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Green Bathroom Wallpaper

(124 products)

Green bathroom wallpaper covers more shade range than any other color category we make. Pale sage and seafoam, dusty mint, deep emerald and forest, warm olive and moss - that range is part of why green works in nearly every bathroom layout. This collection brings together botanical and floral prints on pale and saturated grounds, painterly washes in soft greens, geometric and tile-style patterns in cooler tones, and heritage chinoiserie in deeper green palettes. Cross-shop the broader green wallpaper family for designs in other rooms, the florals when you want a botanical-leaning take, or chinoiserie for the heritage inspired interiors.

Every design is made to order in the USA with non-toxic, water-based inks. Choose between our removable peel and stick (renter-friendly and easy to swap) or our permanent Traditional Type II vinyl, which holds up to the daily steam of a primary bathroom. Order a sample first - green is the color most affected by bathroom lighting, so what looks sage on a screen can read olive in your room. Free US shipping, plus a 4.95-star average across 1,000+ verified reviews.


How to Choose the Right Green Bathroom Wallpaper

Four practical considerations narrow down green bathroom wallpaper for almost any project.

Match the shade to your bathroom's lighting

Bathroom lighting changes how a green reads more than any other factor. Cool white LEDs can push warm greens like olive and sage toward gray, which is worth knowing before you commit. Warm-toned bulbs make cool greens like seafoam read warmer and more yellow. North-facing bathrooms with little daylight benefit from warmer greens; south-facing bathrooms can carry cooler ones. Before you sample-shop green bathroom wallpaper, write down the kind of bulbs you have, because they're the deciding factor for which side of the green spectrum will work in your space.

Decide whether green should expand or enclose the room

Light, receding greens (sage, mint, soft seafoam) make a small bathroom feel larger because they reflect more light back into the space. Saturated greens like forest, hunter, and deep emerald do the opposite, but the trade-off is the whole point: a windowless powder room in deep emerald reads like a confident design choice rather than a cramped one. Match the shade to the effect you want, not just to the size of the room.

Pair green with your tile and metal finishes

Cool greens flatter chrome, polished nickel, and white-grout marble. Warm greens flatter brass, oil-rubbed bronze, and natural wood vanities. If your fixtures are already in place, choose your green to match their undertones rather than fighting them. If you're still choosing your hardware, brass with deep green is one of the strongest combinations you can make.

Place the wallpaper where it actually fits the best

In a powder room you can wallpaper all four walls because there's no shower to deal with. In a primary bathroom with daily steam, run green bathroom wallpaper on the wall behind the vanity, behind the toilet, or behind a freestanding tub, and skip the open-shower wet zone entirely. Above tile or wainscoting works particularly well: a half-height of beadboard or subway tile in white pairs beautifully with green wallpaper running to the ceiling above.

Best Green Bathroom Wallpaper Styles to Shop

Pattern matters as much as shade for green bathroom wallpaper. The right design for a sage-and-marble primary bath is rarely the right one for a moody powder room.

Botanical and Floral Greens

Hand-illustrated foliage, oversized peonies, ferns, and dried-bloom compositions on green grounds are the most-shopped pattern direction in the green bathroom wallpaper category. The pattern and the green work together instead of fighting each other - the wall feels like one cohesive design choice, not two separate decisions layered on top of each other. Pulled from the broader floral wallpaper collection and botanical prints, this is the strongest fit for primary bathrooms with marble, brass, and warm wood.

Tropical and Jungle Greens

Banana leaf, palm frond, and dense rainforest motifs in saturated greens turn guest baths and beach-house bathrooms into immersive spaces. Tropical green bathroom wallpaper pairs particularly well with cane and rattan vanities, white subway tile, and brass fixtures. See the tropical wallpaper for palm and leaf prints, and the jungle wallpaper for full mural-scale rainforest scenes.

Painterly and Watercolor Greens

Loose painterly washes, abstract green compositions, and watercolor florals read softer and more contemporary than literal botanical prints. They work especially well in bathrooms with minimalist fixtures and stone counters, where a more literal pattern would compete. The full watercolor wallpaper collection includes green-tone variations across pale and saturated grounds.

Geometric and Tile-Style Greens

Moroccan stars, Art Deco fans, repeating mosaics, and architectural grids in green tones read structured rather than organic. They suit modern primary bathrooms paired with hexagonal floor tile, marble countertops, and clean-lined hardware. Browse the geometric pattern wallpaper for green geometric variations.

Heritage Chinoiserie and Toile

Traditional chinoiserie, toile, and damask patterns in green palettes carry an old-world sense of luxury that suits primary bathrooms with antique mirrors, marble, and warm brass lighting. Pale green chinoiserie on cream grounds reads light and airy; deep green on charcoal reads dramatic and storied. The chinoiserie wallpaper and toile wallpaper cover both directions.

Looking for more options? Explore the full bathroom wallpaper collection, or browse additional design in modern bathroom wallpaper, luxury bathroom wallpaper, and vinyl wallpaper for bathroom.

Green Bathroom Wallpaper FAQ

Is green a good color for a bathroom wallpaper?

Yes, and historically it's one of the most consistently successful color choices for a bathroom. Green draws on the natural-world palette already implied by water and stone, which is why so many designers default to it for primary bathrooms and powder rooms alike. Cool sage greens flatter chrome and white-grout marble; deep emerald and forest greens turn small powder rooms into jewel-box spaces; warm olive and moss pair with brass and natural wood vanities. The shade of green bathroom wallpaper you choose matters more than the question of whether to use green at all. Browse the green wallpaper collection to see how these shade families apply across other rooms.

What shade of green is best for a small bathroom wallpaper?

Light, receding greens like sage, mint, and soft seafoam make a small bathroom feel larger because they reflect more light back into the room. The lighter the shade, the more visual space it gives back. That said, deeper greens like forest and emerald work in small windowless powder rooms because the saturation reads like a confident design choice; the room feels intentionally moody rather than cramped. If you have natural daylight, sage or mint is the safer green bathroom wallpaper to start with; if you're working in a windowless powder room, a deep saturated green is the more interesting move.

Does green wallpaper make a bathroom look bigger or smaller?

It depends on the shade. Pale, cool greens (sage, mint, seafoam) push visual depth back and make the room feel larger. Saturated, advancing greens (forest, emerald, hunter) pull the walls inward and make the room feel cozier and more enveloping. Pattern scale matters too: a large-scale repeat in green bathroom wallpaper reads as a single design statement, while a small ditsy pattern can make the same room feel busy. For most small bathrooms wanting to feel larger, sage with a moderate-scale botanical or geometric pattern is the most reliable combination. The botanical wallpaper selection is a good starting point.

What colors go with green in a bathroom?

The strongest companions for green in a bathroom are warm metals (brass, unlacquered brass, oil-rubbed bronze), warm woods (oak, walnut, teak), and the off-whites and creams that soften green's coolness. Marble, particularly Calacatta and Carrara, reads beautifully against most greens because the stone's veining picks up green's undertones. For accent colors, pink and blush balance saturated greens (the complementary-color trick), while charcoal and matte black ground pale greens that risk feeling washed out. Avoid pure cool whites and chrome with warm greens like olive and moss; they fight rather than support each other. If you're building from a fixed metal finish, the gold wallpaper collection gives you brass-friendly counterpoints, and black-and-white wallpaper grounds pale greens.

Will green wallpaper hold up in a bathroom?

Yes, when you match the material to the room. Our Traditional Type II vinyl weighs 20 oz per linear yard at 18 mil thickness, with a Class A fire rating per ASTM-E84 and built-in mold and mildew inhibitors that pass ASTM-G21 testing, which is why it's specified in hotel and restaurant restrooms. Peel and stick is moisture-resistant but not waterproof; it works in powder rooms and half-baths without active showers, but for a primary bathroom with daily steam, Type II is the right material. Skip the open-shower wet zone with any wallpaper, and run the bathroom fan during showers and for 10 to 15 minutes after, especially in the first month after install.