Spring Coloring Pages
Enjoy free, printable spring coloring pages you can download as a PDF and print at home or school. Find cheerful designs for kids, classrooms, and relaxing coloring time.
All pages in Spring Coloring Pages
Bunny Basket Egg
Bunny with Easter Eggs
Cute Chick in Teacup
Hatching Chick with Flowers
Bunny with Easter Basket
Easter Bunny Airplane
Easter Bunny Greetings
Easter Egg Basket
Floral Easter Egg Frame
Cute Butterfly Garden
Flower Basket Bouquet
Spring Tulip Bouquet
Spring Tulip Garden
Two Lily Blossoms
Cute Easter Bunny
Potted Daisy Flower Bouquet
Bunny in Blossom Garden
Cute Butterfly Fairy
Hydrangea Blossom Bouquet
Zinnia Blossom Closeup
Elegant Orchid Blossom
Butterfly with Floral Border
Detailed Rose Blossom
Daisy Bouquet Flowers
Welcome the season with a fresh set of spring-themed coloring pages. This collection includes blooming flowers, butterflies, buzzing bees, baby animals, rainy-day scenes, and simple outdoor pictures that are easy for little hands to color. You’ll also find more detailed pages with gardens, wreaths, and nature patterns for older kids, teens, and adults. Every page is free and printable, and each design is available as a PDF download so you can save it, share it with a class, or print a few favorites for a quiet afternoon at home.
About These Spring Coloring Pages
Spring is a great time to color: there’s plenty of nature to notice, lots of bright colors to try, and endless ways to make each page your own. These spring coloring pages range from quick, simple pictures to more detailed designs, so you can pick what fits your mood, age group, or lesson plan.
What you’ll find in this collection
Look for classic spring favorites like tulips, daffodils, butterflies, ladybugs, and birds, plus playful rainy-day pages with umbrellas, puddles, and clouds. Some pages focus on big, bold shapes and open spaces for easy coloring, while others include garden scenes, patterned borders, and nature-inspired details for longer coloring sessions.
Great for kids, families, and classrooms
Parents can print a few pages for screen-free time, rainy afternoons, or a spring break activity. Teachers can use them as a calm early-finisher option, a seasonal art center, or a tie-in for units on weather, plant life cycles, and habitats. Many designs work well with crayons and markers, and simpler pages are friendly for preschool and kindergarten.
Relaxing options for older kids and adults
If you enjoy more mindful coloring, choose pages with repeating floral patterns, wreaths, or busier garden scenes. These are nice for teens and adults who like shading, blending, and experimenting with color palettes—pastels, bright spring tones, or even realistic nature colors.
Printing tips for best results
For most printers, choose “Fit to page” or “Scale to fit” when printing the PDF. Standard letter paper works well, but thicker paper (like 24 lb or cardstock) can help prevent markers from bleeding through. If you plan to use markers, consider printing single-sided, and test one small area first to see how your supplies behave.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What kinds of spring designs are included?
- You’ll find flowers, butterflies, bees, birds, baby animals, gardens, and rainy-day scenes like umbrellas and puddles.
- Are these spring coloring pages free to download?
- Yes, each page is free to download and print for personal or classroom use.
- Do the pages come as PDFs?
- Yes. Download the PDF and print it whenever you’re ready.
- Are there easy pages for preschoolers and kindergarteners?
- Yes, many pages have simple outlines and large areas to color, which are great for younger children.
- Do you have more detailed spring pages for older kids and adults?
- Yes. Look for gardens, wreaths, and patterned designs that are better for careful coloring and longer sessions.
- What paper size should I use?
- Most pages are designed to print on US Letter (8.5 x 11). You can usually scale to other sizes in your print settings.
- What coloring supplies work best?
- Crayons and colored pencils are great for most pages. Markers work well on thicker paper, and printing single-sided can help with bleed-through.
- Can I use these for classroom activities?
- Yes. They’re a helpful seasonal activity for art centers, early finishers, or lessons about weather and nature.