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Home ยป Design and DIY Tips ยป The Complete Paint Sheen Guide

The Complete Paint Sheen Guide

June 9, 2026 | By Jenna Sue Design and DIY Tips

Paint sheen is one of the most overlooked but surprisingly important decisions when choosing paint. The right sheen can enhance your walls, hide imperfections, improve durability, and completely change the overall mood of a room. Here are my tried-and-tested recommendations after years of painting rentals, renovations, kids rooms, bathrooms, trim, ceilings, cabinetry, and more.

the complete paint sheen guidePin

Jump to:

  • Paint Sheens Explained
  • My Go-To Sheen Choices By Surface
  • Helpful Tips
  • Paint Sheen Mistakes to Avoid
  • My Simplified โ€œSafe Choiceโ€ Formula

Paint Sheens Explained

Flat

Zero shine. Soft, chalky, velvety look. Most forgiving and most designer-feeling.

Best for: ceilings, low traffic spaces, limewash-style looks

Avoid in: high traffic areas


Matte

Very low sheen with slightly more durability than flat. My personal favorite for most walls.

Best for: almost every room in the house

Why I love it: it gives walls that soft, elevated, expensive look without feeling shiny or builder-grade.


Eggshell

Slightly more reflective and washable. I use this occasionally in our rentals.

Best for: family homes, kids rooms, rentals

Looks: a little more traditional/suburban to me, but practical.


Satin

Noticeably smoother and shinier.

Best for: trim, millwork, doors, some bathrooms/laundry rooms

Avoid on: textured walls or imperfect drywall because it highlights everything.


Semi-gloss

Durable and reflective.

Best for: doors, trim, cabinetry, high moisture areas

Looks: crisp, polished, classic.


High Gloss

Very shiny and dramatic.

Best for: statement furniture, moody powder rooms, special applications

Not beginner-friendly. Every flaw shows.

paint sheen comparison chartPin

My Go-To Sheen Choices By Surface

Note: The following recommendations apply only to drywall. If the walls have millwork (bead board, shiplap, wainscoting, etc.) I generally opt for satin on all surfaces. Specialty wall finishes (like venetian plaster or microcement) also look beautiful with a sheen to highlight the organic movement and variation.

Walls: Matte or Eggshell

Matte gives that soft, rich, high-end designer look that photographs beautifully and hides imperfections better than shinier finishes. Most modern premium paints are durable enough now that you donโ€™t need eggshell everywhere anymore.

If you want your house to feel cozy, elevated, warm, old-world, European, organic, or customโ€ฆ matte is your friend.

I especially love matte for:

  • living rooms
  • bedrooms
  • dining rooms
  • offices
  • textured walls
  • old homes
  • rentals with imperfect drywall

If cleaning/maintenance is a concern, use eggshell. Just know that it will highlight any texture or imperfections in the walls.

sw alabaster wallsPin
The Hacienda Hideaway walls have a lot of unwanted texture, so we used matte paint to help conceal it (yes, even in a high traffic rental!)

Ceilings: Flat or Matte

Ceilings should disappear, not reflect light back at you. Flat paint hides seams, patches, texture inconsistencies, and roller marks better than anything else. It also gives that soft cocoon-like feel that makes a room feel calmer and more expensive.

The only time Iโ€™d go shinier on ceilings is in an ultra-humid bathroom, ceilings with millwork, or when color drenching to match the rest of the walls in the same color.

sw alabaster walls, accessible beige trimPin
All of the walls and ceilings (except bathrooms) in our home are a matte finish. Zero regrets!

Trim + Doors: Satin or Semi-gloss

This depends on the vibe. Satin: More modern, softer, slightly more relaxed. Semi-gloss: More traditional, crisp, durable, easier to wipe clean.

Personally, I lean towards satin because I donโ€™t always want trim screaming for attention (and it’s easier to paint/touch-up). But semi-gloss can still make sense for:

  • rentals
  • kids
  • heavy traffic
  • mudrooms
  • baseboards that get abused
sw blonde laundry room beadboardPin
I color drenched the entire laundry room in satin paintโ€”the beadboard walls, trim, millwork and ceiling.

Our builder used semi-gloss on the doors, baseboards and window trim throughout our house. They look nice because they were professionally sprayed for a perfectly smooth finish, but any brushed-on touchups are very noticeable.

sw accessible beige doors trimPin
We used Sherwin Williams Accessible Beige on the doors/trim, and Sherwin Williams Pure White for the windows

Cabinets: Satin or Semi-gloss

Cabinets need durability. Matte cabinets sound beautiful in theory until fingerprints and grease enter the chat. Personally, I always use satin for a softer feel that’s much more forgiving when painting. Semi-gloss is a better choice for surfaces that need frequent scrubbing. The more sheen, the more painting prep matters.

hacienda hideaway kitchen with plaster range hoodPin
All of the cabinetry in the Hacienda Hideaway kitchen were painted in satin (BM Advance)

Bathrooms: Matte or Eggshell

Bathroom walls that are very light in color and not in the most high-touch areas can get away with a matte finish. Modern paint formulas have come a long way, and a quality brand will hold up to cleaning.

If maintenance or moisture/ventilation is a concern, use eggshell. I wouldnโ€™t recommend satin or gloss on drywall, however. Nothing cheapens a bathroom faster than shiny walls highlighting drywall texture and reflecting every light source.

black bathroom wallsPin
I took a risk painting our kids’ bathroom walls in black eggshell, but it has held up beautifully after 7 years!

Kids Rooms: Matte or Eggshell

Hot take: kids rooms does not automatically mean higher sheen. Good quality matte paint is surprisingly durable now. I still use matte frequently because:

  • it looks softer
  • hides wall imperfections
  • photographs better
  • feels less builder-basic

But if your child regularly treats walls like a canvas, eggshell may save your sanity.

benjamin moore maplewood bedroom wallsPin
I chose eggshell for these deep brown wall in the Twin Bedroom, purely for durability in a high-traffic rental

Helpful Tips

  • Different paint brands may have additional sheen categories, or use different labels for their sheens (ie Lustre, Velvet). You can find charts online or their website which explain each term in more detail.
  • Flat and matte finishes are the most forgiving, especially in white or very light colors where scuffs, touch-ups, and cleaning tend to blend in more easily (tip: a magic eraser works wonders to clean white/light walls!) Dark matte paint, however, can show marks or uneven areas after scrubbing.
  • In general, higher sheen = easier cleaning, while lower sheen = easier touch-ups. The glossier the finish, the more durable and wipeable it becomes, but touch-up paint is also much more likely to flash or stand out.
  • Sheen can change how a paint color appears. The same color in a glossy finish will look slightly darker, richer, or more saturated than it does in flat paint.

Paint Sheen Mistakes to Avoid

Shiny walls everywhere

This is one of the biggest builder-grade giveaways, especially in natural light. People assume glossier = more durable, but a higher sheen dramatically changes the mood of a room. When it comes to painted drywall, a matte finish feels softer and more elevated. Stick to cabinetry and trim when using high gloss.

high gloss paint on blue walls, doors, trimPin
This high gloss finish works on the doors, trim and millwork in this room by Leandra Fremont-Smith

Using eggshell or satin on textured/imperfect walls

Sheen loves to highlight texture, roller marks and imperfections in the wall. Matte is much more forgiving. Unless you have an intentional wall treatment like plaster or microcement, opt for matte to minimize the appearance of unwanted texture.

blue laundry room Pin
Satin on the cabinetry, millwork and trim + matte on the textured drywall in the Hacienda Hideaway laundry room

Not testing the sheen

Different finishes reflect light differently. Always test a sample in the room to see how the sheen looks throughout the day before painting the entire space.

Overlooking maintenance

While matte walls have their strengths, they arenโ€™t always the most practical choice for frequent cleaning. Eggshell or satin can hold up better in high-traffic areas, but touch-up paint is typically much harder to blend seamlessly than with a matte finish.

My Simplified โ€œSafe Choiceโ€ Formula

If youโ€™re overwhelmed and just want the easiest designer-approved combo:

  • Walls: Matte (my fav) or eggshell
  • Ceilings: Flat
  • Trim/Doors/Millwork: Satin (my fav) or Semi-gloss
  • Cabinets: Satin (my fav) or Semi-gloss

I hope this guide has been helpful, and something you can bookmark and reference often. As always, let me know if you have any specific paint questions and I’m happy to share my experience!

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Like this post? Check out my popular Paint Guides:

  1. How to Paint Cabinets like a Pro
  2. 10 Most Popular White Paints (in real rooms)
  3. 15 Best Greige Colors (in real rooms)
  4. The Best Paint Rollers for Cabinets

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  1. Judith Hume says

    June 9, 2026 at 10:06 pm

    What a great guide, thank you! Using the correct sheen makes such a difference. When I downsized, the dining room walls in my new place had an uneven texture that was so bad that even the workmen who came into my place tended to ask, “What’s the story with those walls?” I couldn’t afford to have the walls redone at that point, so I went from a slight sheen to a flat and voila! The bad texture disappeared!

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