Plymouth Barracuda Touch Up Paint

Plymouth Barracuda Touch Up Paint (22 OEM Colors)

Search for your Barracuda's color

How to Find Your Plymouth Barracuda's Color Code

Plymouth paint codes were often hidden on top of the radiator support, hard to spot under engine grease and oil. Later models started putting them on the drivers door jamb. Typical code format appears as BS/GBS, but only the BS is the color code; variants like QBS, PBS, TBS may appear. BS corresponds to Deep Water Blue Pearl Clearcoat. The G in GBS is not part of the code, and newer listings may simply show BS.

More about Plymouth color codes

Plymouth Barracuda Paint Info

The Color Breakdown

Plymouth didn't just paint the Barracuda; they gave it a personality. With 22 recorded colors, they really went for it-ranging from the sophisticated Turbine Bronze Poly to the "look-at-me" Hawaiian Blue and the quintessentially 1960s Avocado Green Poly. Whether yours is a subtle Sable White or a metallic Matador Red, these cars were designed to be noticed, even if they're currently sporting a few battle scars from the last fifty years.

What to Watch For

Before you start, you need the "secret handshake" to find your paint code. On a classic Barracuda, head to the engine bay and look for the Fender Tag-it's a small metal plate screwed to the driver's side inner fender. If it's covered in grime or old overspray, don't scrub it with a wire brush; just do a gentle "pencil rubbing" with a piece of paper to reveal the embossed codes.

In terms of wear, these Mopars are famous for "checking"-little spider-web cracks in the original finish-and paint bubbling near the window gaskets or door handles. If you see a tiny bubble, catch it now with a touch-up pen before it decides to become a structural feature of the car.

Driveway Repair Tip

Most Barracuda colors are "Poly" (that's 1960s-speak for metallic). These metallics are beautiful but they're also heavy, meaning the sparkles like to sink to the bottom of your touch-up bottle while it sits on your shelf.

Give that bottle an extra 60 seconds of vigorous shaking-seriously, count it out-to wake up the metallic flakes. When applying, think "thin and patient." If you drop a giant blob of metallic paint into a chip, the flakes will "flop" and look darker than the rest of the car. Instead, use a tiny dab, let it dry for ten minutes, and then add another. Matching these classic finishes requires patience, but your Barracuda is worth the extra few minutes of your Saturday.

Plymouth Barracuda Colors by Year

Let us know the year your Barracuda was manufactured. We'll eliminate colors that won't match your vehicle.

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We're always expanding our catalog! If you can't find your vehicle, please let us know and we'll do our best to find the color you need.