Color Palette Generator

Generate and export beautiful color palettes

How to use this tool
  1. Select generation mode: Choose from Random, Monochrome, Complementary, Analogous, or Triadic.
  2. Lock colors: Find a color you like and click the lock icon so it stays when you generate a new palette.
  3. Generate: Keep clicking the Generate button to explore new cohesive color schemes.
  4. Copy codes: Click directly on the color or the hex/rgb values to copy them to your clipboard.
  5. Export palette: Use the export menu to download your colors as JSON, CSS, or a simple text list.
Example

Sample Complementary Palette:

#3b82f6 | rgb(59, 130, 246)

#1d4ed8 | rgb(29, 78, 216)

#f5f3ff | rgb(245, 243, 255)

#f59e0b | rgb(245, 158, 11)

#d97706 | rgb(217, 119, 6)

Frequently asked questions

color palette generator

How the color palette generator helps

Use the color palette generator to explore combinations for websites, dashboards, brand concepts, charts, social graphics, and quick design mockups. A palette helps keep color decisions consistent instead of choosing a new shade every time a button, label, alert, or background is needed.

Utility Tally tools are built for quick, practical workflows: prepare the input, review the result, copy or download the output, and move on without creating an account. The guidance below explains how to use this page responsibly, what the result means, and which related tools or guides can help with the next step.

For best results, start with sample or non-sensitive data when you are learning a tool, then move to real work only after you understand the output. If the result will be sent to a client, imported into software, printed, published, or used in a security-related workflow, take an extra minute to verify formatting, totals, links, spelling, privacy, and destination requirements.

How to use it
  1. Generate or choose a starting color.
  2. Review the palette as a group rather than as isolated swatches.
  3. Copy the color values you want to test in your design or code.
  4. Check contrast for text and interactive elements before publishing.
  5. Save the final palette with usage notes for future consistency.
How it works

Color palettes are often built by adjusting hue, saturation, and lightness relationships. Related colors can feel cohesive, while contrast in lightness and saturation helps create hierarchy. The final palette still needs practical testing because color perception changes with surrounding colors and screen conditions.

The result should be treated as a working output, not a substitute for professional review where tax, security, accessibility, legal, accounting, or production data requirements apply. Check the destination system, final format, and any local rules before relying on the result.

Practical tips

Use fewer colors for interface work than for illustration or mood boards.

Reserve strong accent colors for important actions or states.

Check text contrast separately because a nice palette can still be hard to read.

Document which colors are for backgrounds, text, borders, alerts, and buttons.

Color Palette Generator FAQ