
The trendy paint color renovation experts are steering homeowners away from
Young homeowners are increasingly harking back to the 1970s by painting their bathrooms avocado green.
The retro hue may be nostalgic for many, taking them back to their parents or grandparents' homes, but experts are warning it is not a safe investment.
Realtors and renovation experts have cautioned that such a unique color could put off prospective homebuyers when it comes time to sell the property.
Others also argue that homeowners may think the color is fresh and exciting for a few months, but they may soon become bored.
'Avocado green can quickly become tiring. What looks fresh now is going to look tired in a few months, to the point where you might hate going into your own bathroom,' Rick Berres, owner of remodeling company Honey Doers in Minnesota, told Realtor.com.
However, for homeowners whose hearts are already set on the shade of green, Berres advises going for small, inexpensive touches before plunging head first into a full bathroom makeover.
'Don't get an avo green tub, but you can start with some towels, a mat, and a shower curtain,' Berres suggested.
'You may find that this adds the appropriate amount of this trendy color, and if you get tired of it in six months, no harm done.'
Berres said starting small can avoid the costly penalty of having to undo the damage, which could land you with a bill somewhere between $2,500 and $8,000.
Other designers argue that while avocado green does well on Instagram, Pinterest, and TikTok, it can appear dated and even geriatric in reality.
'Trends go in a 40- to 50-year cycle. Avocado green was really popular in the mid-'70s, so it makes sense that it's a thing again in 2025,' North Carolina designer Andress Eichstadt told Realtor.com.
However others argue an updated bathroom is a good idea, despite the color.
'A bold and outdated bathroom will turn off the most people,' North Carolina Sarah Bronstein told the publication.
'However, an updated bathroom with a well-designed, bold aesthetic may be a solid long-term investment.'
'I think when used in classic and intentional ways, any color can last,' she added.
Realtors have also warned against other bold paint and color tiles.
'Bright colored stone or tile, an all-black bathroom, or bright blue cabinets in the kitchen will appeal to very specific taste and are not easily or inexpensively undone,' New York real estate broker Lisa K. Lippman told the realtor website Melissa Stevenson.
Although paint is easier to undo than other renovation jobs, buyers can still be put off by the time and expense it would take to repaint.
'Painting your home, either the interior or exterior, in non-neutral colors can decrease the value of your home,' realtor Chris Fajkos, from Tahoe, California told the outlet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Mail
43 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Can't ad lib? Pia Whitesell needs to recite her lines before VERY awkward breakfast show interview in Australia
Australian actress Pia Whitesell was spotted going over her lines for a six minute breakfast TV interview on Wednesday. The mother-of-two, 41, who lives in a $57 million LA home with her wealthy husband Patrick, had to recite lines for her brief appearance on The Morning Show. She shared a photo to Instagram which saw her going over her notes for the very brief Seven gig while getting her hair and makeup done. In the picture, Pia could be seen sitting in a chair as she studied two A4 pieces of paper filled with lines from her upcoming interview. 'Getting ready for @morningshowon7 live cross from LA talking all things life and @olayau,' she wrote, referencing her recent partnership with the skincare company. However, it would seem all the pre-written lines couldn't help Pia prepare for the questions hosts Larry Emdur and Kylie Gillies sent her way during the live cross. The interview kicked off to an awkward start when the anchors asked the brunette beauty about her recent luxury holiday to Greece with her Hollywood agent husband. 'First, you just returned from a holiday in Greece. It looked so glamorous. I be you it was,' Kylie, 58, said. Pia appeared embarrassed to be talking about the ritzy getaway, which saw her languishing in the sun on her multi-millionaire husband's superyacht. She stumbled over her answer as glamorous images of her holiday flashed onto the screen. 'It was amazing, I mean, oh god, Europe, just being in, yes, exactly, those photos do, I mean, gosh, I want to go back. I could live there,' she said with an awkward chuckle. Despite seeming reluctant to talk about the holiday, Pia wasn't shy about showing off the trip on her Instagram last week. The former Home and Away star flaunted her bikini body as she posed on a luxury yacht while sailing around the Greek islands earlier this month. She showed off her toned physique in a patterned two-piece and left her long brunette locks out as she smiled for the camera. In another photo, Pia relaxed on the lounge and threw her arm behind her head as she looked out into the distance. She also posed in a $2,945 Miu Miu cotton and suede bandana top in brown, paired with a matching $5,000 miniskirt from the Italian fashion house. 'Oh Greece. I love you,' she captioned the images. Pia has been enjoying a luxury lifestyle since marrying her multi-millionaire Hollywood husband, Patrick, 60, who is the executive chairman of Endeavor. Earlier this month, the actress gave fans a glimpse of her privileged life by showing off her astounding collection of designer goods inside her gigantic walk-in closet. Featured in the photo was Pia's impressive collection of shoes, which filled six built-in shelves in her closet. Measuring several metres wide, the unit boasted three shelves of high heels in a dazzling array of styles for all occasions. Also spied inside Pia's walk-in was the dark-haired beauty's mammoth collection of designer handbags. Stored in ten separate cubicles inside a dedicated vertical built-in unit occupying an entire corner of the closet, Pia's collection included multiple Chanel handbags. Keen-eyed fashion lovers could also spy an Hermès box and what looked like a Birkin.

Reuters
43 minutes ago
- Reuters
EliseAI raises $250 million in a16z-led round to expand in healthcare
Aug 20 (Reuters) - Enterprise software maker EliseAI has raised $250 million in a Series E funding round to expand its automation tools for the healthcare and housing industries, the company told Reuters. The latest funding values the company at over $2.2 billion, doubling its valuation from about a year ago. Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz led the round, with participation from Bessemer Venture Partners and existing investors such as Sapphire Ventures. The New York-based company, which builds AI to automate customer service and operations, said it surpassed $100 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) earlier this year. The fresh capital will be used to fuel product innovation and double its roughly 300-person team over the next year, its CEO Minna Song told Reuters in an interview, with hiring plans across offices in New York, San Francisco, Boston and Chicago. The funding highlights investor appetite for so-called vertical AI companies that build deeply integrated, industry-specific solutions rather than general-purpose models. For EliseAI, the capital provides the firepower to deepen its hold on the real estate market and scale its newer healthcare division, tackling costly administrative tasks in two of the economy's largest and most complex sectors. "We've seen a fundamental shift in the market, from talking about AI to using it to solve really costly problems," Song said in an interview. "The demand from our customers was really strong, and so we decided that now is the time to invest in scaling." EliseAI's platform is able to automate the entire resolution process by focusing on specific industries, said Alex Immerman, partner at Andreessen Horowitz. "A vertical AI like ours will go really, really deep and will take that customer request and then handle every step that's required to resolve it," he said, including coordinating with vendors, scheduling, and ensuring compliance. The company started by targeting the housing industry in 2017, and expanded its applications to healthcare since 2022, an industry it said is burdened by similar communication friction and manual processes. With generative AI technology bursting onto the scene, its software can handle more complicated customer inquiries and workflows by integrating with models like the ones from OpenAI. It serves Zillow Group and other rental managers, and touts its technology is currently used in one in eight apartments in the U.S. In healthcare, the company has been focusing on outpatient specialties, including dermatology and women's health, integrating with electronic health record systems to automate administrative work.

Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Fury as Home Depot does screeching U-turn on tariff price promise
Home Depot is preparing to raise prices, just months after promising to hold the line on costs. On Tuesday, CFO Richard McPhail said tariffs are forcing the home improvement giant to pass along higher costs to shoppers. 'Tariff rates are significantly higher today than they were at this time last quarter,' McPhail told The Wall Street Journal. 'So, as you would expect, there will be modest price movement in some categories, but it won't be broad-based.' The shift marks a reversal from May, when McPhail pledged to 'generally maintain our current pricing levels across our portfolio.' Home Depot, which runs more than 2,300 stores, has tried to diversify its global supply chain to be less reliant on China, which faces the highest tariffs. Half of its products are now made in the US. Still, analysts say tariffs are squeezing margins. 'Home Depot is finding that tariffs will bite in terms of its own costs,' Neil Saunders, retail expert at GlobalData, told Daily Mail. 'It will need to selectively raise prices on some products as we move through this year.' Still, Saunders noted that the company can't raise prices across the board. Rival chains have been merchandising lower prices to attract customers while mixing in higher prices, making it risky for any retailer to move too aggressively. 'Being competitive on price is key for Home Depot,' Saunders added. 'It will also not be alone. Other retailers, including other DIY chains, will need to increase their prices, too.' Still, Home Depot executives said they're confident the company can use its scale to bring some cost relief to customers. While shoppers might see price hikes on certain items, executives say the entire bill is cheaper at its stores. 'Our customers tend to shop with us for their entire project – not for a single item here or there,' McPhail said. The chain tells the Daily Mail that half of its product is made in the US 'For example, they probably aren't going to just buy a bathtub. They're also going to buy the tile, the grout, the shower head, the vanity. 'So, we're focused on protecting the value of the entire project.' Home Depot isn't the only retailer under pressure. Earlier this month, American carmaking giants Ford and GM slashed their profit expectations while reporting billion-dollar tariff costs this year. Walmart, Target, Best Buy, and Amazon all initially warned consumers that President Donald Trump's tariffs would continue to drive costs higher. Trump lashed out at the companies for making the pronouncements, urging retailers to 'eat the tariffs' and sending administration officials to call price hikes a 'hostile and political act.' The moves have largely silenced retailers from openly discussing price hikes. However, they're still slowly making their way through the economy. In July, core inflation rose to 3.1 percent, a 0.3 percentage point increase from June. Days later, the Labor Department reported that July's producer price index, which measures inflation before it reaches consumers, was up 0.9 percent from June and 3.3 percent from a year earlier.



