, airy pink that sits closer to peach than to a true rosy pink. It reads as warm and approachable on the wall, never loud or candy-like. In rooms with strong natural light it stays crisp and cheerful. In dimmer or north-facing rooms it can settle into a slightly more muted, dusty tone, though it keeps its warmth either way.
Bermuda Pink Undertones
The hex and RGB values point clearly to peach and coral undertones rather than a cool or bluish pink. There is more orange in this color than most people expect before they put it on the wall. That warmth is what keeps it from feeling babyish, but it also means very warm artificial lighting can push it toward salmon territory.
Where Bermuda Pink Works Best
Bermuda Pink works well in interiors where you want softness without going neutral. It suits bedrooms, bathrooms, and dining rooms where a flattering, warm glow on walls is a genuine asset. It is an interior-only color. Because its LRV is on the higher end, it does not make a space feel smaller or darker, so you can use it freely even in modestly sized rooms.
Where to put Bermuda Pink
The warmth and relatively high LRV make Bermuda Pink an easy choice for a bedroom. It bounces light around without overwhelming the space, and the peachy tone is genuinely flattering under low evening light, which is when most people spend time in the room.
In a bathroom with incandescent or warm LED lighting, Bermuda Pink leans into its salmon-peach quality in a way that works well. Be aware that cool daylight bulbs will neutralize the warmth and can make it look washed out. Test a large sample before committing.
A dining room is a natural fit. The color is warm and energizing without being aggressive, and it creates a welcoming mood at the table. Candlelight or warm pendant lighting will deepen and enrich the peachy tone in the evening.
Bermuda Pink reads soft and gentle enough for a nursery but its peachy quality keeps it from feeling overly gendered or cliche. It ages reasonably well as a child grows, especially paired with warm wood tones and natural materials.
What to Pair With Bermuda Pink
No coordinating colors are listed in our database for this color at this time. As a general guide, Bermuda Pink pairs well with warm whites, soft terracottas, dusty mauves, and earthy neutrals. Crisp cool whites can make the peach undertone look more orange by contrast, so lean toward creamy options.
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Colors that clash with Bermuda Pink
If Bermuda Pink shares a sight line with a cool or blue-gray in an adjacent room, the contrast can make the pink read more orange and the gray look slightly purple. Neither color looks its best.
A stark, cool bright white on trim and moldings will throw the peach undertone of Bermuda Pink into sharp relief, making the wall color look more orange-salmon than intended.
Because Bermuda Pink already carries orange in its undertone, pairing it with heavily orange or terracotta furnishings in large amounts can tip the whole room too warm and muddy.
Common questions
Its LRV is 71.36, which places it firmly in the light range. That means it reflects a good amount of light and will not darken a room. It is a solid choice if you want color on the walls without sacrificing brightness.
No. Benjamin Moore lists Bermuda Pink as an interior color only, so it is not formulated or recommended for exterior surfaces.
For bedrooms and living areas an eggshell finish gives a gentle sheen that holds up to cleaning without being too reflective. In bathrooms a satin finish adds moisture resistance. Flat or matte finishes work in low-traffic areas if you want the softest, most muted look, but they show marks more easily.
Yes, noticeably. Under warm incandescent or warm LED light the peachy undertone deepens and the color feels richer. Under cool daylight bulbs or in north-facing rooms with flat white light, it can look softer and more washed out. Always test a large painted sample in the actual room under your specific lighting before you buy full gallons.
