21 Houses with Green Siding That Prove Green Is Timeless

Last updated on December 26, 2025 · How we make our designs

Check out our house designs with green siding where we showcase the color as one of the most versatile exterior options.

Green siding can be surprisingly versatile. It can feel like a relaxed farmhouse, a tidy colonial, a quietly confident modern, or a cottage that just wants you to sit on the porch for a minute.

We’ve played with every shade. From soft sage to deep forest. Then we matched it with stone bases, brick accents, cedar touches, and different textures so each home has its own personality, not just “yep, it’s green.”

As you move through these designs, notice how the gables, porches, and window trims change the mood. Some are sneakers-on-the-porch casual, others feel a bit more “please ring the bell, don’t just barge in.” Watch how the walkways, steps, and garages are tucked in and shaped too. That’s where everyday life actually happens, and where a small design choice can make the trip from car to front door feel just a little better.

If you’re trying to figure out which kind of green feels like home to you, you’ll probably spot it here. And if you catch yourself judging houses the next time you’re out for a walk, well, we’ll take the blame for that.

Suburban Sage Board And Stone Haven

1/22
Two story green house with stone accents and manicured lawn
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

Soft sage siding wraps the house in a calm, almost “you’re-home-now” attitude, while the warm stone base keeps it feeling grounded and solid. We layered gables, dormers, and a metal accent roof over the porch to give the façade depth without turning it into a circus.

The three-car garage doors are detailed with panels and windows so they blend right in instead of shouting for attention, and the trim is kept light to frame those big, friendly windows. Out front, the simple walkway, tidy planting beds, and just-right front porch steps were all planned to make the daily walk from car to door feel easy, welcoming, and just a little bit fancy.

Emerald Gable Retreat On Corner Lot

2/22
Two story green house with stone accents
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

Deep green shingle siding wraps the whole house, giving it that “yes, I do love the outdoors” personality without going full cabin-in-the-woods. The crisp white trim around the windows and gables sharpens everything up, so the facade feels clean and tailored instead of heavy.

At the base, stacked stone skirts the exterior and climbs the entry columns, grounding the house and tying it into the landscaped beds that frame the front walk. We pulled the tall gables, dormer windows, and that welcoming front porch together so the home looks impressive from the street but still feels like you could comfortably show up in sneakers, not just on open-house day.

Cedar Accents On Sage Modern Home

3/22
Two-story modern house with sage green siding, cedar accents, and wide overhangs over a small front porch and manicured lawn
More like this: Modern Houses Suburban Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into clean modern lines, using sage horizontal siding to calm down the strong geometry and help the house feel like it actually wants to be part of the neighborhood. Warm cedar boards and the light stone base are there to keep things from getting too serious, adding a little “weekend cabin” energy to an otherwise crisp façade.

Generous roof overhangs stretch out like a brimmed hat, shading the big black-framed windows and giving the porch a cozy, almost room-like feel. Those oversized windows, paired with the simple front steps, were planned to make the interior feel open and bright while still giving the street a friendly, well-kept face—kind of like the house that always has its act together but doesn’t brag about it.

Calm Meadow Green Farmhouse Revival

4/22
Two story farmhouse with soft green siding white trim and a welcoming front porch
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses Gardens
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into that “classic farmhouse but actually livable” vibe, with sage-green lap siding, crisp white trim, and a simple roofline that feels familiar rather than fussy. The warm wood front door and black window frames give it a subtle modern kick, so it doesn’t drift into nostalgia overload.

We shaped the front walk as a gentle curve on purpose, guiding you between low stone walls, potted plants, and layered beds that make the entry feel like a small garden stroll. The proportions of the porch, the placement of the gables, and the balanced rows of windows all work together to make the house look calm and settled, like it’s been part of this lawn and these trees for years already.

Classic Olive Colonial With Bright Trim

5/22
Two story green house with white trim black shutters and manicured front lawn
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This colonial leans into its soft olive siding and crisp white trim, giving the whole place a calm, well-put-together vibe that doesn’t feel like it’s trying too hard. We played up the symmetry with matching gables, evenly spaced windows, and a centered entry so it looks timeless from the street, even when the kids’ bikes are tossed in the yard.

Dark shutters frame the windows like bold picture frames, making the big front panes feel intentional instead of just “lots of glass.” The low porch roof, clean columns, and tidy foundation plantings were all chosen to keep the scale friendly and welcoming, as if the house is saying, “yes, you can borrow sugar here.”

Soft Sage Porchside Garden Cottage

6/22
Green-sided house with gabled roof and landscaped front yard
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses Gardens
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into a calm sage palette, letting the vertical lap siding and shingle-style gable quietly layer texture instead of shouting for attention. We paired simple trim lines with generous windows so the house feels friendly and open, like it’s actually glad you came over.

Out front, the deep covered porch, Adirondack chairs, and wide steps are all about slowing people down before they hit the front door. Low stone accents, clipped shrubs, and that slightly quirky bird sculpture keep the landscaping relaxed but intentional, giving the whole place a tidy, modern-cottage personality without drifting into “storybook” territory.

Olive Porchside Brick-Base Family Nest

7/22
Two-story green-sided house with white trim and brick porch columns
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses Gardens
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into a calm olive-green siding that makes the white trim pop like a crisp shirt collar on a favorite jacket. We paired it with a low front porch wrapped in white railings and chunky brick bases, so the entry feels solid and welcoming without trying too hard.

Up top, the twin front gables frame the second-story windows, giving the façade just enough height and presence for a narrow lot. Neatly edged planting beds and the straight-shot walkway pull the eye right to the door, making the whole place feel tended, friendly, and honestly like somewhere you’d happily borrow a cup of sugar.

Green Gables Stone-Base Family Retreat

8/22
Two-story green craftsman home with stone accents and two-car garage on manicured lawn
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This tall, gabled home leans into its layered green siding, using a deeper tone on the upper level so the whole place feels settled into the landscape rather than shouting from the curb. The stone base wraps the porch and lower walls, grounding everything and giving that “yep, we actually planned this” sort of confidence.

White trim frames the generous windows and garage doors, adding crisp outlines that keep the façade from feeling heavy, even with all that footage. We tucked in dormers and varying roof pitches to break up the massing, so it feels like a welcoming family place instead of a giant box that just happens to have doors.

Forest Studio Entry With Black Frames

9/22
Modern green two-story house with black-framed windows and simple concrete front steps
More like this: Modern Houses Farmhouses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This tall, slim-sided home leans into a deep forest green that makes the black-framed windows and door feel almost like a modern picture frame collection. We loved the idea of a compact footprint that still looks confident from the street, so the front elevation rises straight up with clean lines and no fussy trim getting in the way.

The standing-seam metal porch roof, simple concrete stoop, and twin planters were chosen to keep everything crisp and low-maintenance, while still giving guests a little moment of arrival. Brass sconces warm up all that green and black just enough, adding a welcoming glow that keeps the whole place from feeling too serious—because yes, even a house should know how to relax a bit.

Woodland Lodge With Warm Cedar Accents

10/22
Green-sided house with wood trim and modern landscaping
More like this: Forest Houses Modern Houses Dream Homes
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into that cozy-woods vibe, with deep green siding that lets the cedar trim pop like campfire light against the trees. We paired board-and-batten with shingle-style gables so the house doesn’t feel flat, giving it just enough texture to stay interesting without shouting about it.

Up front, the wide concrete drive with brick inlays feels clean and crisp, then softens into a landscape of low shrubs, grasses, and river rock that quietly guides you to the porch. The warm wood garage doors and entry porch are intentionally oversized moments of natural color, pulling your eye in and making the whole place feel welcoming before you’ve even found the doorbell.

Sage Craftsman With Cozy Brick Base

11/22
Two-story house with soft green siding, tan brick lower level, and attached two-car garage. Small covered entry porch, simple landscaping, and matching taupe trim and roof
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into that calm sage siding, then mixes in warm tan brick so the house feels grounded without getting too serious. The shingle-style upper gable and the little front porch roof break up the height, so the whole place feels more welcoming when you walk up.

We framed the windows and garage in a soft taupe trim that ties the roof, brick, and siding together, so nothing is fighting for attention. Even the slim porch columns and low-maintenance planting beds are chosen to keep things clean and simple, giving you a home that looks put-together without trying too hard.

Deep Pine Suburban Twin-Garage Home

12/22
Two-story green-sided house with white trim and triple-car garage under cloudy sky
More like this: Suburban Houses Modern Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This deep pine exterior leans into a calm, grounded look, paired with crisp white trim that keeps everything feeling fresh instead of too serious. We pushed the double-gable roofline and the small upper dormer to give the front a bit of personality, like it’s casually raising an eyebrow at the rest of the street.

The three-bay garage and straight-shot driveway are all about real-life convenience, hiding clutter while keeping day-to-day traffic smooth. Slim porch columns, clean window grids, and those horizontal lap lines keep the whole place looking neat and intentional, so even on construction day it’s already giving “finished and put-together” energy.

Modern Sage Homestead With Rustic Touches

13/22
Two-story green house with stone base and wood accents. Symmetrical front entry porch with dark windows and neatly landscaped yard
More like this: Farmhouses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design plays with a calm sage siding and then wakes it up with warm cedar shutters, chunky porch posts, and a solid wood front door that feels almost cabin-like. The stone base grounds everything, giving the house a sense of sturdiness that makes you imagine it’s ready for muddy boots and everyday chaos.

We leaned into a mix of vertical board-and-batten, horizontal lap, and shingle textures so the façade feels layered and interesting without getting fussy. Dark window frames sharpen the whole look, framing the views while the deep front porch quietly invites coffee, conversations, and the occasional lazy afternoon escape from the to‑do list.

Sage Bungalow With Breezy Columned Porch

14/22
Single-story green-sided home with white columned porch, stone chimney, and neat front landscaping
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This low, wide bungalow leans into calm with its muted sage shingles, then wakes things up with crisp white trim and those tall, glassy entry doors that feel almost like a modern sunroom. The stone chimney anchors the whole roofline, giving the place a bit of lodge character without going full mountain-cabin cosplay.

We designed the front porch with slender, evenly spaced columns to frame the entry and make everyday arrivals feel just a touch grand. Simple planting beds soften all the straight lines, guiding you from driveway to front steps with a mix of grasses and shrubs that stay tidy but never stiff.

Sage Brickfront Family Corner Residence

15/22
Two-story suburban house with sage green siding, tan brick base, and attached two-car garage
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into that calm sage siding, then warms it up with a brick base and taupe trim so it feels welcoming instead of washed out. The triple gables and mix of lap siding with shingle panels keep the front elevation interesting, even on a quiet cul-de-sac.

We tucked the entry under a compact porch supported by dark-stained columns, giving guests a clear, sheltered landing spot that doesn’t overwhelm the façade. Low, tidy landscaping beds soften the edges of the concrete walk and driveway, framing the house so it feels finished and cared-for the moment you pull up.

Gabled Moss Haven With Courtyard Drive

16/22
Green gabled two-story home with brick accents and three-car garage off a wide driveway
More like this: Suburban Houses Modern Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This home leans into layered gables and tall, narrow windows to give a classic shape a fresher, lighter twist. The mossy green siding sits over a band of brick and stone, so the house feels settled into the landscape instead of just parked on it.

We played with board-and-batten on the upper sections and horizontal lap on the lower level, adding just enough texture that the facade stays interesting even on quiet days. The wide driveway and tucked three-car garage keep the everyday chaos to one side, letting the front entry stay calm, welcoming, and yes, a little bit proud of itself.

Sage Porchfront Craftsman Garden Hideaway

17/22
Green craftsman-style house with wide front porch, tapered columns, and landscaped stone walkway
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses Gardens
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

The soft green siding and shingle gable give the house that calm, neighborly feel, while the chunky tapered columns make the porch look solid and welcoming, like it’s ready for years of muddy boots and coffee chats. Warm wood doors and window frames break up the green nicely, adding just enough contrast so it feels cozy instead of monotone.

Up top, the triple window under the front gable brings in extra daylight and gives the façade a friendly “face,” which we love probably a little too much. The low stone-and-stucco porch walls, simple lantern lights along the path, and tidy planting beds keep everything grounded and practical, so it feels charming without trying too hard.

Evergreen Porchfront Suburban Craftsman Nest

18/22
Green Craftsman-style house with white trim and front porch beside single-car garage
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into a deep evergreen siding that wraps around classic Craftsman lines, then brightens up with crisp white trim and chunky porch columns perched on stone bases. The covered entry feels intentionally welcoming, with the paneled green front door echoing the siding so nothing screams for attention, it just quietly says “yep, I belong here.”

Up top, staggered shingle-style siding in the gables adds texture, while layered rooflines and exposed brackets keep the façade interesting without going overboard. The single garage door with carriage-style detailing, simple concrete steps, and soft foundation plantings all work together to give the house a tidy, relaxed curb appeal that’s easy to live with and even easier to pull into after a long day.

Mossy Porchfront Cottage With Navy Door

19/22
Two-story green Craftsman home with white trim and navy front door
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This place leans into a cozy Craftsman vibe with mossy shingle siding, crisp white trim, and a navy front door that quietly says, “yes, I’m the tasteful one on the block.” The layered gables and deep porch roof give the house a strong, comfortable shape that feels familiar, almost like it’s been here longer than it has, and that was exactly the point.

We designed the front porch as a little outdoor room, with chunky square columns and brick steps that make arriving feel a bit like a tiny ceremony every day. Tall, gridded windows wrap the main level so the rooms inside stay connected to the manicured shrubs and curved path, letting the landscaping act like the house’s favorite accessory rather than an afterthought.

Lakeside Peakview Sage Timber Cottage

20/22
Green board-and-batten lakeside house with black trim and stone base framed by a mountain backdrop
More like this: Lake Houses Mountain Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This lakeside escape leans into its mountain setting with that tall, A-frame inspired roofline and quiet sage siding that almost melts into the pines across the water. We paired black-framed windows with chunky cedar brackets so the whole place feels a bit like a modern cabin that learned some good manners.

Down at ground level, the stone base and wide front steps give the entry a grounded, almost lodge-like feel without going full ski resort. The board-and-batten siding keeps the walls visually slim and vertical, while the generous windows pull in those lake and cliff views you’d never forgive us for hiding.

Sage Peakfront Timbered Entry Home

21/22
Two-story house with sage shingle siding, stone base, and timber-framed front porch
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes
Interior Designs Get the Floor Plans

This design leans into that calm sage shingle face up top, then grounds everything with warm stone along the base so it feels sturdy but still friendly. We framed the dark wood front door with a chunky timber porch, giving it that “yes, you’ve arrived, come on in” kind of vibe without going full mountain lodge.

The windows are tall and lean with soft cream trim, which keeps the whole front feeling crisp instead of heavy, even with all the texture going on. Those subtle bump-outs, layered gables, and tidy little roof brackets are there on purpose, adding just enough character that you notice them, but you don’t feel like the house is trying too hard to impress the neighbors.

Pin this for later:

22/22
collage_694e4693bdb4c9.61029201
More like this: Suburban Houses Traditional Houses
© Design by BuildGreenNewHomes

Table of Contents