Customize the colors in your dashboard by choosing a light or dark theme and one of
14 color palettes. Themes and color palettes help you organize and curate data in your
dashboard. For example, highlight a set of summary metrics by giving them a dark theme and
setting them against a light-themed dashboard.
Required Editions
Available in: Lightning Experience
Available in: Essentials, Group (View Only),
Professional, Enterprise, Performance,
Unlimited, and Developer Editions
User
Permissions Needed
To set dashboard color themes and palettes:
Change Dashboard Colors
Edit a dashboard.
To change the color theme for the entire dashboard, open the properties menu by
clicking .
From Dashboard Theme, choose Light or
Dark.
From Dashboard Palette, choose one of 14 color palettes.
Wildflowers is the default color palette. If you need
an accessible color palette, choose Mineral.
To change the color theme for an individual widget, edit the widget by clicking
. Scroll
through the settings and select the Light or
Dark
Component
Theme. Click Update.
Individual
widgets don’t support unique color palettes.
Save the dashboard.
If you subscribe to a dashboard that contains a custom color palette or theme, the
dashboard subscription email doesn’t display the custom palette or theme.
Did this article solve your issue?
Let us know so we can improve!
Loading
Salesforce Help | Article
Cookie Consent Manager
General Information
Required Cookies
Functional Cookies
Advertising Cookies
General Information
We use three kinds of cookies on our websites: required, functional, and advertising. You can choose whether functional and advertising cookies apply. Click on the different cookie categories to find out more about each category and to change the default settings.
Privacy Statement
Required Cookies
Always Active
Required cookies are necessary for basic website functionality. Some examples include: session cookies needed to transmit the website, authentication cookies, and security cookies.
Functional Cookies
Functional cookies enhance functions, performance, and services on the website. Some examples include: cookies used to analyze site traffic, cookies used for market research, and cookies used to display advertising that is not directed to a particular individual.
Advertising Cookies
Advertising cookies track activity across websites in order to understand a viewer’s interests, and direct them specific marketing. Some examples include: cookies used for remarketing, or interest-based advertising.