A wedding color palette is the set of three to five coordinated colors you carry across your whole wedding, from the bridesmaid dresses and suits to the flowers, stationery, and table. Browse 125 curated, on-trend palettes, see each one on your bridesmaids, groomsmen, flowers, and table, then copy the hex codes or save the look.
Oxblood & Mauve
Moody, fall & winter — Oxblood leads on the dresses & tie, with charcoal suits and a dried cranberry pocket-square pop, gathered into an oxblood bouquet.
Primary
Oxblood
#5E1F26
Secondary
Dusty Mauve
#9E7177
Accent
Dried Cranberry
#3D161B
Neutral
Soft Linen
#EDE0DA
Metallic
Old Gold
#B08D57
Suit
Charcoal
#36393F
Design your colors
Tap any piece to assign a color. Flowers only offer colors real blooms come in.
A wedding color palette works best with three to five colors — one or two dominant colors, a supporting accent, a soft neutral like ivory or champagne, and an optional metallic. Fewer than three can feel flat; more than five gets hard to coordinate and starts to look busy.
The simplest way to balance them is the 60-30-10 rule, borrowed from interior design: let your dominant color carry about 60% of the look (the bridesmaid dresses, large florals, and linens), a secondary color about 30% (the suits, ties, and a second bloom), and an accent just 10% (small pops like a pocket square, candles, or stationery). The neutral grounds everything and the metallic adds shine. Keep one color clearly in the lead and the whole day reads intentional rather than scattered.
Every palette here is already built this way — a lead color, a supporting color, an accent, a neutral, and a metallic — so you can see the balance on real bridesmaids, groomsmen, flowers, and a table before you commit.
2026 trending wedding color palettes
The most on-trend palettes for 2026 weddings are grounded and romantic, with soft greens, warm neutrals, and dusty blue leading. These are the eight palettes couples are choosing most right now.
Wedding color palettes by season
Matching your palette to your wedding date keeps the whole day feeling intentional. Spring and summer lean into sage, blush, dusty blue, and peach, while fall and winter favor terracotta, burgundy, emerald, and warm gold.
Spring
Summer
Fall
Winter
Explore wedding colors by shade
Want a deeper dive into one color? Each guide below collects the curated palettes, flower pairings, and season notes for a single wedding color.