Gallery / Color palette
stripe.com color palette
The brand palette extracted from stripe.com — primary, accent, neutral, background, and text colors with copy-ready hex codes and one-click export to CSS, Tailwind, and design tokens. Last updated June 16, 2026.
Midnight Blue
#0a2a49
rgb(10, 42, 73)
hsl(210, 76%, 16%)
Medium Purple
#a66de7
rgb(166, 109, 231)
hsl(268, 72%, 67%)
Plum
#a5a5f6
rgb(165, 165, 246)
hsl(240, 82%, 81%)
Indigo
#5448ff
rgb(84, 72, 255)
hsl(244, 100%, 64%)
Slate Gray
#59748a
rgb(89, 116, 138)
hsl(207, 22%, 45%)
Snow
#f8fbfd
rgb(248, 251, 253)
hsl(204, 56%, 98%)
Dark Slate Gray
#3b526a
rgb(59, 82, 106)
hsl(211, 28%, 32%)
Lavender
#e3e5f1
rgb(227, 229, 241)
hsl(231, 33%, 92%)
About the stripe.com color palette
stripe.com's brand palette is built around Midnight Blue (#0A2A49) as its primary color, paired with Medium Purple (#A66DE7) as an accent. Below are all 8 colors with copy-ready hex, RGB, and HSL values, plus one-click export to CSS variables, Tailwind, and design tokens.
- Midnight Blue · Primary
- — the dominant brand color — used for logos, primary buttons, and key moments.
- Medium Purple · Accent
- — a secondary highlight for links, callouts, and interactive states.
- Lavender · Neutral
- — a supporting tone for borders, dividers, and muted UI surfaces.
- Snow · Background
- — the base surface the rest of the palette sits on.
- Dark Slate Gray · Text
- — the primary readable foreground color.
Frequently asked questions
What is stripe.com's primary brand color?
stripe.com's primary brand color is Midnight Blue, hex #0A2A49.
What accent color does stripe.com use?
stripe.com pairs its primary with Medium Purple (#A66DE7) as an accent.
How many colors are in the stripe.com palette?
This palette lists 8 role-labeled colors — primary, accent, neutral, background, and text — each with copy-ready hex, RGB, and HSL values.
Can I use the stripe.com color palette?
You can copy any hex code or export the whole palette to CSS variables, Tailwind, or design tokens. Brand colors may be trademarked, so use them for inspiration or compatibility — not to imitate a brand.
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