Scribbloo

Easter Coloring Pages

12 free printable pages · print at home or color online

12 pages

Easter is one of the most colorful holidays of the year, which makes it perfect for coloring. Our free Easter coloring pages gather all the season's favorites: the cheerful Easter Bunny, baskets piled with eggs, intricately patterned eggs waiting to be decorated, soft baby chicks, and fresh spring flowers. The custom of decorating eggs is centuries old — eggs have long stood for new life and the arrival of spring — and these pages let kids invent their own patterns with stripes, dots, zigzags, and swirls. You will find chunky, simple shapes for little hands alongside busier scenes for older kids who want more to fill in. Print as many as you like — they are free, need no sign-up, and are ready the moment you are, whether for an egg hunt, a classroom, or a cozy craft table.

🖨️ How-To Guide: Download & Print Your Easter Coloring Pages

  1. Pick your Easter pages: Scroll the collection and choose your favorites — grab a few bunnies, eggs, and baskets for variety.
  2. Click the download button: Each page has a button right below it — one click saves the high-resolution printable to your device.
  3. Open the file: Open it in any standard PDF or image viewer — nothing to install.
  4. Print at home or school: Choose A4 or US Letter paper and turn on "fit to page" for clean scaling.
  5. Start coloring: Hand out the crayons, markers, or colored pencils and let the egg-decorating begin!

🐰 Activity Ideas Using Easter Coloring Pages

  • Paper Egg Hunt: Color and cut out several Easter eggs, hide them around the room, and let kids hunt for their own handmade eggs.
  • Decorate-Your-Own-Egg Contest: Print the blank patterned egg pages and challenge everyone to invent the most creative egg design, then vote on a favorite.
  • Easter Basket Place Cards: Color a small bunny or chick for each guest and prop it at the table as a cheerful homemade place card for Easter brunch.
  • Spring Window Display: Color several pages, cut them out, and tape bunnies, eggs, and flowers to a window to build a bright spring scene.
  • Easter Card Craft: Color a bunny or chick, fold a sheet of paper in half, and glue it on the front to make a personal Easter card for family.

📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience

  • Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) so markers do not bleed through and your egg art holds up for crafts.
  • Pastel colors — soft pinks, yellows, blues, and greens — give pages a classic springtime Easter feel.
  • Color the egg base first then add stripes, dots, and zigzags on top so the patterns stay crisp.
  • Print a few copies so kids can try the same egg or bunny in different color schemes.
  • Add glitter or stickers once coloring is done to turn a finished page into a sparkly Easter decoration.

Frequently asked questions

What ages are these Easter coloring pages for?
They work for ages 2 to 12. Toddlers and preschoolers love the simple bunnies and chicks, while older kids enjoy decorating the detailed patterned eggs and busier scenes.
Are the Easter coloring pages free?
Yes — every Easter coloring page on Scribbloo is free to download and print, with no sign-up required.
What Easter pictures are in this collection?
Favorites like the Easter Bunny, decorated eggs, Easter baskets, baby chicks, spring flowers, and cheerful holiday scenes — plus cute, easy options for little ones.
How do I print the coloring pages?
Click the download button under any page, open the file, and print on A4 or US Letter paper. Use your printer's "fit to page" setting for the best results.
Can I use these in a classroom or Sunday school?
Absolutely. They are great for Easter craft time and spring lessons — teachers and caregivers are welcome to print as many copies as they need.
What colors work best for Easter coloring pages?
Soft pastels like pink, lavender, mint, and pale yellow give a classic Easter look, but bright, bold colors are just as fun — there are no wrong choices.
Do you have easy Easter pages for toddlers?
Yes. Several pages use big, simple shapes with thick outlines that are easy for little hands to color inside, like a single large egg or a round bunny.
Why do we decorate eggs at Easter?
Eggs have long been a symbol of new life and spring, and decorating them is a tradition many centuries old — coloring these pages is a mess-free way to join in.