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Complementary Color Finder

Find the complementary color for any hue.

Base
HEX#00CAE0
RGBrgb(0, 202, 224)
HSLhsl(186, 100%, 44%)
Complement
HEX#E01600
RGBrgb(224, 22, 0)
HSLhsl(6, 100%, 44%)

Split-complementary

The two hues either side of the complement (+150° and +210°) — a softer alternative to a direct complementary pairing.

#E0005A
#E08700
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How to use Complementary Color Finder

What this tool does

The Complementary Color Finder takes any colour and returns its complement — the hue sitting directly opposite on the colour wheel, 180° away. It shows the base and its complement side by side as large swatches, each with its HEX, RGB and HSL values and individual copy buttons. As a bonus it also lists the two split-complementary colours (+150° and +210°), which are a softer alternative when a direct complementary pairing feels too intense.

Complementary colours create the highest contrast of any two-colour pairing. That is what makes them so useful — and also what makes them easy to overuse. Seeing the exact values together helps you decide where the contrast belongs and where the gentler split-complementary option might serve better.

Use cases

In web design, the complement of your primary brand colour is the natural choice for a call-to-action button or a highlight that must not be missed. In branding, a complementary pair gives a logo instant visual punch and a clear hierarchy. Photographers and illustrators lean on complements deliberately — an orange subject against a teal background is a classic cinematic look, because the opposing hues make the subject pop. For accessibility audits, knowing the complement helps you reason about contrast, though hue contrast is not the same as luminance contrast and still needs a proper check. Hobbyists decorating a room, designing a poster or styling a chart can use the pair to make one element clearly stand out against another.

How to use it

  1. Choose your base colour with the colour picker, or type a HEX code such as #00C8E0 — the picker and text field stay synchronised.
  2. Read the two large swatches: your base on one side, its complement on the other, each with HEX, RGB and HSL values.
  3. Click any value’s copy button to copy that exact notation.
  4. Check the split-complementary row underneath for a softer pairing, and copy either colour or the whole row.
  5. Change the base colour at any point — the complement and split colours update instantly.

Tips

Use the complement as an accent, not as half your layout. A small amount of an opposing hue draws the eye; large blocks of two complements next to each other can visually vibrate and tire the viewer. If a complementary pair feels harsh, switch to one of the split-complementary colours, or desaturate the complement slightly so it recedes. For text, never assume a complement is readable on its base — opposing hues can still have similar lightness, which means poor contrast; always verify foreground and background pairs against WCAG thresholds. When you need a third colour, the split-complementary pair plus the base forms a balanced, ready-made trio.

Complementary pairing is one of several colour harmonies. Analogous schemes use neighbouring hues for a calmer look, triadic and tetradic schemes spread colour around the wheel for richer palettes, and a monochromatic ramp builds tints and shades from a single hue for UI states. To see all of those derived from one base colour at once, use a full palette generator. When you need a specific notation for CSS or a design tool, a colour converter translates any swatch between HEX, RGB, HSL and more, and a contrast checker confirms that the pairs you choose meet accessibility requirements.

Frequently asked questions

What is a complementary colour?
A complementary colour is the hue that sits directly opposite your colour on the colour wheel — exactly 180° away. Red and cyan, blue and orange, yellow and violet are complementary pairs. Placed together they produce the strongest possible contrast, which makes complements ideal for accents that need to grab attention.
How is the complement calculated?
The tool converts your colour to HSL, adds 180° to the hue, and converts back. Saturation and lightness are left unchanged, so the complement has the same intensity and brightness as your base colour — only the hue flips to the opposite side of the wheel.
What are the split-complementary colours shown below?
Split-complementary colours are the two hues that sit either side of the true complement, at +150° and +210° from the base. They give you most of the contrast of a complementary pairing but with a gentler, less vibrating result, which is often easier to use across a whole layout.
Is my colour uploaded or stored?
No. The colour you choose and its complement are computed entirely in your browser with local JavaScript. Nothing is sent to a server, saved or tracked, and the tool keeps working offline once the page has loaded.
Why do my base and complement look equally bright?
Because only the hue is rotated. A complement keeps the same saturation and lightness as the base, so the two colours have matching visual weight. If you want one to dominate, adjust its lightness or saturation afterwards — equal weight is the starting point, not a requirement.

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