Frog Coloring Pages
12 free printable pages · print at home or color online
Frog Catching a Fly
Two Frog Friends
Frog Close-Up Face
Leaping Frog
Tadpole to Frog
Baby Froglet
Poison Dart Frog
Big Bullfrog
Red-Eyed Tree Frog
Frog on a Lily Pad
Smiling Pond Frog
Frogs are a favorite first animal for little artists — round, friendly, and easy to recognize with their big bulging eyes and wide smiling mouths. Our free frog coloring pages feature the whole pond family: the classic green pond frog, the sticky-toed tree frog, the booming bullfrog, the brightly patterned poison dart frog, and even a tadpole growing its first legs. As kids color, they pick up real nature facts — that frogs are amphibians that begin life in water, that a tree frog's toe pads help it climb glass, and that a frog's long sticky tongue snaps out to catch bugs. The pages range from chunky, simple shapes for tiny hands to busier pond scenes with lily pads, cattails, and dragonflies for older kids who want more to fill in. Print as many as you like — they're free, need no sign-up, and are ready the moment you are.
🖨️ How-To Guide: Download & Print Your Frog Coloring Pages
- Pick your frogs: Scroll the collection and choose your favorite frogs — grab a few for variety.
- Click the download button: Each page has a button right below it — one click saves the high-resolution printable to your device.
- Open the file: Open it in any standard PDF or image viewer — nothing to install.
- Print at home or school: Choose A4 or US Letter paper and turn on "fit to page" for clean scaling.
- Start coloring: Hand out the crayons, markers, or colored pencils and let the hopping begin!
🐸 Activity Ideas Using Frog Coloring Pages
- Life Cycle Line-Up: Color the tadpole, the froglet, and the grown frog, then place them in order to show how a frog grows up — a hands-on science lesson.
- Pond Diorama: Color several frogs and lily pads, cut them out, and glue them onto a blue paper "pond" to build one big amphibian scene.
- Name That Frog: Cover the labels and quiz each other on the tree frog, bullfrog, and dart frog by their toes, size, and patterns.
- Bright Frog Challenge: Use the dart frog page to talk about warning colors in nature, then color it as boldly as possible — reds, yellows, and electric blues.
- Leaping Story Prompt: Let your child invent a short story about the frog they just colored — where its pond is, what bugs it eats, and who its froggy friends are.
📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience
- Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) for bold frog outlines with no bleed-through.
- Greens and yellows suit most frogs — but dart frogs and tree frogs come in reds, blues, and oranges, so go bright!
- Color the body first then add spots, stripes, and those big round eyes so the small details stay neat.
- Print a few copies so kids can try the same frog in different color schemes.
- Save favorites in a folder to build a personal frog and pond coloring book over time.