How to Manage the Admin Color Scheme in WordPress (Quick & Easy)

If you want to change the admin color theme in WordPress, then managing the color scheme of the WordPress admin allows you to create a custom dashboard for you and your team. The color theme or scheme can match the design of your company or feature your favorite colors.

In this essay, we’ll show you how to manage the admin color scheme in WordPress in a straightforward way.

The main Reason to Change the Admin Color Scheme in WordPress.

If you’re not a massive fan of the default admin color technicalities in WordPress, then you can change the color scheme to something you would love to add.

You could also utilize various other admin color schemes for your site staging to more easily tell it apart from your live website.

That being said, let’s showcase a few different ways you can interchange the admin color scheme in WordPress. Here are the following schemes:

How to Interchange the Admin Color Scheme with WordPress Default Settings:

WordPress has created a fantastic feature that lets you select from a few predetermined color palettes for your WordPress website admin dashboard.

To interchange the admin color scheme, sign in to your WordPress admin dashboard, navigate to Users, and go to Profile.

After that, choose the new color scheme in the ‘Admin Color Scheme’ section by clicking the radio button.

  • There are nine different color techniques to choose from.
  • As you click various other options, the color scheme will simultaneously change.
  • Once you’ve chosen a color scheme you like, you have to scroll down to the bottom of that webpage and click on the ‘Update Profile’ button.
  • You can also manage the admin color scheme for other registered consumers on your WordPress website.
  • To continue this, go to Users and navigate to All Users, and then hover over the consumer and click on the ‘Edit button.
  • Then, act on the same method as above to change the admin color scheme for that consumer.
  • Once you’re done, make sure to click on the ‘Update Profile’ button at the bottom of that page.

How to Make Custom Admin Color Schemes in WordPress:

If you need even more color choices for your admin dashboard, then you can make custom color schemes and post them to your WordPress blog page.

To do this, go to the free website of WordPress Admin colors and click on the ’Start Creating’ button. Then, give a name into the ‘Color Scheme Name’ name box.

A new color option will show up on your WordPress admin panel page.

After that, you can wholely customize your color scheme by pressing the color button in the ‘Choose your colors’ section.

Click the color and select your new color from the popup to change one of the remaining colors. You can press anywhere on the color picker box or enter a hex code for a particular color.

Once you’re done customizing your color scheme, click on the ‘Generate Color Scheme’ button at the very end of the webpage.

This will make the color scheme code that you have to add to WordPress.

On the next panel, there will be two different code documents.

You have to download the CSS file, copy the code snippet, and put it into your favorite text editor. We will be including all of these in your WordPress files.

 

For this tutorial, we’ll take the help of a code snippets plugin. It’s the quickest and most beginner-friendly method of including code snippets to your WordPress website.

First, you have to download the Code Snippets plugin. For more information, see our beginner’s guide on how to download a WordPress Plugin.

Upon activation, you’ll need a new menu item labeled ‘Snippets’ in your WordPress admin panel. Go forward and navigate to Snippets and then go to Add New.

Then, provide your code snippet with a proper name. This can be anything so that you can remember your code name.

After that, you can put up the snippet you copied above into the color ‘Code’ box.

Next, click on the ‘Save Changes and Activate’ button at the end of the screen.

This will store the code and activate the fresh admin color scheme.

 

Now, you have to upload the CSS stylesheet you installed earlier to your theme directory in your WordPress hosting account.

To do this, you can utilize an FTP client or the file manager setting in your WordPress hosting control panel.

If you haven’t utilized FTP before, you might need to check out our guide on how to utilize FTP to upload documents to WordPress.

First, you have to connect to your site using an FTP client or the document manager in cPanel. Once you’re linked, you need to navigate to the wp-content file or folder.

 

Inside this folder, you will notice another folder called themes. This is where WordPress saves all the themes of your site used or has used in the past.

You have to click on the themes folder and then open up the folder for the theme you’re using.

Then, post the display.cc file that you downloaded.

Your CSS document will have the name that you have chosen earlier.

 

Note: If you interchange WordPress themes, you will have to upload the CSS file to your new theme file.

After that, navigate to Users and then go to Your Profile.

Then, you can choose the new color scheme you just made.

 

If you have to use this color scheme, then click the ‘Update Profile’ button at the end of the page.

How to manage the Default Admin Color Scheme for New Users

When a new consumer creates an account, they’ll need the option to customize their color panel and scheme. But, you may have to control the default admin color panel or prevent users from changing the color theme altogether.

The simplest way to do this is by utilizing the free plugin Force Admin Color Panel.

First, you need to install and activate the plugin. For more information, follow a step-by-step guide on how to download a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, navigate to Users, go to Profile, choose your admin color, and press on the ‘Force this admin color scheme on all users’ dropbox.

After that, click on the ‘Update Profile’ button at the end of the page.

 

We hope this article has helped you learn how to change the admin color scheme or the color panel in WordPress.