If you’ve ever looked at a paint color and seen a number labeled “LRV,” you might have wondered what it actually means, and whether it really matters. LRV stands for Light Reflectance Value, and it plays a major role in how a paint color looks in your home.
Let’s break it down simply.
What Does LRV Mean?
Light Reflectance Value (LRV) measures how much visible light a color reflects. It’s measured on a scale from:
- 0 = absolute black (absorbs almost all light)
- 100 = pure white (reflects almost all light)
Most interior paint colors fall somewhere between 5 and 90.
The higher the LRV:
- The brighter the color appears
- The more light it reflects
- The more open a room may feel
The lower the LRV:
- The darker and moodier the space feels
- The more light the walls absorb
Why LRV Matters in Real Homes
LRV isn’t just a technical spec, it affects various aspects of your home like the ones below:
1. How Bright a Room Feels
- High LRV colors help bounce light around darker rooms.
2. How Large or Small a Room Feels
- Lighter colors (higher LRV) can visually expand a space.
- Darker colors (lower LRV) create intimacy and depth.
3. How Paint Looks in Different Lighting
- North-facing rooms receive cooler light.
- South-facing rooms receive warmer, stronger light.
- A high-LRV white may glow in a sunny room but look flat in a dim hallway.
What Is Considered a High, Medium, or Low LRV?
Here’s a simple breakdown homeowners can use:
LRV 70–90
- Light colors and whites
- Best for small or dark rooms
LRV 40–69
- Mid-tone colors
- Balanced and versatile
LRV 10–39
- Deep, rich colors
- Moody and dramatic
LRV 0–9
- Very dark shades
- Accent walls or bold design statements
Example: How LRV Affects White Paint
Not all whites are equal. For example:
- White Dove has an LRV around 83
- Simply White has a higher LRV (brighter)
- Chantilly Lace is even brighter
Even though they’re all “white,” their LRV changes how they feel in a space. That’s why two whites can look dramatically different on your walls.
Does Higher LRV Always Mean Better?
No. Neither is “better” — it depends on:
- Room size
- Natural light
- Ceiling height
- Design goals
- Mood you want to create
A dramatic dining room may benefit from a lower LRV. A basement office may need a higher LRV.
Higher LRV = brighter
Lower LRV = deeper and richer
LRV and Exterior Paint
LRV also matters outside. And it can matter significantly in sunny climates.
Lower LRV exterior colors:
- Absorb more heat
- Can fade differently over time
- Create stronger curb appeal contrast
Higher LRV exterior colors:
- Reflect more sunlight
- Often look cleaner and brighter
What This Means for Your Home
LRV isn’t just a number on a paint chip — it helps predict how a color will behave in your space. Before choosing a paint color:
- Check the LRV.
- Consider your room’s natural light.
- Decide whether you want brighter or moodier.
- Test a sample in multiple lighting conditions.
