If you’re looking for the freshest bedroom color trends Canada is following in 2025, this guide is for you. Below you’ll find clear, practical advice: which colours are in style, how to use them, easy combos that work in Canadian homes, real-life examples, and where to buy paint and accessories in Canada. Read on for usable ideas — not fluff.
Quick overview: what’s trending in bedrooms (short list)
- Warm, earthy neutrals replacing cool grays.
- Muted greens and nature-linked tones (sage, olive, eucalyptus).
- Rich, moody shades (deep plum, charcoal, navy alternatives).
- Soft pastels & powdery blues for calm, modern bedrooms.
- Two-tone walls and accent ceilings (colour on the ceiling is back).
- Textured finishes (matte paint, plaster, limewash) to add depth. (benjaminmoore.com)
Why bedroom colours matter more in 2025
Bedrooms are no longer just a place to sleep — they’re retreats. After years of minimal white and cool gray, 2025 pushes warmth, comfort and connection to nature. People want colours that support rest but also reveal personality: cosy browns, muted greens, and calm blues that feel grown-up and relaxed. Colour trends also reflect sustainability and wellbeing — low-VOC paints, natural finishes and tones inspired by the outdoors. (Canadian Living)
1 — Warm earthy neutrals: the big move away from cool gray
What it is: Warm beiges, mushroomy greiges, and cinnamon-tinted neutrals are replacing the long reign of cool gray. These tones feel grounding and pair easily with wood furniture and soft textiles.
How to use it:
- Paint all walls a warm neutral for a cozy base.
- Add texture (woven rug, linen duvet, wool throw) to stop the space feeling flat.
- Use slightly darker trims or a warm white to keep contrast gentle.
Real example: A Toronto condo owner swapped cool gray for a warm greige on all walls and introduced walnut bedside tables and a thick wool rug. The result felt warmer and more restful without being “dark.” This approach also helps rooms feel more inviting in winter months. (dulux.ca)
Where to buy the tones: Benjamin Moore (Cinnamon Slate and their 2025 palettes), Dulux 2025 palettes, and BEHR trend lists are good places to start for warm neutrals. Always try samples on your wall. (benjaminmoore.com)
2 — Muted green family: sage, eucalyptus, olive — quietly everywhere
Why it’s popular: Greens evoke nature and calm — perfect for a restful bedroom. In 2025, greens are more muted and greyed (think sage, dusty eucalyptus), so they feel sophisticated rather than loud.
How to use it:
- Use sage as a full-room colour in small bedrooms for a cocooning feel.
- Paint only the headboard wall in olive for a dramatic but restful focal point.
- Pair greens with warm wood tones and brass or black hardware for a modern look.
Real-life tip: Many Vancouver designers recommend sage on bedroom ceilings to bring the sky inside while keeping a cozy footprint on the walls. A thin crown moulding painted warm white ties the look together. (Ateliers Jacob)
Where to buy: Look at Benjamin Moore and Dulux for curated green palettes and their coordinating accent colours. Local paint shops (Benjamin Moore dealers, RONA, Home Depot Canada) will give you sample pots to test. (benjaminmoore.com)
3 — Moody colour choices — plum, deep blue alternatives, charcoal
Trend summary: Not everyone wants neutrals. 2025 still embraces moody colours — but they’re richer and warmer (eg. cinnamon-plum tones) rather than purely cold blues. These colours create dramatic, restful bedrooms when used correctly.
How to use it:
- Use a deep plum or charcoal on the bed wall and balance it with lighter bedding and layered lighting.
- Choose matte finishes to reduce glare and make deep colours feel velvety.
- Anchor with natural textures: wool, wood, rattan to prevent the room from feeling heavy.
Real-life pairing: Benjamin Moore’s 2025 Colour of the Year, Cinnamon Slate (a plum-brown hybrid), is frequently cited in Canadian design roundups as a bedroom-friendly moody choice. It’s dramatic yet cozy. (benjaminmoore.com)
4 — Powdery blues & soft pastels — calm and modern
Why they work: Powder blue and soft pastels offer a refreshing alternative to deep moody hues. They keep a room bright and airy while still feeling intentional.
Where to use them:
- Great for small bedrooms or rooms with limited natural light — they bounce light around.
- Use for a monochrome look (varying tones of blue) or pair with warm creams for balance.
Trend note: Some UK and North American trend pieces point to powder blue replacing darker navy in certain schemes for 2025 — it’s a gentler, more modern mood. (Ideal Home)
5 — Two-tone walls & accent ceilings — color with subtle structure
What it is: 2025 sees more deliberate two-tone treatments — lower wall in a deeper colour, upper wall lighter, or a coloured ceiling for drama.
How to implement:
- Paint lower 1/3 of walls a darker tone (like deep green) and upper two-thirds a warm neutral for balance.
- Paint just the ceiling in a soft blue or muted green to create an intimate “sky” above the bed.
- Use moulding or trim as a natural break between tones.
Practical tip: Keep trim and the bedhead area in warmer whites to frame the mood. Two-tone schemes work well with textured paint or a plaster finish on one portion. (House & Home)
6 — Textured finishes: matte, limewash and soft plaster
Why texture: Texture brings depth without adding colour. 2025 bedrooms favour tactile finishes—matte paints, limewash, or Venetian plaster—to create soft, lived-in walls that read as luxury.
How to use it:
- Choose a matte or eggshell finish for the paint — it reads richer and less reflective.
- Consider a limewash or Venetian plaster on a single accent wall for subtle striations and depth.
- Textured painted ceilings give a cocooning effect when used sparingly.
Where to get help: Many local painters and specialty paint dealers (Benjamin Moore retailers, Dulux dealers) can mix limewash or decorative plasters. Ask for small sample areas before committing. (dulux.ca)
7 — Colour + wellbeing: low-VOC paints and natural pigments
Good to know: In Canada, buyers increasingly choose low-VOC or zero-VOC paints to protect indoor air quality. Colour trends are pairing with these healthier finishes so design and wellbeing go together.
How to shop:
- Look for Benjamin Moore’s Natura or Aura lines, Dulux’s low-VOC options, or BEHR’s certified low-VOC ranges.
- Check product labels and ask stores for VOC data sheets if indoor air is a priority. (benjaminmoore.com)
Local vendor tip: Home Depot Canada, RONA, and independent Benjamin Moore dealers across Canada stock low-VOC options — request sample tins and breathe-easy certifications.
8 — How to pick the right bedroom palette for your home (step-by-step)
- Start with light samples: Paint three 12”x12” patches on different walls — test morning and evening.
- Consider natural light: North-facing rooms benefit from warmer tones; south-facing rooms can handle cooler shades.
- Choose a dominant emotion: Calm (sage), cozy (warm beige), dramatic (plum).
- Add secondary colours via textiles: If unsure, add accent pillows, curtains and rugs before repainting.
- Balance with wood and metal: Warm wood tones soften moody colours; brass or black hardware adds contrast. (Ateliers Jacob)
9 — Real-life colour combos that work in Canadian homes
- Cinnamon Slate (plum-brown) + warm cream + walnut — moody yet cozy. (Benjamin Moore’s 2025 palette.) (benjaminmoore.com)
- Sage green + soft white + oak — biophilic and calm. (Ateliers Jacob)
- Powder blue + warm neutrals + rattan — bright, restful, modern. (Ideal Home)
- Charcoal accent wall + linen bedding + brass lamps — dramatic and sophisticated.
- Dusty rose + warm beige + dark wood — soft, grown-up and unexpected. (Royal Home Painters)
10 — Budget ways to follow 2025 bedroom colour trends
- Paint one wall (headboard wall) instead of the whole room — huge impact for low cost.
- Switch textiles: duvet cover, curtains, cushions in trendy tones — easy seasonal swaps.
- Use peel-and-stick panels or wallpaper in a feature area if you rent.
- Refinish furniture in warm stains rather than replacing it to match new palettes.
Practical example: Swap out duvet cover and two cushions to introduce muted green or plum — the room reads as updated without a paint job.
11 — Local brands & where to buy in Canada (quick list)
- Benjamin Moore Canada — Colour of the Year and curated palettes (look for Cinnamon Slate and coordinating colours). (benjaminmoore.com)
- Dulux Canada — 2025 trend palettes and paint systems. (dulux.ca)
- BEHR / Clare (available via Canadian retailers) — accessible trend palettes and sample programs. (behr.ca)
- Home Depot Canada / RONA / Lowe’s Canada — paints, sample tins and tools.
- Local Benjamin Moore dealers & independent paint stores — great for expert advice and custom mixing.
- House & Home / Style at Home / Canadian Living / Elle Canada — editorial inspiration and trend roundups. (House & Home)
12 — Common mistakes to avoid
- Choosing a colour from a website photo alone — lighting and screens distort colour. Always test.
- Painting an entire small bedroom a very deep colour without enough light — it can feel claustrophobic.
- Matching too many wood tones — aim for 1–2 warm woods to keep the palette coherent.
13 — Final checklist before you paint
- Order sample pots and paint 3 test patches.
- Live with samples for 48–72 hours in different light.
- Confirm finish (matte/eggshell/satin) based on room use and light.
- Buy high-quality brushes/rollers or hire a pro for smooth texture.
- Keep leftover paint for touch-ups — store labelled with date and room name.
Closing — make the trend your own
Trends are helpful, but your bedroom should fit how you sleep and rest. Use the bedroom color trends Canada ideas above as a starting point: pick the mood first (calm, cosy, or dramatic), test real samples, and combine colour with texture and natural materials. A single accent wall, a new duvet and two cushions, or a painted ceiling can change a room’s whole feel without a massive project.