Get all the details about one of my favorite paint colors, Benjamin Moore Navajo White (not to be confused with the Sherwin Williams color of the same name).
We’ll show you this color used in our home, at various times of the day, for a complete review that will make your paint color decision oh-so-easy!
Navajo White is a beautiful and rich creamy white that is timeless and fresh.
This color feels a little tricky because Benjamin Moore changed the color code of it a couple times through the years, so you’ll see it noted as OC-95 or 947. Rest assured, it’s the same color.
Another reason this color feels a little tricky is because it changes so much throughout the day. I love it as a rich cream, as well as a more bleached out warm white.
With that in mind, you’ll see the color in varying lighting throughout this post. It’s rich and creamy, with strong yellow undertones – though it never feels like an actual yellow. Want to learn more? Keep reading!
Why You’ll Love this Paint Color
We first used Benjamin Moore Navajo White in the North facing mudroom and mudroom bath. This paint color is frequently used by one of my favorite designers, Phoebe Howard. Don’t miss my favorite Warm Whites!
I studied the spaces she used it in and felt it would be a great fit for all the newfound natural light we had in those spaces. I was right! It’s a stunning color – day and night.
It was our hope when we purchased our current home we would use just 1-2 paint colors for the entire home. However, the lighting is vastly different in different areas of our home, so I used several different shades of cream to best fit each space.
Our sizable well-lit breakfast room needed something a bit warmer than the Sherwin Williams Zurich White we had initially painted it. After the roof leaked not once, twice, but three times (after being replaced!), we decided to finish the room to our initial vision.
Having loved it in the mudroom, we decided to use it in the North-facing breakfast room. It was very pretty in that room, though I liked it best it in daytime rather than evening, where it felt significantly more yellow.
While we’ve since painted that room in a brighter white with less yellow undertones, we’ve kept this color in other spaces, because it’s just right!
Benjamin Moore Navajo White OC-95
You can learn more about our favorite cream color paints here.
Spaces it Works Well In
- Open concept spaces
- Rooms with a significant amount of natural lighting
- North-facing rooms
- This can also be a good color for rooms with that face east in the afternoons (western morning sun).
Makes a Room Feel
- light
- warm
Undertones
- yellow (more so than many of my favorite cream paint colors)
Styles it Fits
- traditional
- country cottage
- farmhouse
Benjamin Moore Navajo White LRV 78.26
The LRV of a color is important, because it showcases how much light is reflected on a simplified scale. Learn more in our guide to What is LRV?
Knowing the LRV of a color can also help you make a more educated comparison!
With an LRV of 78, this color is comparable to Soft Chamois at 78.94, and Sherwin Williams Zurich White, which has an LRV of 76.
Tips
- Paint the ceiling in the same color (can use a different sheen). We learned this lesson the hard way – when we painted our ceiling with a traditional bright white ceiling paint, it made this color feel too yellow in our breakfast nook.
- Paint moulding (like our picture frame moulding or board and batten) in the same paint color, but one sheen higher.
- Want to pair Navajo White with a gray paint color? Just make sure it’s a deeper, more saturated shade for contrast.
Coordinating Colors
- Try this color with a mushroom paint color for some contrast.
- Pair it with Benjamin Moore Hale Navy for a striking style.
- I don’t recommend pairing this color with a sage green paint color, as greens can bring out the yellow in this shade.
- This color works well with dark grays and blacks, especially if you’re updating a cream kitchen, as shown in the Instagram kitchen below.
Trim Colors
Careful with trim for this color, as going with a lighter warm white can easily make Navajo White look more yellow in comparison.
- For trim, try using this same color, just in the same sheen or one sheen higher. I first discovered this color being used as a trim. I like to paint the ceiling the same color as well, otherwise BM Navajo White will read yellow against stark white ceilings.
- Another option is to do Navajo White on your trim, but just a percentage! Try lightening it to 75% or even 50% to ensure the trim coordinates, with just a slight change in depth.
- Or, use Navajo White on your walls, with a deeper color on the trim. Our favorite Greige Paint Colors will coordinate beautifully as a trim color.
- Sherwin Williams Extra White or Benjamin Moore Simply White would give you more contrast. Because they both have a slight hint of yellow undertones, they will coordinate well but showcase the rich depth of cream in Navajo White.
Painting indoors? You can learn all about choosing ceiling paint and trim paint here! You will also find detailed information about using this color in tile paint and furniture paint.
Find all of our paint colors in our paint palette here and keep track of all of yours here. If you use any of them, please return to share your thoughts!
Oh boy! I never realized how hard it was to settle on a color. I am looking to do something throughout the house, maybe a beige. I have Kilim Beige in my bedroom and I love it! I have SW Latte everywhere else, but it seems so dark. I notice the paint color changes throughout the day and the sun coming in from the west in the afternoon makes everything look school bus yellow! Is there a nice beige out there that would stand up to all the sun???
Try Sherwin Williams Realist Beige or Sherwin Williams Accessible Beige. I think you’ll love Realist!
Thank you for all of the information! I love reading your blog! This is the first blog that I have found that really breaks it down and makes it easy. Im now transforming my mudroom/laundry with this color all because of this post and im loving it! 🙂
Oh gosh, thank you!!! I truly appreciate your kindness.
Thank you Julie for the BM Soft Chamois Cream suggestion.
How do think it would go with BM Dill Weed– a green?
I’ve painted my kitchen in Dill Weed. I didn’t think it would be as dark as it seems to me. Oak really changes the color of paints. I’m learning.
Beautiful!
I love the way you broken everything down, undertones etc. I’m spinning in circles trying to find paint without yellow undertones that don’t look grey. I painted my kitchen BM Dill Green but it is to dark and my narrow hallway SW softer tan and it seems to yellow. My home is all Oak- cabinets, doors, crown molding, and time. What I’ve done makes everything seem dark to me. Any help, paint colors, advice would be greatly appreciate. I would love to send you pictures, if you able to help. Thank you so much.
I would use Benjamin Moore Soft Chamois Cream Paint Color – if paint could be a crowd pleaser, this would be it! It’s light, but warm, yet not yellow!
My kitchen walls are Navajo white with lots of natural light, wood cabinets and terra cotta floor.
I now need to repaint my entrance which has the same floor and flows into the kitchen. There is almost no natural light in the entrance, and Navajo white is too dark and yellow. I am looking for a brighter/lighter version of Navajo white. What do you suggest? Chamois white? Linen white? You can see the entrance from the kitchen so must be a smooth transition. Thanks
I had the same issue with our kitchen. I found this cream kitchen cabinet color I had made worked really well in our adjacent room with little natural light. You could also try a sample of Benjamin Moore Soft Chamois Cream Paint Color. Another idea would be to go a few shades down and ask them to decrease the yellow. Whatever you do, I’d love to hear/see photos!