The closest widely recommended Benjamin Moore match for Sherwin-Williams Cyberspace (SW 7076, LRV 6) is Wrought Iron (2124-10), around LRV 6.1: nearly the same depth, but a hair grayer and greener, with the blue holding back a little more. If you want Cyberspace's blue to read more clearly, Cheating Heart (1617), near LRV 7.6, sits a step lighter and bluer.
On the Behr deck, the closest easy match is Behr Carbon (N520-7), around LRV 5.5, a touch deeper and a hair cooler than Cyberspace.
The delta between all of these is small, so the numbers only get you to the right shelf. The only way to be sure is to confirm the winner on your own wall, in your own light, before you buy a gallon.
Sherwin-Williams Cyberspace is one of the most popular deep blue-charcoals in the country, so it is no surprise that people painting with Benjamin Moore or Behr want the same brooding look without switching brands. The honest answer up front: no paint company publishes official cross-brand equivalents, and none of these three will ever certify a competitor's color as a match. What we can do is line up the numbers that actually matter, LRV (how light or dark a color reads) and undertone (the subtle cast underneath the charcoal), and find the closest fit. If you want the full method, here is how cross-brand paint matching works. For Cyberspace specifically, matching is about landing within a point or two of LRV 6 while keeping that muted, barely-there blue that separates it from a plain charcoal.
The closest matches, side by side
| Color | Brand + code | Approx LRV | Undertone vs Cyberspace | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyberspace (approx #44484D) | Sherwin-Williams SW 7076 | 6 | Reference: blue-charcoal, faint blue lead over a near-black base | The color you are matching |
| Wrought Iron (approx #454749) | Benjamin Moore 2124-10 | ~6.1 | Almost identical depth, a hair grayer and greener, less overt blue | Closest widely recommended BM match |
| Cheating Heart (approx #4C525B) | Benjamin Moore 1617 | ~7.6 | A step lighter, holds the blue-gray cast more clearly | Best BM pick if you want the blue to show |
| Carbon (approx #474C52) | Behr N520-7 | ~5.5 | A touch deeper and a hair cooler, slightly more neutral charcoal | Closest easy Behr match |
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LRV figures are approximations of each brand's published data and can shift with batch and sheen. The hex values above are digital renderings meant to show relative tone on a screen, not exact color: a physical paint chip under your own lighting is the only authoritative reference.
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Why there is no exact Cyberspace equivalent
Every brand builds its colors on its own tint bases and its own colorants, then measures them on its own equipment. That means two blue-charcoals can share the same LRV on paper and still read differently on a wall, because the pigments that create the color are not identical. Cyberspace leans on a muted blue that barely leads over a near-black base, which is exactly what keeps it from looking like a plain gray-black. Benjamin Moore and Behr each reach a similar place with a slightly different recipe, so the undertone drifts: Wrought Iron picks up a hair more gray and green, Cheating Heart lets the blue read more openly, and Behr Carbon leans a touch more neutral. None of that is a flaw. It is simply why a cross-brand match is always a close approximation, never a certified twin.
Deck differences matter too. A fan deck chip is printed or drawn down under controlled light, but your room has its own mix of daylight, warm bulbs, and reflected color from floors and trim. A blue-charcoal at LRV 6 is dark enough that these variables get amplified, because there is very little light bouncing back to soften the reading. So the same gallon can look distinctly blue on a bright, north-facing wall and almost black in an evening hallway. This is exactly why we treat the numbers above as a starting shelf, not a final answer.
When the Benjamin Moore match works (and when to stay Sherwin-Williams)
The right call usually comes down to the rest of your palette and how much blue you actually want to see.
- Choose the Benjamin Moore Wrought Iron match when your trim, ceiling, and coordinating grays are already Benjamin Moore, so your whole project stays inside one fan deck and one store, and you want the same near-identical depth as Cyberspace.
- Reach for Cheating Heart when you want the blue to stay visible rather than flattening into charcoal, especially in a room with strong daylight. For where that blue shows up best, see Cyberspace undertones and best rooms.
- Stay with Sherwin-Williams Cyberspace when you want that specific balance of blue and charcoal it is known for, since Wrought Iron and Behr Carbon both trade a little of the blue for a more neutral base.
- Before you decide, our guide on how to compare paint colors the right way shows how to line up two dark chips without getting fooled by the deck or the store lighting.
Related matches
Hunting equivalents for other Sherwin-Williams blues? See the Benjamin Moore match for In the Navy, the deep dramatic navy, and the Benjamin Moore match for Windy Blue, the soft gray-blue. Same method, same honesty: closest LRV and undertone, then a test on your own wall.
Frequently asked questions
What is the closest Benjamin Moore equivalent of Cyberspace?
The closest widely recommended match is Benjamin Moore Wrought Iron (2124-10), around LRV 6.1. It sits at nearly the same depth as Cyberspace (SW 7076, LRV 6) but reads a hair grayer and greener, with the blue holding back a little more. If you want Cyberspace's blue to stay visible, Cheating Heart (1617) is a step lighter and bluer near LRV 7.6. There is no official equivalent, so test either one on your own wall before you commit.
Is there a Behr version of Cyberspace?
Behr Carbon (N520-7) is the closest easy Behr match, sitting near LRV 5.5 with a slightly deeper, cooler cast than Cyberspace. It is not an official equivalent, and Behr mixes in a different base and colorant system, so the undertone can shift under your lighting. Paint a sample board and check it against Cyberspace in the actual room before ordering a full gallon.
Does Benjamin Moore Wrought Iron match Sherwin-Williams Cyberspace?
They are close cousins, not twins. Wrought Iron and Cyberspace share almost the same depth (both near LRV 6), but Wrought Iron leans a touch grayer and greener while Cyberspace keeps a faint blue lead. In bright daylight the blue in Cyberspace steps forward and the two separate; in low light both can flatten toward near-black. Sample them side by side, then confirm on your wall.
Can I get an exact Cyberspace match at Benjamin Moore or Behr?
Not officially. No paint brand publishes exact cross-brand equivalents, and each brand uses its own bases and tints, so LRV and undertone always shift a little. Some paint counters can scan a Cyberspace chip and mix a custom color-match into their own base, which gets you very close, though sheen and coverage can still differ. The only way to be sure is to test the match on your own wall in your own light.
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