
How to Choose the Right Paint Finish
Choosing a paint colour is only half the decision. The finish, also called sheen, controls how shiny the surface looks, how easily it cleans, how well it hides imperfections and how durable the final result feels in everyday use. The right finish can make a wall look smooth, a bathroom easier to wipe down, a cabinet more durable or an exterior door more polished.
Use this guide to compare flat, matte, eggshell, satin, semi-gloss and high-gloss paint finishes, then match the right option to each room, surface and project around your home.
Ready to shop? Use the Online Paint Selector, browse interior paints or compare paint primers before you start.
Paint Finish Cheat Sheet
| Finish | Look and feel | Best for | Watch for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flat / Matte | Soft, low-shine or non-reflective | Ceilings, adult bedrooms, formal rooms, imperfect walls | Harder to clean than higher-sheen options; standard flat is not ideal for busy kitchens or bathrooms. |
| Eggshell | Soft glow with light reflectance | Most interior walls, living rooms, bedrooms, hallways and family rooms | More washable than matte, but still not as moisture-resistant as satin or semi-gloss. |
| Satin / Pearl | Smooth, slightly shiny, pearl-like finish | Kitchens, bathrooms, laundry rooms, mudrooms, kids rooms and high-traffic walls | Shows wall flaws and roller marks more than eggshell. Prep matters. |
| Semi-Gloss | Noticeably reflective and durable | Trim, baseboards, doors, cabinets, windows, bathrooms and high-touch surfaces | Can look too shiny on large walls and highlights patching or drywall seams. |
| High Gloss | Glass-like, polished and highly reflective | Statement doors, cabinets, furniture, trim and architectural accents | Requires the smoothest prep. Imperfections, brush marks and dust show easily. |
What Does Paint Finish Mean?
Paint finish is the level of shine or reflectiveness on a painted surface. The more light a finish reflects, the shinier it looks. That shine also changes how the paint performs. Low-sheen finishes make colours feel softer and deeper and help disguise wall flaws. Higher-sheen finishes are easier to wipe, more durable on high-touch areas and more resistant to moisture, but they can make dents, patching and uneven texture more visible.
Brand naming can vary. One brand may use “satin,” another may use “pearl” or “low lustre,” and some products include specialty finish names. Always compare the label, the product page and the intended use, not the finish name alone.


How to Choose the Right Paint Finish in 6 Steps
- Start with the surface. Drywall, plaster, trim, cabinets, metal, masonry, exterior siding and wood decks all need different products and preparation.
- Match the room’s traffic level. A quiet adult bedroom can use a lower sheen; hallways, stairs, kids rooms and mudrooms usually need a more washable finish.
- Consider moisture and cleaning. Kitchens, bathrooms, laundry rooms and entryways benefit from satin, pearl, semi-gloss or a specialty washable formula.
- Check the surface condition. If the wall has patched areas, dents, texture or older plaster, a lower-sheen finish will hide flaws better.
- Think about lighting. Bright rooms and glossy finishes can create glare. Dim rooms may benefit from a slightly higher sheen to reflect more light.
- Test before buying full cans. Test the colour and, when possible, the finish in the same room, on more than one wall and at different times of day.
Best Paint Finish by Room
| Room or area | Recommended finish | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Ceilings | Flat or ultra-flat | Reduces glare and helps hide drywall seams, roller marks and ceiling imperfections. |
| Living rooms | Matte or eggshell | Balances a smooth designer look with everyday cleanability. Use satin or pearl for high-traffic family rooms. |
| Bedrooms | Matte, flat or eggshell | Creates a calm, soft look. Choose eggshell or satin for kids rooms that need more frequent cleaning. |
| Dining rooms | Matte, velvet or eggshell | Adds a refined low-sheen look and pairs well with semi-gloss trim or painted millwork. |
| Hallways and stairwells | Eggshell, satin or pearl | Handles fingerprints, scuffs and regular cleaning better than standard flat paint. |
| Kitchens | Satin, pearl or semi-gloss | Better for splashes, grease, humidity and frequent wiping. |
| Bathrooms and powder rooms | Satin, pearl, semi-gloss or bathroom-rated matte | Helps resist moisture and makes walls easier to clean. Powder rooms can often use eggshell if splash exposure is low. |
| Laundry rooms and mudrooms | Satin, pearl or semi-gloss | Practical for humidity, winter salt, wet gear, dirt and scuffs. |
| Basements | Eggshell, satin or moisture-rated matte | Balances low-light conditions, imperfect drywall and possible humidity. |
| Home offices | Matte or eggshell | Reduces glare behind desks, monitors and video-call backgrounds. |
Best Paint Finish by Surface and Project
Walls
For most interior walls, eggshell is the safest all-around choice. It has a low, soft sheen and is easier to clean than flat or matte. Matte is a good option for a premium, low-glare look in lower-traffic spaces. Satin or pearl works better when the wall is likely to be touched, wiped or exposed to moisture.
Shop wall paint or browse all interior paint options.
Ceilings
Ceilings usually look best in flat or ultra-flat paint because it minimizes glare and hides surface imperfections. A bathroom ceiling may need a moisture-resistant product, especially in a room with a shower and limited ventilation.
Trim, Baseboards and Interior Doors
Trim, baseboards, moulding and interior doors are high-touch surfaces. Semi-gloss is a practical choice because it creates a harder, more washable finish. Satin or pearl can work when you want a softer look, while high gloss creates a more dramatic statement on very smooth trim or doors.
Cabinets, Vanities and Furniture
Cabinet paint needs to stand up to touching, cleaning, cooking residue and daily wear. Satin, semi-gloss, high gloss and cabinet-specific enamel finishes are common choices. The smoother and shinier the finish, the more important the prep becomes. Clean off grease, scuff or sand glossy surfaces, use the right primer and allow the paint to cure fully before heavy use.
Read the kitchen cabinet painting guide or shop cabinet and furniture paint.


Exterior Siding, Trim, Doors and Garage Doors
Exterior paint finish should match the surface and the exposure. Flat and low-lustre exterior finishes can help siding look smooth and hide minor imperfections. Satin offers added durability and moisture resistance. Semi-gloss and high gloss are better reserved for doors, trim, shutters, garage doors and outdoor furniture because they are easier to clean and create a crisp accent.
For Canada, also consider weather. Exterior projects need paint that can handle sun, rain, humidity, snow, temperature swings and freeze-thaw cycles. Check the product label for recommended temperature range and drying conditions before painting.
Read the exterior paint guide or shop exterior paints and coatings.
Decks, Fences and Exterior Wood Stain
Deck stain, exterior wood stain and outdoor stain are selected a little differently from wall paint. The key decision is often opacity: clear, transparent, semi-transparent, semi-solid or solid. Clear and transparent stains show more wood grain. Solid stain and deck paint create more colour coverage and can help older wood look more uniform.
Use stain colour and colour wood stain samples on the same type of wood whenever possible. The final colour can change depending on wood species, age, sanding, previous coatings and whether the product is transparent or solid. For a fence, choose between stain if you want to keep wood grain visible and exterior paint or solid stain if you want an opaque finish.
Shop exterior wood stains and finishes or learn how to stain a deck.
Garage Floors and Concrete
A garage floor should not be painted with ordinary wall paint. Concrete and garage floors need a floor coating or epoxy-style finish designed for abrasion, hot tires, road salt, oil, gas and regular cleaning. If you are planning to repaint a garage, separate the project into garage walls, garage door and garage floor because each surface needs a different product.
Shop concrete and garage floor finishes or read the garage floor painting guide.
How Paint Finish Changes Colour and Lighting
The same paint colour can look different in flat, eggshell, satin and semi-gloss because each finish reflects light differently. A low-sheen finish can make a colour feel deeper and softer. A higher-sheen finish can make the colour look brighter, lighter or more reflective, especially in direct sunlight or under strong overhead lighting.
| Light condition | What often happens | Finish tip |
|---|---|---|
| North-facing rooms | Light can feel cooler and greyer. | Use matte or eggshell for a soft look; warm whites, creams and muted warm tones can balance cooler light. |
| South-facing rooms | Rooms often feel brighter and warmer. | Low-sheen finishes reduce glare; cool tones and airy neutrals can work well. |
| East-facing rooms | Bright morning light, cooler later in the day. | Test colours in morning and afternoon before choosing the finish. |
| West-facing rooms | Cooler mornings and warmer evening light. | Check samples near sunset because gloss and satin can reflect warm light strongly. |
| Basements and low-light rooms | Colours may look darker or flatter. | Eggshell or satin can add light reflection, but moisture and wall condition still matter. |
| Artificial light | Warm, neutral and cool bulbs shift undertones. | Test samples at night with the bulbs you actually use. |
Primer, Paint & Primer and Finish Quality
The final finish is only as good as the surface underneath it. Primer can improve adhesion, even out porosity, block stains, help with dark-to-light colour changes and reduce uneven sheen. Paint and primer in one can work well on sound, previously painted walls with similar colours, but specialty surfaces and problem areas often still need a separate primer.
Use primer when painting bare drywall, repaired patches, raw wood, glossy surfaces, metal, masonry, stained areas, cabinets, laminate, melamine, water marks, smoke stains or a major colour change. If the surface is peeling, chalky, greasy or glossy, clean and prep it before priming.
Shop paint primers or learn how to prime walls for painting.
How to Test Paint Finish Before You Buy
- Choose two or three colours, then test them in the room where they will be used.
- Paint a large sample board or test panel instead of relying only on a small chip.
- Use two coats so the sample looks closer to the final result.
- Move the sample near windows, corners, trim, flooring, cabinets and furniture.
- Check it in the morning, afternoon, evening and under artificial light.
- If you are deciding between sheens, test the same colour in more than one finish.
- Confirm primer, tools and drying time before buying full-size cans.
Use the Online Paint Selector to browse brands, colours and finishes, then order samples or paint for local pickup where available.
Paint Finish Buying Checklist
| Decision | What to confirm before buying |
|---|---|
| Room | Is it low-traffic, high-traffic, humid, messy, dark or bright? |
| Surface | Wall, ceiling, trim, door, cabinet, exterior siding, deck, fence, garage door or floor? |
| Finish | Flat, matte, eggshell, satin/pearl, semi-gloss or high gloss? |
| Prep | Does the surface need cleaning, sanding, patching, caulking or primer? |
| Primer | Is the surface bare, glossy, stained, raw wood, metal, masonry or a big colour change? |
| Colour test | Did you test the colour and finish in real room lighting? |
| Tools | Do you have brushes, rollers, trays, tape, drop cloths, sandpaper and cleaning supplies? |
| Quantity | Have you measured the room and allowed for two coats or primer? |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best paint finish for walls?
Eggshell is the best all-around paint finish for most interior walls because it gives a soft look with better cleanability than flat or matte. Choose matte for a lower-glare designer look or satin/pearl for busier, more washable areas.
What paint finish should I use for ceilings?
Flat or ultra-flat paint is usually best for ceilings because it hides imperfections and reduces glare. For bathroom ceilings, choose a product that is suitable for moisture-prone rooms.
Is eggshell or satin better?
Eggshell is softer and better at hiding minor flaws. Satin is shinier, more durable and easier to wipe. Use eggshell for most living spaces and satin for kitchens, bathrooms, laundry rooms, mudrooms and kids rooms.
What paint finish hides imperfections best?
Flat and matte finishes hide wall imperfections best because they reflect less light. Higher-sheen finishes such as satin, semi-gloss and gloss show more flaws.
What is the easiest paint finish to clean?
Semi-gloss and high-gloss finishes are generally the easiest to wipe clean, which is why they are often used on trim, doors, cabinets and high-touch surfaces. Satin and pearl are good choices for washable walls.
What finish is best for kitchen cabinets?
Semi-gloss, satin enamel, high gloss or cabinet-specific enamel finishes are common choices for cabinets. The best option depends on the look you want and how smooth the surface is after prep.
Can I use matte paint in a bathroom?
Only use matte paint in a bathroom if the product is designed for moisture-prone or high-humidity spaces. Standard flat or matte paint may not clean well or resist moisture as effectively as satin or semi-gloss.
Does paint finish affect colour?
Yes. Low-sheen finishes can make colours look softer or deeper, while higher-sheen finishes can make colours look brighter or more reflective. Test samples in the actual room before buying full cans.
What paint finish should I use outside?
For exterior siding, choose a durable exterior flat, low-lustre or satin finish based on the surface and exposure. Use satin, semi-gloss or gloss for doors, trim, shutters, garage doors and outdoor furniture.
Should I use paint or stain on a fence?
Use exterior stain if you want to preserve more of the natural wood grain. Use solid stain or exterior paint if you want opaque colour coverage and a more uniform look.
