Finding a Valspar Equivalent for Sea Salt

If you love Sherwin Williams Sea Salt but need a Valspar alternative, you are not alone. This is one of the most common cross-brand paint matching searches, whether you are working with a painter who prefers Valspar, your local store does not carry Sherwin Williams, or you simply want to compare prices across brands before committing.

Sea Salt (SW 6204) is a light green with green-gray undertones. A soft, muted green-gray that shifts beautifully with light. Part green, part gray, part blue depending on the moment. It's a chameleon. To find a good Valspar match, we need a color that captures not just the right depth (LRV 63) but also that specific undertone character. That is where Delta E color science comes in.

We calculated the perceptual color distance between Sea Salt and every Valspar color using the CIE2000 Delta E formula, which measures how different two colors look to the human eye. A Delta E under 2 means most people cannot tell the colors apart. Between 2 and 4, you might notice a difference in certain lighting. Above 5, the difference is clearly visible side by side.

The results are decent but not perfect. The closest Valspar option is Coastal Pleasure (VR085A) with a Delta E of 4.8, which is a "good match" level match. Coastal Pleasure captures similar soft coastal vibes but is brighter and bluer. You will want to test a sample before committing, as the difference may be noticeable in certain lighting.

Valspar Matches for Sea Salt

Good match · ΔE 4.8

Coastal Pleasure captures similar soft coastal vibes but is brighter and bluer.

Sea SaltCoastal Pleasure
LRV6375
Hex#CDD6CC#DCE2E1
UndertoneGreen-GrayVery Light Blue
FamilyGreenBlue

Undertone Comparison

Sea Salt has green-gray undertones. A soft, muted green-gray that shifts beautifully with light. Part green, part gray, part blue depending on the moment. It's a chameleon.

Coastal Pleasure has very light blue undertones. An ultra-light blue-gray. Lighter than Gentle Wave, with barely-there blue. Like a cloudless sky reflected in still water.

The undertone difference is worth paying attention to. While they are close in overall appearance, the different undertones mean they may diverge in certain lighting. Sea Salt's green-gray quality may read differently than Coastal Pleasure's very light blue character, especially in rooms with strong directional light or colored accents that could pull out one undertone more than the other. Test a sample in your specific room before committing.

How These Colors Behave in Different Lighting

Sea Salt in Your Room

In bright light, the green comes forward. In dim or north-facing rooms, it reads as a soft blue-gray. Under warm light, it can lean slightly sage. This color changes more than most with lighting.

Coastal Pleasure in Your Room

The blue is whisper-soft. In most rooms, reads as a cool, fresh off-white. The lightest blue-gray Valspar offers.

LRV and Brightness

Sea Salt has an LRV of 63, while Coastal Pleasure has an LRV of 75. That means Coastal Pleasure reflects more light. If you switch from Sea Salt to Coastal Pleasure, the room should feel slightly brighter and more open.

Best Rooms for Sea Salt

Sherwin Williams recommends Sea Salt for: bathroom, bedroom, laundry room, nursery, spa-like spaces. With an LRV of 63, this is a light color that is in the medium-light range, reflecting enough light to keep rooms feeling open while adding more color and depth than a white or off-white. It works well in living rooms, bedrooms, and hallways where you want warmth and character without darkness.

Coastal Pleasure is recommended for: bathroom, nursery, bedroom, hallway, porch ceiling. Both colors are recommended for similar applications, which confirms that this is a practical cross-brand match. You can use Coastal Pleasure in the same rooms you planned for Sea Salt.

Sea Salt in Other Brands

Looking for Sea Salt equivalents in other brands besides Valspar? We have matches across all major paint brands.

Frequently Asked Questions

The closest Valspar match for Sea Salt (SW 6204) is Coastal Pleasure (VR085A) with a Delta E of 4.8, which rates as a "good match" match. Coastal Pleasure captures similar soft coastal vibes but is brighter and bluer. Delta E measures perceptual color distance on a scale where under 2 means nearly identical, 2 to 4 means close with subtle differences, and over 5 means clearly noticeable.

No, they are not identical. Sea Salt is a Sherwin Williams color with green-gray undertones and an LRV of 63. Coastal Pleasure is a Valspar color with very light blue undertones and an LRV of 75. With a Delta E of 4.8, you will likely notice a difference, especially in bright or direct lighting. Paint formulations differ between brands, so even colors with similar values can look slightly different due to pigment concentration, binders, and finish.

With a Delta E of 4.8, the difference is enough that they should not be used on adjacent walls in the same room. You can use them in separate rooms of the same house, but be aware that walking from one room to the other may reveal the difference, especially if the rooms have similar lighting. For the most consistent look, pick one brand for all connected living spaces and reserve the other brand for visually separate rooms like bathrooms or bedrooms behind closed doors.

There are several practical reasons to look for a Valspar equivalent. Price differences between brands can be significant on large projects. Availability matters if your nearest paint store or home center specializes in Valspar. Some painters have strong preferences for one brand's formula based on coverage, dry time, or workability. And if you are touching up existing Valspar work, matching within the same brand gives you the best consistency for seamless results.

Colors on screen are approximations. Your monitor, lighting, and paint finish will affect how colors appear in your space. Always test with a physical paint sample before purchasing.

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