Useful Data Tips

Color Best Practices for Data Visualization

⏱️ 35 sec read 📊 Visualization

Bad color choices make charts hard to read or misleading. Good color choices make insights jump out. Here's how to use color effectively:

1. Limit Your Color Palette (5-7 Max)

Too many colors = visual chaos

✅ Good: 3-5 distinct colors for categories
❌ Bad: 15 different colors in one chart
Result: Impossible to match legend to data

2. Use Color With Purpose

Sequential: For Ordered Data

Use when: Low to high values (temperature, sales growth, age ranges)

Example: Light blue → Dark blue

Lighter = lower values, Darker = higher values

Diverging: For Data With a Midpoint

Use when: Data has a meaningful center (0, average, target)

Example: Red ← White → Blue

Good for: Profit/loss, above/below average, positive/negative sentiment

Categorical: For Distinct Groups

Use when: Unordered categories (product types, regions, departments)

Example: Blue, Orange, Green, Purple

Colors should be equally bright/saturated

3. Design for Colorblind Readers (8% of Men!)

Red-Green Colorblindness is Most Common

❌ Avoid: Red vs Green for comparisons
✅ Use: Blue vs Orange, or add patterns/shapes

Colorblind-Safe Palettes:

Better: Don't rely on color alone - use labels, patterns, or shapes too

4. Gray is Your Friend

Use gray to de-emphasize less important data:

Scenario: Show one product's performance vs all others

✅ Good:
- Target product: Bright blue
- All others: Light gray

Result: Focus immediately goes to what matters

5. Be Careful With Red and Green

Cultural meanings vary:

Financial data:

6. Ensure Sufficient Contrast

Situation Solution
Light background Use dark, saturated colors
Dark background Use light, bright colors
Text on color High contrast (black on yellow, white on blue)

Test: Convert chart to grayscale. Can you still distinguish categories? If not, adjust colors or add patterns.

7. Highlight What Matters

Use saturation and brightness strategically:

Example: Sales across 50 states, highlighting top 5

Top 5 states: Bright, saturated blue
Other 45: Pale, desaturated blue/gray

Eyes immediately go to bright colors

8. Common Color Mistakes

Tools to Help

Quick Decision Guide

Data Type Color Scheme Example
Categories Distinct hues Blue, Orange, Green
Low → High Sequential Light → Dark blue
Above/Below target Diverging Red ← White → Green
Emphasis Color + Gray Blue highlight, gray background

Golden Rule: When in doubt, use fewer colors. A chart with 2-3 well-chosen colors is almost always better than one with 10+. Less is more.

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