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7 Front-Door Paint Colors That Actually Look Good All Winter

Some front-door colors look great in spring and sad in January. Winter light is harsher, everything outside is bare, and certain colors end up looking faded or cold. These shades usually still look good when the trees lose their leaves and the porch is covered in boots instead of flowers.

1. Deep, warm navy

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A navy with a little warmth in it works on brick, siding, and stone. It looks classic with a wreath at Christmas and still feels right in February with nothing but a doormat and a porch light. It’s dark enough to look intentional, but not so black it feels heavy.

2. Rich charcoal with brown undertones

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Straight, cool gray can feel flat in winter. A deep charcoal that leans slightly brown or taupe plays nicer with dead grass, bare trees, and warm interior light. It pairs well with brass hardware and looks good with both white and off-white trim.

3. Forest green that isn’t too bright

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Deep green doors can go either way. The ones that work year-round are more pine or forest than lime or emerald. They feel grounded against winter landscapes and look sharp with natural wood, stone, or brick. Add a simple wreath and it looks seasonal without screaming “holiday.”

4. Classic black that hides scuffs

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A true black door with the right sheen looks good in every season and with almost any siding. And honestly, it hides fingerprints, scuffs, and kid dirt better than light colors. If you’re tired and busy and don’t want to baby the door, black is hard to beat.

5. Warm red with a little depth

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Not candy-cane red—more like a brick red or oxblood. It’s cheerful enough for Christmas but still looks grounded in January and March. On a simple porch, a warm red door can carry the whole front of the house without a ton of extra decor.

6. Soft greige that pulls the porch together

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If you like things quieter, a warm greige door that blends with your trim and siding can make the whole front look more expensive. It’s especially good if your porch has a lot going on already—busy brick, stone, or heavy railing—because it calms everything down.

7. Deep teal that reads grown-up, not trendy

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Teal can go wrong fast if it’s too bright. A deeper teal with more gray in it holds up better in winter light and doesn’t fight your Christmas decorations. It still feels fun, but it doesn’t look like you picked it off a trend board last week. Pair it with a simple wreath and clean hardware, and it’ll carry you through every season.

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