If you want your boat looking sharp for the coming summer, now is the time to start planning. The good marine upholsterers get busy, and decisions around colour, fabric, and whether to clean or replace deserve more than a rushed call in October.
Start with the safe ground. Warm whites, beiges, stone greys, and sand-coloured fabrics remain very much in style. They complement natural teak decking, stainless steel hardware, and sea views, and they have a practical edge too: light neutrals reflect the sun and conceal fading well over time.


Beyond beige, the 2026-27 palette leans into natural-inspired tones with subtle elegance. Off-whites, soft greys, sand, taupe, and muted blues dominate, replicating the calm of open water. The minimalist approach is strong, with clean stitching details and sleek seating that increases the sense of space in smaller boats and reads as modern and upscale in larger vessels. Deep navy remains an evergreen, paired with white or grey for a timeless nautical look. Charcoal and graphite are gaining ground as a contemporary alternative, sitting particularly well on RIBs, speedboats, and tenders.


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For those wanting to move beyond the familiar, Sunbrella, one of the most widely specified brands in the marine upholstery world, is currently pushing three seasonal colours that translate beautifully to a boat context. Spa Blue is soft and serene, a tranquil tone that creates a light, restorative backdrop that feels crisp, calm, and effortlessly livable. For a cabin interior or cockpit cushions it is close to perfect, and for a New Zealand summer on the water it feels exactly right. Soft Green echoes new growth and brings a sense of balance and easy comfort, connecting naturally to the NZ coastal and bush environment in a way that navy simply does not. Blush Pink is the bolder choice of the three and probably works best as an accent or piping colour against a neutral base rather than as a primary upholstery colour.


These colours carry real practical weight because Sunbrella is a brand the trade knows well. A local upholsterer ordering from their swatch book will have access to these exact colour families. Their Sarek Collection, spanning both outdoor furniture and marine ranges, includes linen, onyx, and mint, with mint sitting close to soft green and reinforcing that the direction is consistent across their range.
An emerging trend worth noting is mixed textures and layered colour schemes: matte vinyl combined with high-gloss piping, smooth seats alongside textured fabric inserts. A classic example is light grey seating with navy piping and woven charcoal accents. Custom embroidery, boat names, logos, or monograms, is also growing as a way to add a premium, personalised touch.


One practical note for New Zealand conditions: darker colours get significantly hotter in direct sun. Lighter shades are the better choice for exposed cockpit or flybridge seats. Mid-tones like taupe or spa blue strike a useful balance between heat management and stain concealment.


