The colour is Purple
It was originally Purple, but it was changed to brown.
The color change of Baltic Avenue in Monopoly was made to better align with the game's overall color scheme and improve gameplay visibility. Originally, Baltic Avenue was purple, but it was changed to brown to represent the lowest tier of properties more distinctly. This alteration helps players easily identify property values and enhances the game's aesthetic coherence.
Dark purple. Baltic and The other one that escapes my memory.
Income Tax
The browns (Old Kent Road & Whitechapel Road in the UK edition) In the US version, the properties in the dark purple color group, namely: Meditteranean Avenue and Baltic Avenue.
That depends on what version of the Monopoly game you are using. In the main US version, the cheapest properties are dark purple. Those dark purple properties are Mediterranean Avenue and Baltic Avenue.
In Monopoly, a color set refers to a group of properties that are all of the same color, which players aim to acquire to build houses and hotels. Each color set consists of multiple properties, and owning all the properties in a set allows the player to charge higher rent when opponents land on them. For example, the brown color set includes Baltic Avenue and Mediterranean Avenue. Completing a color set is a key strategy for maximizing income and dominating the game.
The cheapest square on a Monopoly board is brown, specifically the "Mediterranean Avenue" square. It is the first property players can purchase and is priced at $2. The other brown square, "Baltic Avenue," costs $4, making the brown color group the least expensive in the game.
In the standard monopoly the best color to describe the $100 bill is a beige color.
Mediterranean Avenue and Baltic Avenue both cost $60.
According to Wikipedia.... 2008.
Mediterranean Avenue and Baltic Avenue (otherwise known as the purple properties), both at 60 dollars.