Choose your Automotive paint color for your 2016 Honda Civic Hybrid

Restore Your 2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Finish In Two Steps

Select Your Honda's Color (Step One)

AutomotiveTouchup paint products are custom mixed to perfectly match the color of your 2016 Honda Civic Hybrid using a basecoat/clearcoat system just like factory specs. To insure a proper match, you’ll need to know your vehicle’s color code, so you can find it on the chart below. The color code can be located in the driver side door jamb. Click here for Honda paint code location chart and paint code image example.

Chip Color Codes Color Description
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Fiji Blue Pearl B529P B529P Fiji Blue Pearl
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Royal Blue Pearl B536P, B536P-4 B536P, B536P-4 Royal Blue Pearl
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Atomic Blue Metallic B537M, B537M-4 B537M, B537M-4 Atomic Blue Metallic
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Nighthawk Black Pearl B929-1, B92P, B92P-4 B929-1, B92P, B92P-4 Nighthawk Black Pearl
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Taffeta White NH578 NH578 Taffeta White
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Billet Silver Metallic NH689M NH689M Billet Silver Metallic
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Alabaster Silver Metallic NH700M, NH700M-4 NH700M, NH700M-4 Alabaster Silver Metallic
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Galaxy Gray Metallic NH701M NH701M Galaxy Gray Metallic
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Crystal Black Pearl NH731P NH731P Crystal Black Pearl
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Tango Red Pearl R25P-4, R525P R25P-4, R525P Tango Red Pearl
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Rallye Red R513, R513-4 R513, R513-4 Rallye Red
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Milano Red R81 R81 Milano Red
2016 Honda Civic Hybrid Touch Up Paint | Habanero Red Pearl YR557P YR557P Habanero Red Pearl

 

Don't see your color listed?


Call 1-888-710-5192
We probably have it.

Did you choose the wrong vehicle model?


Did you choose the wrong model? How about the 2016 Honda Accord, Accord Coupe, Accord Crosstour, Accord Hybrid, Amaze, Avancier, Ballade, Br-V, Brio, Ciimo, Civic, Civic Coupe, Clarity, CR-V, CR-Z, Crider, Crosstour, Crx, Del Sol, E, Element, Element Dx, Element Ex, Everus, Fit, Fit Shuttle, Gienia, Greiz, HR-V, Insight, Integra, Logo, Mdx, Odyssey, Passport, Pilot, Prelude, Prologue, R, Ridgeline, S2000, S660, Shuttle, Spirior, Ur-V, Wr-V, Xr-V, or Zr-V?  If you're still not sure, take a look at our All 2016 Honda Models page.  Or, just go to our page dedicated to Honda Touch Up Paint

Why The Two-Step Paint System?

Your 2016 Honda Civic Hybrid is painted at the factory with a high quality basecoat/clearcoat system. This two-step paint system consists of step one, the basecoat, which is your car’s actual color, and step two, the clearcoat, the specially formulated clear paint that protects the base color and provides the luster and deep shine your vehicle came with when new. AutomotiveTouchup products faithfully reproduce your vehicle manufacturer’s basecoat/clearcoat system.

Here's what our customers are saying about our Touch Up Paint:

Aaron P, owner of a 2015 Honda Fit from Flushing, NY

I am really very pleased. Actually, I own a brand new 2016 red Honda fit. I was told by the Honda dealer that they do not cover scratches that are not manufacturer's defects but the 2015 Fit milano red (R18) will match perfectly. I applied paint touch up and clearcoat only and it matched perfectly. You cannot locate the old scratch even if you wanted to.

Stan F, owner of a 2015 Honda Fit from Culver City, CA

The color match for the tri-color paint on my Honda Fit (Orchid White Pearl) is very close. And the paint pen is best suited for small scratches and chips. I used primer, then ground coat, then mid coat on larger chips from the pens, and saw good coverage that required leveling in order to blend the work with the surrounding paint. For larger chips that require leveling, it is best to use the paint from Automotivetouchup's spray can, as spray painting should not require extreme leveling. Leveling is itself a technique that borders on the art-form, as it requires at least for me, the taking down of the ground coat into a smooth finish, but doing so as to not reveal the dark primer underneath. Once the ground coat had a satisfactory finish, then the mid coat, which is more transparent and less subject to critical application, can then be applied. I would say do your best with the application of the ground coat to conceal, blend, and level it - before you apply the mid coat. If the ground coat is looking good, then the mid coat should also be. Remember, use the pens for small scratches and chips as seen in the videos from AutomotiveTouchup, where the small size of the scratches and chips would not require the degree of leveling that I encountered.

Share your touch up story...