Summer 2026’s Butter Yellow Trend Has Captured My Neutrals-Loving Heart

Here's how I'm styling it for the season.

Christie Tyler wears Spring 2026's buttter yellow trend.
(Image credit: Christie Tyler)

As you may know by now, my neutral-obsessed brain doesn’t leave room for much color. However, once the world defrosts from the long winter and flowers begin to bloom, I feel an extra pep in my step—and need for different colors in my wardrobe. I crave neutral-adjacent tones like deep olive green and toffee-brown as soon as summer creeps around the corner. My favorite summer 2026 color trend to test-drive, though, is butter yellow.

My love for it has reached its ultimate peak this season. It gives me ultimate peace and inspiration and pairs well with any other pared-down finds in my wardrobe. It is just as serene and calming as shades of cream, white, or tan without feeling flat or overdone. Ahead, I broke down how I’m styling butter yellow for the warmer seasons ahead!

Use Butter Yellow as a “Bridge” Color

Christie Tyler takes a mirror selfie in a butter yellow-adjacent blazer and toque, styled with white capris and black kitten heels

(Image credit: Christie Tyler)

If wearing color still feels like a leap, this shade is the perfect entry point. I’ve been using it almost as a "connector" between my usual palette by pairing it with cream, chocolate, washed-out black, and even soft gray. It warms everything up without disrupting the overall neutrality of a look.

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It’s less about making yellow the focal point and more about letting it quietly shift the tone of an outfit. A on-hue knit draped over the shoulders, a soft bag, a barely-there sandal—it doesn’t scream for attention, but it changes everything.

Go Tonal

Christie Tyler layers satin butter yellow pieces for a tonal look

(Image credit: Christie Tyler)

This particular light shade of yellow is one of the few that can truly be worn head-to-toe without feeling overwhelming. In fact, it does the opposite. Instead, it reads as incredibly refined.

I love the idea of mixing slightly different shades within the same palette. Not everything has to match perfectly. When the tones are soft enough, it just feels layered rather than mismatched, like a tonal neutral moment, but with more depth.

I fell in love with this Another Tomorrow set, but there’s so much room to play here. I’m also dreaming of recreating the look in a more relaxed way with Leset—something easy yet intentional.

Stick With Soft Fabrics

Christie Tyler pairs a butter yellow shirt with low-key denim overalls

(Image credit: Christie Tyler)

My current uniform has been a pale yellow vintage Ralph Lauren button-down with vintage Levi’s, white overalls, or delicate lace shorts. It’s effortless, slightly nostalgic, and feels like the kind of outfit you throw on without thinking, but somehow still looks considered.

I especially love this tone in casual fabrics. It feels perfect for slower days: gardening, long lunches, lying in the sun. It gives you that “something extra” that a white tee sometimes lacks without straying too far from your comfort zone.

Dress It Up

With event season approaching, this particular shade of yellow feels like the most elegant departure from black, especially for those of us who default to it (my New York roots will always show).

A slightly deeper version of butter reads rich and elevated for evening, while softer shades feel romantic and airy for daytime occasions. It stands out, but in a way that still feels understated, which, to me, is always the goal. Plus, slightly bolder shades won't be confused for white if you wear them to a wedding.

Christie Tyler

(Image credit: Christie Tyler)
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Christie Tyler
Contributing Editor

Christie is a content creator, model, and the co-founder of Vollective; she also runs a popular Substack. She's marketed for brands including CHANEL, Louis Vuitton, Hèrmes, YSL, and more.