Original Factory Colors
Classic Dodge Charger Paint Colors & Factory Codes (1970)
Every original factory paint color offered on the classic Dodge Charger (1970), with official manufacturer paint codes, hex approximations, and rarity notes. Use the paint code to order a color-matched sample from a restoration supplier.
β Rare / Desirable Colors
β
Rare
Plum Crazy
FC7
#6a2d8f
1970
High-Impact color (1970-71). Plymouth name In-Violet. Most iconic Mopar purple.
β
Rare
Sublime
FJ5
#a4d233
1970
High-Impact color (1970 only). Plymouth name Lime Light.
β
Rare
Go Mango
EK2
#f15a22
1970
High-Impact color carried into 1970 (1969-70).
β
Rare
Green Go
FJ6
#7ac142
1970
High-Impact color (1970-71). Also called Sassy Grass Green (Plymouth).
β
Rare
Top Banana
FY1
#f3d712
1970
High-Impact color (1970-73). Plymouth name Lemon Twist.
β
Rare
Hemi Orange
EV2
#e34e1c
1970
High-Impact color carried into 1970 (offered 1969-72).
β
Rare
Panther Pink
FM3
#e85aa0
1970
High-Impact color, Spring 1970 introduction. Plymouth name Moulin Rouge. Very rare.
β
Rare
Butterscotch
EL5
#e0a02a
1970
High-Impact color carried into 1970 (1969-71).
Standard Colors
Silver Metallic
FA4
#b9bcc0
1970
1970, the final and most iconic year of the 2nd-gen 'Coke bottle' Charger.
Black
FX9
#111112
1970
1970 black.
Bright Blue Metallic
FB5
#2f73c4
1970
1970 bright metallic blue.
Bright Red
FE5
#c41f23
1970
1970 Rallye/Bright Red.
Dark Burnt Orange Metallic
FK5
#8a3a1a
1970
1970 dark burnt orange metallic.
Beige
FL1
#d8c7a0
1970
1970 beige.
White
FW1
#eeeeec
1970
1970 Alpine White.
Light Gold Metallic
FY4
#c2a44e
1970
1970 light gold metallic.
About these colors:
Color names, factory paint codes, and production years are cross-referenced from established
marque references and owner registries. Hex codes are approximate digital representations of
factory paint β vintage automotive paint was never defined as a hex value, and original enamel
fades over time. True paint colors depend on age, sun exposure, refinishing history, and
production batch variation. For an accurate match, always mix by the factory paint code β not
by the on-screen swatch β and verify against an original paint chip or a professional
color-matched sample before purchasing paint for a restoration.