Georgia Peach
What Georgia Peach Actually Looks Like
Georgia Peach is a saturated coral pink that sits squarely between peach and rose. It is not a pale blush and not a loud orange red. Think of a ripe peach flesh with a noticeable pink lean, rendered at medium depth. In bright natural light it reads lively and warm. In dim or north-facing light it can settle into a dustier, more muted coral.
Georgia Peach Undertones
The color carries clear orange and pink undertones working together. The orange component gives it warmth and keeps it from reading purely as a cool pink, while the pink component prevents it from tipping into a true terra cotta. In rooms with a lot of warm wood tones or honey-colored floors, the orange undertone can come forward noticeably.
Where Georgia Peach Works Best
Georgia Peach works well in spaces where you want genuine color commitment, not a hint of blush. A dining room or powder room can carry it with ease because those rooms are typically seen in short visits and artificial lighting, which flatters warm corals. A bedroom works if you genuinely love the color, but be aware that a mid-tone saturated pink lives large on four walls. It is an interior-only paint.
Where to put Georgia Peach
A small powder room is one of the best places for Georgia Peach. The space is compact, so the saturation feels intentional rather than overwhelming, and guests experience it briefly. Pair white trim and a simple mirror to keep things grounded.
Warm coral tones have a long history in dining rooms because they flatter skin tones and look good by candlelight or warm bulb light in the evening. Georgia Peach holds up well in that context. Keep the ceiling a warm white to avoid the room feeling enclosed.
Use Georgia Peach on one focal wall behind the bed rather than all four sides if you are uncertain about full commitment. A single feature wall lets you live with the color without it dominating every surface.
A foyer or hallway benefits from the welcoming quality of this coral pink. Because these spaces are transitional, a bold warm color signals arrival and energy without you having to sit inside it all day.
What to Pair With Georgia Peach
No coordinating colors are currently listed in our database for Georgia Peach 031. In general, the color pairs well with warm creamy whites on trim, soft warm greiges on adjacent walls, and natural materials like rattan, unfinished oak, or terracotta tile.
You Might Also Like
Colors that clash with Georgia Peach
If an adjacent room or hallway is painted in a cool gray or slate blue, Georgia Peach will look garish at the transition. The warm orange-pink and cool gray read as mismatched rather than contrasting.
Purple undertones in furniture or textiles can make the pink in Georgia Peach look muddied and uncertain, pulling the color in a direction it was not designed to go.
A stark, blue-white trim paint will emphasize any coolness in the room and make Georgia Peach look slightly orange by contrast, which can feel unintentional.
Common questions
The precise LRV is 46.61, which puts it in the middle range, not dark but not light either. On four walls in a small room with limited natural light it will feel immersive and color-forward. In a well-lit room it reads as bold but comfortable. If you want less intensity, test the color in your specific lighting before committing.
Yes, Benjamin Moore lists Georgia Peach 031 as an interior color only.
An eggshell finish is a reliable choice for most living spaces because it has just enough sheen to be wipeable without reflecting so much light that the color shifts noticeably throughout the day. In a bathroom or kitchen, a satin finish adds durability. Flat finishes will make the color look softer and more matte but are harder to clean.
The Benjamin Moore color code is 031. The hex value and RGB breakdown display in the color specification block on this page.
