2021 Automotive Color Popularity Report

Two-tone finishes making a comeback, personalized colors and other emerging trends are happening

The rise of two-tones finishes reflects a consumers’ desire for personalization. Considerable progress in color science and application technologies provide an opportunity to bring these styling choices to the masses in a more practical and sustainable manner.

“It’s fitting that two-tones finishes would come back into favor during this time when we as a society are looking to the past,” said Misty Yeomans, PPG color styling manager, automotive OEM, Americas. “Along with special-order colors, tinted clearcoats, tri-coats and matte finishes, two-tone finishes better reflect vehicle owners’ individual preferences and personalities.”

Two-tone finishes were common in the 1950s and 1960s

Despite their popularity, conventional color development and application processes made them increasingly impractical in mass production environments. The traditional process for achieving a two-tone finish requires labor-intensive masking of the vehicle body and multiple runs through the paint shop. PPG has helped global OEMs overcome this challenge through a breakthrough application technology that produces crisp paint edges without the use of masking and other time-intensive steps.

PPG’s precision application process can reduce paint shop application time by approximately 50 minutes per two-tone vehicle

It supports customer sustainability goals by reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and eliminating the need for energy-intensive air-filtering systems to handle overspray. Color personalization is also enabled through PPG advancements in digital color styling, which dramatically reduces the time to market for new colors.

Other trends highlighted in the PPG report are rising popularity of grays, blues, greens and violets, with vibrant new colors more likely to debut on sporty models rather than SUVs and pickups.

Green, with its connection to nature, sustainability and inclusiveness, remains strong worldwide. This will continue to be an important color space for the automotive industry.

“Green is also seen as a ’traffic light’ color, acting as a signal for everyone to go forward – it's safe and we can trust this color,” Yeomans said. “Green has two directions. One is sporty, fresh and vivid. The other is organic and darker, with deeper tones developed or designed as dark luxury greens yet still with a sporty and fresh attitude.”

PPG also sees increased emphasis on taking a holistic approach to vehicle styling

From a global perspective, white (35% of vehicle builds) and black (18%) continue to be the predominant choices of car buyers, while demand for grays has increased 2% in each of the past two years. Blues remain strong at 8%, while reds dropped to 7% of builds. This was led by a 1.5% drop among North American consumers. PPG report shows two-tone finishes, personalization gaining favor among car buyers – 2

“We consider all surfaces and features of the vehicle as part of our color styling process,” said Yeomans. “As one example, we’re seeing increased use of specialized wheel coatings and colors to complement the styling cues of the vehicle body.”

PPG's unique position as a global color leader enables the company to observe and translate emerging color trends for customers' applications – from consumer goods to automotive color and residential to commercial and industrial design. Using this fact-based approach, PPG color experts help customers generate color ideas based on cultural and demographic trends. The resulting color technologies coat a wide range of materials and surfaces, shorten development cycles and bring more desirable and better-looking products to market faster.