Porsche Mission E Touch Up Paint

Porsche Mission E Touch Up Paint (15 OEM Colors)

Search for your Mission E's color

How to Find Your Porsche Mission E'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 Mission E Paint Info

The Color Breakdown

Porsche didn't hold back when they launched the Mission E/Taycan lineage. With 15 colors recorded, they really went for it-balancing the dignified Mahogany Metallic and Volcano Gray against some of the boldest shades in the electric world. If you're sporting Mamba Green Pearl or the headline-grabbing Frozen Berry Metallic, you're driving a rolling piece of art. Even the classics like Carrara White Pearl Tricoat have that high-end shimmer that says, "I'm not just a commuter; I'm a Porsche."

What to Watch For

While these finishes are stunning, modern Porsche paint is notoriously "friendly"-which is a nice way of saying the clear coat is a bit soft and loves to collect character marks. Because the Mission E sits low to the ground, the nose and hood are basically magnets for stone chips. You might also notice faint "tiger stripes" or texture marks on the roof; these often come from the protective film used during shipping.

Before you start, you'll need your paint code. Porsche likes to play a bit of hide-and-seek: check the driver-side door jamb first, but if it's not there, pop the "frunk" (front trunk) and look at the side walls or under the carpet liner. If all else fails, the very first page of your service booklet usually has the code printed on a white sticker.

Driveway Repair Tip

Since so many of these colors-like Enzian Blue Pearl and Dolomite Silver-are packed with metallic flakes and pearls, they require a little extra patience to get that factory glow. Before you open your touch-up bottle, shake it for a full two minutes. You want those heavy metallic particles off the bottom and swimming through the paint so they don't look "clumped" when they hit the car.

When applying, forget the "one and done" approach. Use the tip of your brush to dab tiny, thin layers into the chip. If you build it up slowly, you avoid the dreaded "paint blob" and keep the repair flush with the rest of your beautiful bodywork. It's not about how much paint you use; it's about how carefully you place it.

Porsche Mission E Colors by Year

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

Are we missing something?

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.