Letter Coloring Pages
12 free printable pages · print at home or color online
Letter Close-Up Q
Letter Z for Zebra
Big Letter S as a Snake
Bubble Letter M
Flower Letter F
Uppercase and Lowercase Ee
Letter D for Dog
Letter C with Cat
Bubble Letter B
Letter A is for Apple
Big Letter A
Letters are one of the very first things children learn to recognize, and coloring them makes the alphabet stick. Our free letter coloring pages present each letter in clear, chunky outlines that are easy for little hands to fill in — and as kids color an A, a B, or a Z, they're tracing the same shapes their hand will soon need for writing. The English alphabet has 26 letters, each with an uppercase and lowercase form, and many of our sheets pair a letter with a matching picture (A is for Apple, B is for Bear) so children connect the symbol to its sound. The pages range from giant single block letters for toddlers to detailed bubble letters and full A-to-Z charts for older kids. 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 Letter Coloring Pages
- Pick your letters: Scroll the collection and choose your letters — grab the letter of the week or the whole alphabet.
- 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 ABC fun begin!
🔤 Activity Ideas Using Letter Coloring Pages
- Letter of the Week: Color one letter each week, say its sound out loud, and pin the finished sheet on the wall to build a growing alphabet display.
- Spell Your Name: Print the letters in a child's name, color each one, then line them up and tape them together to make a personalized name banner.
- Sound Hunt: After coloring a letter, go on a hunt around the room for objects that start with that same sound — B for ball, book, banana.
- Alphabet Wall Chart: Color all 26 letters and arrange them in order on a big poster to make your own homemade A-to-Z chart for the playroom.
- Trace and Color: Have older kids trace the outline of each letter with a finger before coloring, building the muscle memory they'll use for handwriting.
📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience
- Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) so finished letters hold up as wall art or name banners without bleed-through.
- Color inside the lines first then add a background — it helps the bold letter shape stand out clearly.
- Print a full set of A to Z so you always have the next letter ready for letter-of-the-week.
- Say the letter and sound while coloring to turn quiet time into gentle reading practice.
- Laminate favorites so kids can color them again with dry-erase markers and reuse them many times.