Volkswagen Rabbit Touch Up Paint

Volkswagen Rabbit Touch Up Paint (88 OEM Colors)

Search for your Rabbit's color

How to Find Your Volkswagen Rabbit's Color Code

Volkswagen paint codes can be difficult to find. Most are located around the spare tire area, printed on a paper color id tag that is guaranteed to fall off and disappear just when needed; not on a metal plate in the driver door jamb. Typical format: LD7X/2R (two codes: LD7X and 2R). LD7X corresponds to Platinum Gray Metallic Clearcoat; 2R is also used for the same color. Really old Volkswagen can be nearly impossible to figure out.

More about Volkswagen color codes

Volkswagen Rabbit Paint Info

The Color Breakdown

The Volkswagen Rabbit didn't just scurry onto the scene; it did so in a technicolor dreamcoat. With 88 recorded colors over its lifespan, Volkswagen really went for it. We're talking about everything from the punchy, iconic Miami Blue and the fiery Mars Red to the more sophisticated Reflex Silver Metallic. Whether your Rabbit is a vintage "bunny" from the 70s or a punchy 2000s hatchback, it's clear the designers weren't afraid of a little personality on the palette.

What to Watch For

Before you start dabbing, we need to find your "birth certificate." For the Rabbit, the paint code isn't usually in the door like most cars-it's playing hide-and-seek. Open your hatch, lift the carpet, and look in the spare tire well or on the underside of the trunk lid. You're looking for a small white sticker with a 2-to-4-digit code (like "LP3G" for Mars Red).

Keep an eye on the roof and the tops of the fenders. These cars are known for "delamination," which is just a fancy way of saying the clear coat gets tired of the sun and starts to flake off like a bad sunburn. Also, if you have a red Rabbit, you might notice it looking a bit "pinkish" over time; that's just the pigment getting thirsty for some shade. Don't worry, though-it's nothing a little careful touch-up can't improve.

Driveway Repair Tip

When you're using your touch-up brush or pen, remember: Patience is your best tool. If you're working with one of the many metallic options like Reflex Silver or Diamond Silver, shake that bottle for a full 60 seconds. The "sparkles" (metallic flakes) like to settle at the bottom, and you want them swimming around evenly before you apply.

Instead of trying to fill a chip with one big "blob" of paint, think like a minimalist. Apply a tiny, thin layer, let it dry for 15 minutes, and then add another if you need to. It's much easier to add more paint than it is to deal with a big, wet drip running down your door. Keep it light, keep it steady, and your Rabbit will be looking fresh in no time.

Volkswagen Rabbit Colors by Year

Let us know the year your Rabbit 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.