Original Factory Colors

Classic Ford Bronco Paint Colors & Factory Codes (1968)

Every original factory paint color offered on the classic Ford Bronco (1968), 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
Diamond Green
R
#2f6b3a
1968
A bright jewel green listed only for 1968.
β˜… Rare
Yucatan Gold
3
#c79a3b
1968
A warm gold metallic offered only on 1968 models.

Standard Colors

Raven Black
A
#15171a
1966–1977
The longest-running early Bronco color, offered every model year from 1966 through 1977. A no-cost, fleet-friendly base color.
Wimbledon White
M
#f4f4ef
1966–1977
Carried over from 1966 to 1977. Most Bronco hardtop and pickup roofs were painted Wimbledon White at the factory to create a two-tone look.
Pure White
C
#fbfbf8
1966–1974
A second, cooler white offered alongside Wimbledon White on early Broncos.
Rangoon Red
J
#b3171c
1966–1968
A bright fire-engine red typical of mid-1960s Ford trucks.
Holly Green
L
#1f5135
1966–1968
A deep forest green from the original 1966 palette.
Caribbean Turquoise
B
#1f8a8a
1966–1968
One of several bright turquoise/teal hues that defined the mid-1960s Bronco look.
Peacock Blue
D
#1f6f8c
1966–1968
A medium teal-leaning blue offered on the first-generation Bronco.
Chrome Yellow
G
#f2c10d
1966–1977
A high-visibility yellow associated with fleet, forestry and utility Broncos; offered across the entire early run.
Lunar Green
U
#7c8a5a
1967–1968
A muted olive/sage green introduced for 1967.
Pebble Beige
6
#cbbfa3
1967–1968
A soft sandy beige offered on 1967-1968 Broncos.
Candyapple Red
T
#b51226
1968–1977
A vivid wet-look red that became a Bronco staple from 1968 onward.
Harbor Blue
7
#27517a
1967–1973
A medium navy blue that carried across several early years.
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.