My server's file list has weird colors (green, yellow, purple). Fix: Go to Edit > Settings > File Lists . Turn off "Show file permission colors" or "Show ownership colors." These are designed for white backgrounds and rarely work well in dark mode.
The queue bar (bottom) is white but the list is dark. Fix: This is a known bug in versions 3.60-3.65. Update to the latest version (3.66+) or switch to the "Fusion" theme, as it forces the queue pane to respect the palette. Conclusion: Go Dark or Go Home Is a dark theme for FileZilla better? Yes, but only if done correctly. filezilla dark theme better
For the Message Log (bottom pane), go to Debug > Show raw directory listings (indirectly) or simply right-click the message log pane. You can change its font and background there. Set it to #1E1E1E with #D4D4D4 text. Method 3: The "FileZilla MRC" Fork (The Ultimate Hack) If you don't want to fiddle with settings, a developer named "mrc" created a popular fork of FileZilla called FileZilla MRC (available via GitHub). This version compiles the dark theme directly into the executable. My server's file list has weird colors (green,
FileZilla remains the king of FTP clients. It is finally time it looked like it belongs in the modern era. Go dark. It’s simply better. The queue bar (bottom) is white but the list is dark
The default FileZilla interface is a relic of the 2000s when CRTs needed white backgrounds to prevent burn-in. Those days are over. We have OLED, high-DPI, and dark IDEs.
For decades, FileZilla has been the titan of FTP clients. It is reliable, open-source, and packed with features that developers, sysadmins, and webmasters rely on daily. Yet, for most of its history, the user interface has remained stubbornly bright. You know the look: the stark white queues, the pale grey local and remote directory trees, and the harsh brightness that feels like staring into a medical examination light at 2 AM.