Fall Coloring Pages
12 free printable pages · print at home or color online
Cozy Mug and Leaves
Colorful Fall Tree
Cornucopia Harvest
Pumpkin Patch Scene
Cute Fall Leaf
Squirrel Gathering Acorns
Acorn and Oak Leaf
Basket of Fall Apples
Friendly Fall Scarecrow
Fall Pumpkin
Falling Maple Leaves
Fall is the season of crisp air, golden light, and trees that blaze with red, orange, and yellow — and coloring it is a cozy way to celebrate the change. Our free fall coloring pages capture the icons of autumn in clear, bold outlines: falling leaves, pumpkins fresh from the patch, smiling scarecrows, ripe apples, acorns, and busy squirrels storing food for winter. As kids color, they notice real signs of the season — why leaves turn color and drop, what farmers harvest in autumn, and how animals get ready for the cold. The pages range from chunky, simple shapes for little hands to busier harvest scenes for older kids and grown-ups 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 Fall Coloring Pages
- Pick your fall pages: Scroll the collection and choose your favorite autumn scenes — 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 bring on the autumn colors!
🍂 Activity Ideas Using Fall Coloring Pages
- Real Leaf Color Match: Gather fallen leaves on a walk, then match their colors to a leaf coloring page — a hands-on way to talk about why leaves change.
- Harvest Coloring Station: Set up a stack at a fall festival, pumpkin-patch visit, or Thanksgiving table to keep kids happy and creative.
- Autumn Window Display: Color several pages, cut them out, and tape leaves, pumpkins, and acorns to a window for a warm seasonal scene.
- Pumpkin Color Experiments: Print a few copies of the same pumpkin and try classic orange, then white, green, and rainbow versions side by side.
- Fall Story Prompt: Let your child invent a short story about the scarecrow or squirrel they just colored — where it lives and what it's getting ready for.
📝 Printable Tips for the Best Coloring Experience
- Use heavier paper (32 lb. or cardstock) for bold autumn outlines with no bleed-through.
- Reach for warm fall colors — reds, oranges, yellows, and browns — but encourage any colors the artist loves.
- Color large shapes first then go back for veins, stems, and stitches so the small details stay neat.
- Print a few copies so kids can try the same leaf or pumpkin in different color schemes.
- Save favorites in a folder to build a personal fall and harvest coloring book over time.