Benjamin Moore’s Color of the Year 2025 Has Already Won Over Designers

Our tip: Go monochrome with it.
Lydia Geisel Avatar
banquette next to wall
Photography by Gieves Anderson; Styling by Julia Stevens

Share

We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs.

Designers are taking two big decisions off their plate: Which color to paint the window trim and ceiling. These days, instead of combining three different shades in a room, they’re choosing one hue and using it everywhere. And while you can do this with any swatch out there, bold colors that have an earthy undertone, like this kitchen’s mustard yellow and this bedroom’s forest green, have proven to work best. Benjamin Moore’s 2025 color of the year, Cinnamon Slate, is also a strong color-drenching contender. 

flowers in front of sofa
Courtesy of Benjamin Moore

The brand, which just announced its entire trending palette for the coming year, describes the paint color as a plum-brown. It’s a fitting choice given it also chose a nuanced, or “in between,” hue for its 2024 color of the year last October, a periwinkle shade dubbed Blue Nova. Other than being fun to try to describe, complex colors like Cinnamon Slate and Behr’s color of the year, a red-brown called Rumors, have the added benefit of changing tones throughout the day as the sunlight shifts. 

Another great place to use Cinnamon Slate? In the kitchen. Benjamin Moore’s dark take on the ambiguous hue sits somewhere between pink and purple and, back in 2021, we called dusty mauve out as an up-and-coming cabinet color. It looks like we were right on track.

purple room with arched door
Courtesy of Benjamin Moore

If you want to get a sense of what the paint color will look like, peep RHONY star Brynn Whitfield’s former galley kitchen, which features a similar mauve tone from Farrow & Ball (she loved it so much she used it in her new apartment’s bedroom). One of the kitchenettes in Hotel Julie also has a striking violet that reminds us of Benjamin Moore’s pick, as does the living room in this London townhouse by K&H Design. Finally, it is purple’s time to shine.

Cinnamon Slate

Benjamin Moore
Lydia Geisel Avatar

Lydia Geisel

Home Editor

Lydia Geisel has been on the editorial team at Domino since 2017. Today, she writes and edits home and renovation stories, including house tours, before and afters, and DIYs, and leads our design news coverage. She lives in New York City.