Peachland
What Peachland Actually Looks Like
Peachland is a soft, ripe peach, warm and clearly tinted rather than pastel or washed out. It sits in a comfortable middle range, light enough to feel airy but saturated enough to read as a real color choice. In daylight it glows gently. In lower light it deepens toward a toasty coral, still clearly peach but noticeably richer.
Peachland Undertones
The undertone here is red-orange, and it is not shy. It reads consistently across most light exposures, which is actually useful because you know what you are getting. Where it can catch you off guard is in side light or when placed next to cool-white trim, which throws the warmth into sharp relief and makes the orange component more obvious. Warm wood floors and cream or ivory trim absorb that undertone naturally and keep the color balanced. Cool gray or bright white surroundings will pull it toward orange.
Where Peachland Works Best
Peachland works well as a full-room color in living rooms, bedrooms, dining rooms, and entries. Dining rooms and entries tend to emphasize the warmth, so the color reads cozier and slightly more intense in those spaces. Bedrooms and living areas with a mix of natural and artificial light let it stay in its sweet spot, approachable and inviting without feeling aggressive. Because it is light enough to bounce daylight, it suits rooms that get reasonable sun without needing to rely on bright white to feel open.
Where to put Peachland
In a living room with a mix of natural light and warm lamp light, Peachland stays true to its peachy character. Lean into the warmth with linen upholstery and natural wood furniture rather than fighting it with cool grays, which will only emphasize the orange.
As a bedroom color it is genuinely comfortable, warm enough to feel cozy at night under incandescent light, soft enough in morning sun to avoid feeling like you woke up inside a fruit bowl. Keep bedding in creams, warm whites, or soft terracottas.
Dining rooms are where Peachland earns its keep. Candlelight and amber-toned pendants deepen it just enough to feel atmospheric and welcoming at the table. Expect it to read warmer here than anywhere else in the house.
An entry in Peachland makes a genuine first impression. The warmth reads immediately, which works in your favor if the adjacent rooms share warm tones. Test it against your flooring material before committing because the orange undertone will interact with whatever is underfoot.
You can carry Peachland onto trim and ceiling for a soft, seamless, enveloping look. This works best in rooms without a lot of cool natural light. Use a semi-gloss on trim so the surfaces read as distinct even at the same hue.
What to Pair With Peachland
No coordinating colors are specified in our database for this color. As a general guide, Peachland pairs well with warm off-whites on trim and ceilings, earthy terracottas or soft sage greens as accents, and natural wood tones in furniture and flooring. The red-orange undertone plays nicely with materials that have warmth already built in.
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Colors that clash with Peachland
Bright or blue-white trim throws Peachland's red-orange undertone into high contrast, making the wall color read more orange and less peach than you intended.
Gray flooring, especially blue-gray or greige with a cool bias, fights the warm undertone and creates a disconnect that makes both surfaces look slightly off.
In rooms where raking side light is the main source, the orange undertone gets amplified along the lit wall and the contrast with a stark white ceiling becomes jarring.
Common questions
The Benjamin Moore color code is 2168-40. The precise LRV is 48.25, placing it squarely in the mid-tone range, light enough to reflect daylight but dark enough to read as a definite color. The hex value renders in our color swatch above.
It depends on what is around it. On its own in warm light it reads as a peachy coral. Next to cool-white trim or in a room with cool gray flooring, the red-orange undertone becomes more prominent and the color can tip toward orange. Test it against your specific trim and floor finish before you commit.
Yes, Benjamin Moore lists Peachland as an interior color only.
You can, but be aware that north light is cooler and can intensify the orange quality of the undertone. It will not turn muddy, but it may read less like soft peach and more like a warm coral in that exposure. Sample it on the actual wall and view it at different times of day before deciding.
