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Tangerine vs Orange: What's the Difference?

The main difference between Tangerine and Orange is brightness and saturation: both are orange shades, but Tangerine is lighter. Tangerine (#FF9966) and Orange (#FFA500) are similar colors often confused. They differ in brightness, saturation, and undertone, making each better suited for different design contexts.

Tangerine#FF9966
Orange#FFA500
#FF9966Blended: #FF9F33#FFA500
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Tangerine vs Orange: Key Differences at a Glance

Aspect Tangerine Orange
BrightnessLight (L=70%) — airy, soft, approachableMedium (L=50%) — balanced, versatile
SaturationVivid (S=100%) — bright, energetic, eye-catchingVivid (S=100%) — bright, energetic, eye-catching
Hue familyOrangeOrange
TemperatureWarmWarm
Hex code#FF9966#FFA500
RGB255, 153, 102255, 165, 0

Can you use Tangerine and Orange together?

Orange text on Tangerine
Tangerine text on Orange
Contrast Ratio:1.06:1Insufficient Contrast

How to Tell Tangerine and Orange Apart

  • Look at lightness first: Tangerine is noticeably lighter.
  • Watch the undertone: the hue shifts 19° between them, which changes the perceived temperature.
  • Compare them on a white background to see true saturation, and on black to see true lightness.

Tangerine or Orange: Which to Use and Where

Four real design scenarios, with the recommended pick based on hue, saturation, and WCAG contrast.

Branding & logos
PickTangerine

Tangerine is more saturated (100% HSL vs 100%) so it reads as bolder and more memorable at logo scale, while Orange can feel washed out when printed small.

Web UI & body text backgrounds
PickTangerine

Tangerine hits a 2.10:1 WCAG contrast against white — safer for text-heavy interfaces — where Orange only reaches 1.97:1 and risks failing AA at small body sizes.

Fashion & apparel
PickTangerine

Tangerine is a warm tone that flatters spring/summer collections and warmer skin undertones, while Orange leans warmer and is better suited to autumn/winter layering.

Interior design & walls
PickTangerine

Tangerine is the more muted of the two (100% saturation) and sits more calmly on large wall surfaces, while Orange's higher chroma can overwhelm a room when used beyond accent pieces.

When to Use Tangerine vs Orange in Design

Use Tangerine for:
Call-to-action buttons
Autumn and harvest themes
Food, citrus, warmth branding
Youthful energetic campaigns
Friendly notification badges
Use Orange for:
Call-to-action buttons
Autumn and harvest themes
Food, citrus, warmth branding
Youthful energetic campaigns
Friendly notification badges

Tangerine and Orange Hex Codes, RGB & HSL

Tangerine#FF9966

Tangerine (#FF9966) is a light, vivid orange with a warm undertone — it feels airy, soft, approachable and bright, energetic, eye-catching.

HEX
RGB
HSL
HSV
CMYK
PANTONE
Shades
Tints
Orange#FFA500

Orange (#FFA500) is a medium, vivid orange with a warm undertone — it feels balanced, versatile and bright, energetic, eye-catching.

HEX
RGB
HSL
HSV
CMYK
PANTONE
Shades
Tints

Tangerine and Orange WCAG Contrast Ratios

Text legibility depends on the contrast ratio between foreground and background. WCAG 2.1 AA requires at least 4.5:1 for normal text and 3:1 for large text; AAA requires 7:1. Use these numbers to choose accessible combinations for your design.

Sample text preview
Tangerine text on white
2.1:1Fail
Sample text preview
Tangerine text on black
10:1AAA
Sample text preview
Orange text on white
1.97:1Fail
Sample text preview
Orange text on black
10.63:1AAA
Sample text preview
Tangerine text on Orange
1.06:1Fail
Sample text preview
Orange text on Tangerine
1.06:1Fail

Explore Tangerine and Orange individually

Each color has a dedicated page with shades, tints, CSS name, pairings, and color psychology.

Orange color page#FFA500 · shades, tints, pairings

More Tangerine and Orange Comparisons

Tangerine vs Orange FAQ

What is the difference between tangerine and orange?+
The main difference between Tangerine and Orange is brightness and saturation: both are orange shades, but Tangerine is lighter. Tangerine (#FF9966) and Orange (#FFA500) are similar colors often confused. They differ in brightness, saturation, and undertone, making each better suited for different design contexts.
Is tangerine darker than orange?+
No. Orange is the darker of the two at 50% lightness, while Tangerine sits higher at 70%.
Are tangerine and orange the same color?+
No. Tangerine is #FF9966 and Orange is #FFA500. They differ by 19° in hue, 20% in lightness, and 0% in saturation.
Which is more saturated, tangerine or orange?+
They have nearly identical saturation — Tangerine at 100% and Orange at 100% in HSL.
Is tangerine warm or cool?+
Tangerine (#FF9966) is a warm orange. Its hue sits at 20° on the color wheel, which places it in the warm range.
Is orange warm or cool?+
Orange (#FFA500) is a warm orange. Its hue sits at 39° on the color wheel, which places it in the warm range.
Can you use tangerine and orange together?+
Yes. Both tangerine and orange are orange shades, so they pair naturally in a monochromatic palette. Use orange as the dominant color and tangerine as the accent or highlight.
What color family does tangerine belong to?+
Tangerine belongs to the orange family. Its HSL is 20°, 100%, 70% — a warm tone within the broader orange group.
What is the hex code for tangerine?+
The hex code for Tangerine is #FF9966. In RGB, that's rgb(255, 153, 102), and in HSL it's hsl(20, 100%, 70%).
What is the hex code for orange?+
The hex code for Orange is #FFA500. In RGB, that's rgb(255, 165, 0), and in HSL it's hsl(39, 100%, 50%).