Teal sits at the meeting point of blue and green, and that duality makes it surprisingly versatile in a window blind: it reads as cool and contemporary in a white-painted room, warmer and more botanical when paired with natural materials. This guide covers six picks across the main blind types - roller, roman, venetian, vertical, pleated, and day-and-night - chosen to give you something workable regardless of how you're fitting the window or what the rest of the room is doing. It does not cover electric or motorised blinds, or plantation shutters, both of which put you in a meaningfully different price bracket.

What teal means in a blind fabric

Teal is not a standardised colour name, which matters when you are ordering a made-to-measure blind at a specific size. Retailers use it differently: some label a finish "Teal" outright; others reach the same territory under names like Duck Egg, Dark Teal Blue, Smoke Blue, or Willow Duck Egg. A fabric named Duck Egg tends towards the lighter, greyer end of the spectrum; Dark Teal Blue sits deeper and more saturated; a pure "Teal" label usually lands somewhere between the two.

Screen colours are also unreliable guides. Fabric dye, weave texture, and the direction of natural light all shift how a colour reads in a room. If you are matching to existing furnishings, a physical sample swatch is the only reliable check. Most UK made-to-measure retailers will post samples free or for a nominal charge.

The picks in this guide have been chosen because they include finishes that land within the teal spectrum or make teal work as a complementary colour. Where a range's teal finish has a specific name, we use that name rather than collapsing it into a generic description.

What to look for

Fabric type and light control. Roller and vertical blinds in polyester give a clean, flat finish that shows a solid colour at its most direct. Roman blinds in heavier fabric - often cotton or linen blends - give a textured, softer appearance; if teal is a statement rather than a background note, romans reward it. Pleated and day-and-night blinds are lighter in structure and their teal finishes tend to read as accents rather than the dominant tone. None of the fabric picks in this guide are marketed as blackout; if full darkness is a priority, teal as a colour choice does not preclude it - blackout-backed fabrics exist across roller and vertical types - but the specific ranges here are chosen for colour, not opacity.

Finish depth. The difference between Duck Egg and Dark Teal Blue is not just a shade: it is a question of how the blind will behave in a room over a day. Lighter duck-egg tones recede into the window and let the wall colour lead; deeper teals become an architectural feature when raised or lowered. Neither is correct, but they are different decisions.

Blind type and window size. Vertical blinds work best on wide windows and patio doors because the vanes slide along a top track rather than rolling up. Rollers and romans suit standard portrait-format windows. Venetians handle bathroom and kitchen environments well because aluminium slats are moisture-tolerant. If the window is wide and teal is your colour, the vertical pick here is the most purposeful match. For a standard bedroom or living-room window, the roller or roman will give a neater result.

Colour context in the room. Teal is naturally high-contrast against warm whites, terracotta, and warm grey. In a room that is predominantly cool - pale grey walls, chrome fixtures - a deeper teal blind will anchor the window; in a room with warmer tones, a lighter duck-egg will harmonise more gently. The venetian and pleated picks here lean towards the cooler end; the roman and day-and-night picks include warmer teal-adjacent tones.

Fitting type. All six picks are made-to-measure. For recess fitting, check that the blind type has a mechanism shallow enough for your recess depth - venetians and rollers typically need around 5cm of depth inside the recess; vertical blinds need a track that fits within the recess width. If you have UPVC windows, a Perfect Fit frame is an option for rollers and pleated blinds; it clips into the rubber gasket of the window without drilling.

Our picks

Best teal roller
Splash Twist Roller

Splash Twist Roller

at Swift Direct Blinds

A bold roller from Swift Direct Blinds available in 35 finishes, with greens and blues that sit well in teal schemes.

from £8.36 in 81 colours

Read review →
Best teal roman
William Morris Roman

William Morris Roman

at Blinds 2go

A William Morris roman from Blinds 2go in 12 finishes, with the Willow Duck Egg colourway lending a classic teal-leaning tone to living rooms and studies.

from £19.89 in 133 colours

Read review →
Best teal venetian
Turin

Turin

at Swift Direct Blinds

A lightweight aluminium venetian from Swift Direct Blinds starting from under seven pounds, in 3 finishes including neutral and cool-grey tones for rooms built around teal accents.

from £6.71 in 85 colours

Read review →
Best teal vertical
Splash Tropez

Splash Tropez

at Swift Direct Blinds

A vertical from Swift Direct Blinds in 40 finishes, including Dark Teal Blue and Duck Egg, making it the most direct teal match in the vertical category.

from £6.67 in 41 colours

Read review →
Best teal pleated
Scandi Pleated

Scandi Pleated

at Swift Direct Blinds

A pleated blind from Swift Direct Blinds with a dedicated Teal finish alongside four other colours, keeping the palette clean and the choice simple.

from £12.00 in 5 colours

Read review →
Best teal day and night
Enjoy Roller

Enjoy Roller

at Blinds 2go

A day-and-night roller from Blinds 2go in 24 finishes, including a named Teal option, offering in-fabric light control without giving up the colour.

from £12.92 in 57 colours

Read review →

Pick details

Best teal roller
Splash Twist Roller

Splash Twist Roller

at Swift Direct Blinds

A bold roller from Swift Direct Blinds available in 35 finishes, with greens and blues that sit well in teal schemes.

from £8.36 in 81 colours

Read review →

The Splash Twist Roller from Swift Direct Blinds is the most flexible pick in this guide from a sheer volume standpoint. With 35 finishes across the range, the teal-adjacent options include Moss Green, Vine Green, and Smoke Blue alongside the cooler neutrals if you want a pairing rather than a single statement colour. The fabric is a standard polyester roller construction, and the range starts at a modest price point, making it a low-commitment starting point if you are still deciding how prominent teal should be in a room. The flat roller surface means the colour reads consistently across the window whether the blind is fully down or partially raised.

Compared to the pleated or day-and-night picks, the roller format gives you more control over how much of the teal is visible at any moment - it rolls cleanly onto the tube when raised and leaves the window fully open. That is worth noting if teal is a seasonal or experimental choice rather than a fixed scheme.

Best teal roman
William Morris Roman

William Morris Roman

at Blinds 2go

A William Morris roman from Blinds 2go in 12 finishes, with the Willow Duck Egg colourway lending a classic teal-leaning tone to living rooms and studies.

from £19.89 in 133 colours

Read review →

The William Morris Roman Blind from Blinds 2go approaches teal from a different angle entirely. This is a patterned fabric range built around William Morris archive prints, and the teal-leaning finish is Willow Duck Egg - a design that layers duck-egg blue tones over a white ground with the characteristic Willow leaf motif. It is closer to duck egg than to a deep teal, so if you need a saturated colour, this is not it. What it offers instead is teal as part of a wider decorative language: a roman blind with pattern depth that works in living rooms, reading rooms, and bedrooms where the window is a focal point rather than a functional afterthought.

Romans in this format stack at the top of the window when raised, which suits rooms where you want to see the full fabric design rather than losing it to the stack. At 12 finishes across the range, the breadth here is narrower than the roller or vertical picks, but all 12 finishes are cohesive within the Morris archive aesthetic. The from-price of £19.89 reflects the more complex construction relative to a basic roller.

The Willow Duck Egg colourway pairs with a Bijou Linen White backing, which contributes to the lighter reading of the colour. If you need the blind to feel richer, Willow Ink and Willow Onyx in the same range move towards darker, heavier tones that could anchor a teal scheme more firmly.

Best teal venetian
Turin

Turin

at Swift Direct Blinds

A lightweight aluminium venetian from Swift Direct Blinds starting from under seven pounds, in 3 finishes including neutral and cool-grey tones for rooms built around teal accents.

from £6.71 in 85 colours

Read review →

The Turin venetian from Swift Direct Blinds is the narrowest pick by finish count in this guide, with 3 finishes: 25mm Neutral (premium), 25mm Smoke Grey, and Matt White. None of these is a teal in the direct sense. The reason it earns its place here is practical: aluminium venetian blinds are the recommended type for kitchens and bathrooms where moisture tolerance matters, and if your teal scheme is in one of those rooms, you are likely choosing a blind to work alongside teal rather than to carry it. The cool grey and neutral tones of the Turin sit comfortably against teal wall tiles or teal-painted cabinetry without competing with them.

Starting from £6.71, the Turin is the lowest entry price of any pick in this guide. The 25mm slat width is standard for aluminium venetians and gives a fine-grained light control: tilted open, the slats admit diffused light; tilted closed, they overlap to block it substantially. If your teal room is a kitchen or bathroom, the Turin is the appropriate blind type regardless of whether it carries the colour itself.

Best teal vertical
Splash Tropez

Splash Tropez

at Swift Direct Blinds

A vertical from Swift Direct Blinds in 40 finishes, including Dark Teal Blue and Duck Egg, making it the most direct teal match in the vertical category.

from £6.67 in 41 colours

Read review →

The Splash vertical blind from Swift Direct Blinds is the pick where teal is named most directly. Among its 40 finishes, Dark Teal Blue and Duck Egg both sit clearly within the teal spectrum, making this the most straightforward answer to a search for teal vertical blinds. The vertical format means these finishes are distributed across wide fabric vanes hanging from a top track - appropriate for patio doors and wide window openings where a roller or roman would require an unusually large drop and width.

Dark Teal Blue reads as a deep, saturated colour with significant presence; Duck Egg is lighter and softer, sitting closer to the duck-egg end of the spectrum than the dark-teal end. With 40 finishes overall, the range also includes plenty of greens (Moss Green, Vine Green, Cacti) and blues (Brittany Blue, Classic Blue, Midnight Blue, Indigo Blue) if you want to combine finishes across a bay window or two adjacent openings.

Compared to the roller pick, the vertical format stacks the vanes to one side when fully open rather than rolling onto a tube. This is more visible as a mechanism - verticals do not disappear as neatly as rollers - but for wide openings it is the practical choice. Starting from £6.67, it is also among the lowest entry prices in this guide.

Best teal pleated
Scandi Pleated

Scandi Pleated

at Swift Direct Blinds

A pleated blind from Swift Direct Blinds with a dedicated Teal finish alongside four other colours, keeping the palette clean and the choice simple.

from £12.00 in 5 colours

Read review →

The Scandi Pleated Blind from Swift Direct Blinds has the smallest finish count of any pick here: 5 finishes - Olive, Khol, Teal, Charcoal, and White Linen. That narrowness is not a weakness in this context; a dedicated Teal finish means there is no ambiguity about what you are ordering, and the palette of five is coherent rather than scattered. Olive and Teal together are a natural pairing if you are working a botanical-adjacent scheme; Charcoal and Teal will give a sharper contrast.

Pleated blinds fold into accordion pleats as they raise and stack neatly at the top - more so than romans, which have more fabric mass in their stack. The pleated format suits smaller or awkwardly shaped windows, including some non-rectangular frames. Starting from £12.32, the Scandi sits mid-range on price among the picks here. If you need a teal blind with a named Teal finish and a compact mechanism, this is the most direct option.

Best teal day and night
Enjoy Roller

Enjoy Roller

at Blinds 2go

A day-and-night roller from Blinds 2go in 24 finishes, including a named Teal option, offering in-fabric light control without giving up the colour.

from £12.92 in 57 colours

Read review →

The Enjoy Roller Blind from Blinds 2go is a day-and-night style: two layers of alternating sheer and opaque horizontal stripes that slide past each other to vary light and privacy without raising the blind entirely. Among its 24 finishes, Teal is a named colour sitting alongside Midnight Blue, Navy, and a broad range of neutrals. At a from-price of £12.92, it is mid-range relative to the other picks.

The day-and-night mechanism means you can set the blind with sheer stripes aligned over the opaque ones for a diffused-light position, or offset them for fuller privacy. It is not a blackout format in either position - some light passes through the sheer stripes even when offset - so if your teal room is a bedroom requiring full darkness, this is the wrong type. For a living room, kitchen-diner, or home office where adjustable privacy through the day is useful, the mechanism earns its keep. The Teal finish in this format has more visual texture than a flat roller would, because the alternating stripe structure catches light differently at different positions.

Compared to the roller pick, the Enjoy costs slightly more for similar window sizes and has a more complex mechanism. The trade-off is the in-fabric light control. Compared to the vertical, it suits a standard portrait-format window rather than a wide opening.

What we did not include

This guide covers six blind types. A few angles are worth noting as deliberate omissions.

Panel blinds, which use large flat fabric panels on a sliding track, are technically available in teal finishes at some retailers, but they are designed for very wide openings or room dividers rather than standard windows. Including one here would have added a highly specific use case without being useful to the majority of readers.

Cordless and motorised options appear within some of the ranges covered here - Swift Direct Blinds and Blinds 2go both offer motorised upgrades on selected ranges - but the focus of this guide is colour and blind type. The motorisation decision sits separately from the colour choice and involves a meaningful price step-up that shifts it into a different buying evaluation.

We also kept a deliberate focus on soft-fabric and slat blinds rather than plantation shutters. Shutters in teal are possible as a made-to-order product, but their price, lead time, and installation requirements put them in a separate category. A teal shutter is not a substitute for a teal roller blind; they are different choices for different situations.

Price by your window

Each of the six picks carries made-to-measure pricing, so what you pay depends on the size of your window. Entry prices range from £6.67 for the Splash vertical at its smallest size to £19.89 for the William Morris roman. The price rises with width and drop, and the relationship is not always linear - wider blinds on a vertical or roller involve proportionally more fabric. The per-pick price widgets on each range page let you enter your exact dimensions to see the cost at your specific size.

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