Porsche 911 Touch Up Paint

Porsche 911 Touch Up Paint (213 OEM Colors)

Search for your 911's color

How to Find Your Porsche 911's Color Code

Porsche paint codes are often hard to find. They are usually near the spare tire area, printed on a paper color ID tag that may fall off with time. The owner's manual for some models sometimes lists paint codes. Porsche uses the same color across different models, and the same code may appear under different color names. Codes can be four characters starting with L or three characters, using letters and numbers.

More about Porsche color codes

Porsche 911 Paint Info

The Color Breakdown

Porsche didn't just pick a palette for the 911; they curated a legacy. With 212 recorded colors, they really went for it. You'll find everything from the "Look At Me" vibrance of Lizard Green and Miami Blue to what feels like fifty different ways to say "classy gray," including Chalk, Seal Gray, and Arctic Silver. Whether your car is dressed in the iconic Guards Red or the sophisticated Midnight Blue Metallic, each shade is designed to catch the light at 70 mph-which also makes every little stone chip feel like a personal insult.

What to Watch For

Because the 911 sits lower than a curb's ego, its "frunk" (front trunk) lid and bumper are essentially gravel magnets. You'll likely find most of your battle scars there or on the wide "hips" of the rear fenders where the tires kick up road debris. Finding your paint code is a bit of a scavenger hunt: check the underside of the front hood first. If it's not there, Porsche likes to play hide-and-seek by tucking a white paper ID sticker inside your maintenance booklet or under the carpet in the front luggage compartment. Look for a code that usually starts with an "L" (like L84A) or a three-digit combo.

Driveway Repair Tip

Since so many Porsche colors are high-end metallics like GT Silver or pearlescent like Rainforest Green, your touch-up bottle is your best friend-but only if you wake it up first. Shake that bottle for at least 60 seconds (set a timer!) to make sure the metallic flakes aren't all napping at the bottom. When applying, don't try to fill a deep chip in one go. Think of it like building a tiny skyscraper: apply one thin layer, let it dry for 20 minutes, and then add another. If you're working with a tricky metallic, it requires patience, but building those layers slowly is the secret to making that chip disappear into the horizon.

Porsche 911 Colors by Year

Let us know the year your 911 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.