About Valspar Swiss Coffee

Swiss Coffee (VR086E) is a off-white from Valspar's collection with an LRV of 83 and warm cream undertones. Valspar's Swiss Coffee is a warm, creamy off-white with yellow-cream undertones. Like its BM and Behr namesakes, it delivers a cozy warmth that avoids looking stark while still reading as a white in most rooms.

As a very light color, Swiss Coffee reflects a significant amount of light back into the room, making it an excellent choice for spaces where you want maximum brightness. It works as both a wall color and a trim or cabinet color, and it is light enough to use throughout an entire home without any room feeling closed in or dark. The high LRV means it will look bright even in rooms with limited natural light, though the undertones may shift depending on your light source.

Light Reflectance Value (LRV)

Swiss Coffee has an LRV of 83, placing it in the very light range on the 0-to-100 scale. LRV measures the percentage of visible light a color reflects. A pure black has an LRV of 0 and a pure white has an LRV of 100. Understanding a color's LRV helps you predict how it will feel in your space: higher LRV means brighter and more spacious, lower LRV means cozier and more intimate.

0 (Pure Black)83 · Swiss Coffee100 (Pure White)

Undertone Analysis

Swiss Coffee has warm cream undertones. Undertones are the subtle background colors that become visible in different lighting conditions. Even colors that look "neutral" in the store will reveal their undertones once they are on your walls and interacting with natural light, artificial light, and the colors around them.

Valspar's Swiss Coffee is a warm, creamy off-white with yellow-cream undertones. Like its BM and Behr namesakes, it delivers a cozy warmth that avoids looking stark while still reading as a white in most rooms. Warm undertones like these pair naturally with other warm elements: honey-toned wood floors, brass and gold hardware, cream-colored textiles, and warm-toned furnishings. They can clash with strongly cool elements like icy blue accents or chrome fixtures, though the effect depends on the strength of the undertone.

Lighting Behavior

The cream warmth is consistent across lighting conditions. In south-facing rooms, the yellow undertone becomes more visible. In north-facing rooms, it reads as a warm neutral off-white. Under warm incandescent bulbs, the cream deepens. Under cool LEDs, it stays balanced and inviting.

Every paint color looks different depending on the light source in your room. South-facing rooms get warm, direct sunlight that brings out yellow and warm undertones. North-facing rooms get cool, indirect light that emphasizes blue and gray undertones. East-facing rooms are bright and warm in the morning, cooler in the afternoon. West-facing rooms are the opposite: cool morning, warm afternoon. Incandescent and warm LED bulbs push colors warmer, while cool-white LEDs and fluorescent tubes push colors cooler. To avoid surprises, always test Swiss Coffee with a physical sample on your actual wall, and observe it at different times of day before committing.

Best Rooms for Swiss Coffee

Valspar recommends Swiss Coffee for: whole house, living room, bedroom, trim, cabinets.

Swiss Coffee is versatile enough to use as a whole-house color, providing a consistent, cohesive look as you move from room to room. Whole-house colors need to work in multiple lighting conditions and alongside various furnishings, which is why a balanced LRV (83) and manageable undertones are essential. Swiss Coffee handles this well. As a trim color, Swiss Coffee provides a clean frame for wall colors without the starkness of a pure white. It softens the transition between wall and trim while still reading as "white" in most contexts. On kitchen and bathroom cabinets, Swiss Coffee offers a fresh, clean look. Cabinet colors are seen up close and under task lighting, so the undertones matter even more than on walls.

Closest Matches in Other Brands

Find the closest equivalent to Valspar Swiss Coffee from other paint brands. Matches are calculated using Delta E (CIE2000), the industry standard for measuring perceptual color difference.

Benjamin Moore Matches

Swiss Coffee OC-45
Excellent match · ΔE 1.8

Nearly identical. All three brand versions of Swiss Coffee are remarkably similar, making this one of the easiest cross-brand swaps in paint.

View all Benjamin Moore matches →

Sherwin Williams Matches

Dover White SW 6385
Good match · ΔE 3

Dover White captures a similar warm cream quality. Close but Dover White may be slightly more yellow.

View all Sherwin Williams matches →

Frequently Asked Questions

The closest Sherwin Williams match for Valspar Swiss Coffee is Dover White (SW 6385) with a Delta E of 3, which rates as a "good match" match. Dover White captures a similar warm cream quality. Close but Dover White may be slightly more yellow. A Delta E under 2 means most people cannot tell the colors apart, while 2 to 4 means the difference is subtle.

Swiss Coffee has warm cream undertones. Valspar's Swiss Coffee is a warm, creamy off-white with yellow-cream undertones. Like its BM and Behr namesakes, it delivers a cozy warmth that avoids looking stark while still reading as a white in most rooms. Undertones become most visible when the color is on a large surface like a wall, and they shift depending on the light source in your room. Always test with a physical sample in your specific space to see how the undertones interact with your lighting, flooring, and furnishings.

Swiss Coffee (VR086E) has a Light Reflectance Value (LRV) of 83, which puts it in the very light range. LRV measures the percentage of light a color reflects on a scale from 0 (pure black) to 100 (pure white). At 83, this is a light color that will keep rooms feeling bright and open.

Swiss Coffee leans warm. The warm cream undertones give it a cozy, inviting quality. It pairs naturally with other warm elements like wood tones, brass hardware, and cream textiles. In north-facing rooms, the warmth is especially welcoming.

Colors on screen are approximations. Monitor settings, lighting, and screen calibration affect how colors appear. Always test with a physical paint sample before purchasing.

Color data sourced from manufacturer specifications. Match calculations use Delta E (CIE2000) computed from Lab color space conversion. Last reviewed: March 22, 2026.