Banana: Color Spectrum and Ripeness Hex Codes

Category: physical-properties Updated: 2026-02-25 Topic: banana

Banana peel color shifts from deep green (#228B22) at stage 1 through brilliant yellow (#FFE135) at stage 5 to brown-spotted (#8B4513 patches on yellow) at stage 7. Chlorophyll degradation and carotenoid expression drive this progression.

Banana Color as a Ripeness Signal

The color of a banana 🍌 peel is among the most universally understood freshness indicators in the food world. From the deep greens of an unripe fruit to the warm yellows of peak ripeness and the brown-flecked patina of overripeness, each stage maps to predictable biochemical changes happening inside the peel.

The 7-Stage Color Scale

Chiquita Brands standardized a seven-stage banana ripening color scale in the mid-20th century that became the industry norm. Below are approximate hex codes and RGB values derived from colorimetric analysis of each stage:

StageDescriptionHex CodeRGB ValuesEating Quality
1Full green#228B2234, 139, 34Starchy, inedible raw
2Green with yellow trace#4E7D2A78, 125, 42Very firm, starchy
3More yellow than green#9DC12A157, 193, 42Firm, mild starch
4More green than yellow#C8D400200, 212, 0Slightly sweet
5Full yellow#FFE135255, 225, 53Peak sweetness, soft
6Yellow with brown flecks#D4A017212, 160, 23Very sweet, soft
7Yellow-brown, heavily spotted#8B4513 on #C8A400Overripe; best for baking

The hex value #FFE135 — sometimes called “banana yellow” — has become a named color in web design contexts precisely because of this association.

The Chemistry Behind the Color Change

Two pigment systems drive banana peel color:

Chlorophyll (green): Present at high concentrations in unripe peel, chlorophyll actively masks the underlying yellow pigments. As bananas ripen, ethylene gas (produced endogenously and artificially during commercial ripening) activates chlorophyllase and other degradative enzymes. Chlorophyll a and b are broken down into colorless tetrapyrrole catabolites. The half-life of chlorophyll in banana peel at 20°C is approximately 4–6 days post-harvest.

Carotenoids (yellow/orange): Lutein and beta-carotene are present in banana peel tissue throughout ripening — they are simply masked by chlorophyll in early stages. As chlorophyll degrades, carotenoids are revealed rather than synthesized. Total carotenoid content of the peel is roughly 0.5–2.0 mg per 100g fresh weight, depending on variety.

This explains why the yellow color does not appear gradually from the inside out — it emerges across the entire peel surface as the green mask dissolves.

Peel Color vs. Internal Ripeness

A critical discrepancy exists between peel color and internal flesh ripeness, particularly under two conditions:

  1. Chilling injury: Bananas stored below 13°C may develop brown-black peel discoloration while the flesh remains starchy and underripe. The peel pigment cells are more cold-sensitive than internal tissue.
  2. Ethylene gassing: Commercially ripened bananas can display full yellow peel (stage 5 appearance) while the flesh is still slightly firm and not fully sweet, because peel color responds to ethylene faster than starch-to-sugar conversion in the flesh.
ConditionPeel ColorFlesh TextureFlesh Sweetness
Normal stage 5Full yellowSoft-firmHigh
Chilled then warmedBrown/blackFirm, starchyLow
Fast ethylene gassedFull yellowFirmModerate

Red and Purple Varieties

Not all bananas follow the yellow spectrum. Red bananas (such as the Red Dacca) progress from deep burgundy-green (#4A1C40) to brick red (#8B2500) at peak ripeness. Their carotenoid and anthocyanin chemistry differs substantially from Cavendish. Purple-tinged varieties used in ornamental horticulture contain elevated anthocyanin levels in peel tissue.

The 🍌 color spectrum is intrinsically linked to the ripening process described in ripening stages, which covers the underlying ethylene biochemistry driving these pigment shifts.

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Sources

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