Comparison

Coolors vs Grainient

5 min readUpdated June 2026By the DesignBookmark team
Coolors screenshotGrainient screenshot

Quick verdict

Coolors and Grainient are both excellent color & gradient tools, and the right pick depends on what you need. Coolors is the super-fast color-scheme generator loved by millions, while Grainient is the best animated grainy gradients on the internet. For most people, Coolors is the safer default thanks to its wider adoption — but Grainient can be the better fit for the right workflow.

If you're choosing between Coolors and Grainient, you're not alone — they're two of the most talked-about color & gradient tools around, and the differences aren't always obvious from their landing pages.

We track hundreds of color & gradient tools on DesignBookmark, so we've put them side by side below: what each one is, where they overlap, how they differ, and a clear answer to which you should choose.

No fluff and no fabricated benchmarks — just an honest, practical comparison to help you decide fast.

At a glance

CoolorsGrainient
TypeColor & GradientColor & Gradient
PricingFreeFreemium
On DesignBookmarkFeatured pickListed
Categories11

Pricing is a general guide and changes often — always confirm current plans on each tool's site.

What they have in common

At a high level, Coolors and Grainient are after the same thing. Both sit in our color & gradient category, both are aimed at designers, developers and creators, and both are built to make that job faster and more enjoyable.

So if you're only going to use one, you won't be missing out on the fundamentals either way — the question is which one's particular take on color & gradient tool suits you best. That's what the rest of this comparison digs into.

Coolors

Coolors bills itself as the super-fast color-scheme generator loved by millions — and in practice that's exactly what it delivers. Its biggest strength is the everyday experience — the small details are thought through, so it gets out of your way and lets you work.

Against Grainient, it tends to win people over when a clean, familiar workflow is the priority. On the pricing side, Coolors is generally free — always click through to confirm current plans, since they change often.

Visit Coolors

Grainient

Grainient bills itself as the best animated grainy gradients on the internet — and in practice that's exactly what it delivers. It earns its reputation by being genuinely useful day to day, not just impressive in a thirty-second demo.

Compared with Coolors, it's the one to reach for when you want something that just works out of the box. On the pricing side, Grainient is generally freemium — always click through to confirm current plans, since they change often.

Visit Grainient

How to choose between Coolors and Grainient

Pick Coolors

Choose Coolors if you're watching your budget — its pricing model is the friendlier of the two to start with, and you want the more established, widely-adopted pick that most people reach for first.

Pick Grainient

Choose Grainient if you like trying the newer, fast-moving option.

Pricing & how you'll pay

Based on their general pricing models, Coolors is the friendlier option to get started with, while the other leans more premium. That said, pricing tiers shift constantly — check the current plans on each site before you commit, especially if a specific feature you need sits behind a paywall.

Workflow & learning curve

The best color & gradient tool is the one that disappears into your routine. Think about which interface feels more natural to you, which integrates with the apps you already use, and which you'd actually open every day. A short free trial of each tells you more than any feature chart.

Scope — all-rounder or specialist

Both cover similar ground here, so neither is obviously the "bigger" tool. Judge them on how well they do the specific job you care about most, rather than the length of their feature lists.

Momentum & community

A tool is only as good as the team and community behind it. Both Coolors and Grainient are actively maintained and listed on DesignBookmark for that reason — but it's worth a quick look at each one's changelog and community to see which is moving in a direction you like.

Frequently asked questions

Is Coolors better than Grainient?+

Neither is universally "better" — they're both strong color & gradient tools, which is why people compare them. Coolors suits you if you want the super-fast color-scheme generator loved by millions; Grainient suits you if you want the best animated grainy gradients on the internet. The best way to decide is to try both on a real project.

What's the difference between Coolors and Grainient?+

They overlap a lot — both are color & gradient tools aimed at the same audience. The practical difference is emphasis: Coolors is the super-fast color-scheme generator loved by millions, whereas Grainient is the best animated grainy gradients on the internet. That shapes which workflows each one feels best for.

Is Coolors or Grainient cheaper?+

Going by their general pricing models, Coolors is usually the more affordable place to start (Coolors is free, Grainient is freemium). Pricing changes often, so always confirm the latest plans on each site before deciding.

Can I use Coolors and Grainient together?+

Often, yes. Plenty of people use more than one color & gradient tool side by side — one as their main driver and another for the things it does best. There's no rule that says you must pick only one, though most settle on a primary tool over time.

Is there a free version of Coolors or Grainient?+

Both generally offer a free or freemium way in, so you can try Coolors and Grainient before paying for either.

The bottom line

The bottom line: Coolors is the easier one to recommend as a default, but there's no wrong answer between Coolors and Grainient — they're both genuinely good color & gradient tools. Re-read the "how to choose" points above, take whichever one speaks to you for a quick spin, and keep the one that earns a permanent place in your workflow.

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