Cartoons Coloring Pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com is the single largest category on the site – with over 19,190 pages spanning more than 150 animated series and films, the full history of animation from the 1930s to the 2020s, and an audience range from children who are just learning to hold a crayon to adults who grew up watching every series here and are still watching. The word “cartoons” on this site means something genuinely vast: it includes Cocomelon and Hazbin Hotel, Tintin and Arcane, Bluey and Futurama, Spirited Away and SpongeBob, Murder Drones and Thomas and Friends. If it is animated and has a dedicated following, it likely has its own sub-category below.

Every page in this collection is completely free to download as a PDF and print, or to color online directly in your browser.

For Youngest Viewers: Ages 2–5

The largest cluster of sub-categories for the very youngest audience covers the shows that define early childhood screen time for children around the world. Cocomelon, Baby Shark, Pinkfong, and Sunny Bunnies anchor the toddler end of the collection – simple characters in bright primary colors with minimal visual complexity, ideal as a first coloring experience. Bluey and Peppa Pig are the dominant preschool shows of their era, both with distinctive flat-color palettes (Bluey’s Australian cattle dog family in blues and oranges, Peppa’s rounded pink family) that translate naturally to coloring. PAW Patrol, PJ Masks, Gabby’s Dollhouse, Pocoyo, Thomas and Friends, Wolfoo, Firebuds, Club Baboo, Daniel Tiger, and Blue’s Clues round out the core early-childhood section, each with its own visual identity and dedicated coloring page cluster. Doc McStuffins, Shimmer and Shine, Sofia the First, Octonauts, Super Wings, Abby Hatcher, Chip and Potato, Ben and Holly, and Super Why extend the preschool range further, covering themes from medical play to magic kingdoms to underwater adventure.

For Children: Ages 6–12

The elementary school range contains the broadest and most varied section of the entire category. Pokémon and Sonic represent the gaming-adjacent properties that span both this age range and older fans. SpongeBob, Tom and Jerry, Garfield, Scooby Doo, Doraemon, and Looney Tunes are the multi-generational classics that appear on this list because children still discover them daily – each of these properties has been finding new young fans for decades. Gravity Falls, The Amazing World of Gumball, Adventure Time, Steven Universe, The Owl House, Amphibia, and Big City Greens represent the wave of visually inventive Disney Channel and Cartoon Network series that defined 2010s animation for this age group. Ben 10, Teen Titans Go, Ladybug and Cat Noir, Power Rangers, Miniforce, and Spidey and His Amazing Friends cover the superhero and action-adventure space. My Little Pony, Care Bears, Rainbow Rangers, Trolls (and Trolls World Tour and Trolls Band Together), Strawberry Shortcake, Littlest Pet Shop, and Enchantimals cover the fantasy-fashion and magical-creature range. Dora the Explorer, Curious George, Barney and Friends, Paw Patrol, VeggieTales, Masha and the Bear, Pororo the Little Penguin, Bubble Guppies, Rugrats, Clifford, Fancy Nancy, Pete the Cat, Daniel Tiger, Care Bears, Nick Jr, and Digimon are additional major sub-categories across this range.

Animated Films: Kids and Family

A substantial portion of the Cartoons category is organized by animated film rather than ongoing series, covering nearly the full history of major animated feature films. The DreamWorks cluster includes Shrek, Kung Fu Panda, How to Train Your Dragon, Madagascar, Penguins of Madagascar, The Bad Guys, Over the Moon, Megamind, Turbo, Trolls, Home, Bee Movie, Monsters vs. Aliens, Antz, and several others. The Pixar/Disney adjacent cluster includes Finding Nemo, Finding Dory, A Bug’s Life, Ratatouille, Wreck-It Ralph, The Croods, Despicable Me/Minions, and more. The Studio Ghibli cluster is among the most distinctive in the category: Spirited Away, My Neighbor Totoro, Howl’s Moving Castle, and Ponyo each bring the specific visual qualities of Hayao Miyazaki’s direction – the soft watercolor-adjacent backgrounds, the expressive character designs, the naturalistic color range – to coloring pages that reward careful, patient work with subtle palettes. Additional animated film sub-categories include Coraline, Nimona, The Mitchells vs. The Machines, The Bad Guys, Ice Age, Rio, Happy Feet, Balto, Rango, and many others across independent, classic, and international production.

Classic and Vintage Cartoons

Some sub-categories in this collection represent animated properties with histories stretching back decades before the streaming era. Looney Tunes (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Tweety, Porky Pig, Road Runner) and Tom and Jerry are two of the oldest still-active animation franchises in existence, continuously popular since the 1940s. Woody Woodpecker, Betty Boop, Pink Panther, Snoopy (Peanuts), Charlie Brown Christmas, Scooby Doo, Garfield, Astro Boy, Tintin, Barbapapa, Rugrats, Mia and me, and Doraemon all represent properties with multi-decade histories that span generations of fans. Dr. Seuss and the Seuss-adjacent pages – including Cat in the Hat, Fox in Socks, Horton Hears a Who – cover the beloved illustrated book adaptations. Barney and Friends, Thomas and Friends, Masha and the Bear, Prostokvashino, Ilya Muromets, and KikoRiki extend the vintage and international classic range.

Teen and Adult Animation

The Cartoons category makes no age-range restrictions, which means it also contains the full range of animation specifically created for teenage and adult audiences. The Simpsons, Family Guy, American Dad, South Park, Futurama, Bob’s Burgers, and Beavis and Butt-Head represent the established network and cable adult animation franchises. Rick and Morty, Solar Opposites, Disenchantment, Close Enough, Final Space, Big Mouth, and Tuca and Bertie are the streaming-era adult animated series that have built substantial audiences. Bojack Horseman stands in its own category as one of the most critically serious animated series ever produced. Regular Show, Adventure Time, The Boondocks, and King of the Hill occupy the middle ground between family-accessible and adult-intended.

Hazbin Hotel and Helluva Boss – both produced by Vivienne “Vivziepop” Medrano and originally released on YouTube before Hazbin Hotel moved to Amazon Prime Video – have generated some of the most active fan art communities in recent animation, and their specific character sub-categories (Alastor, Angel Dust, Charlie Morningstar, Lucifer Morningstar, Husk, Emily) reflect the depth of fandom engagement. Murder Drones (Glitch Productions) and Fundamental Paper Education are similarly YouTube-origin series with intense, dedicated followings.

Arcane (Riot Games / Netflix, 2021) represents the gaming-animation crossover – technically based on the League of Legends game world, it is generally categorized as an animated series and has been among the most-awarded animated productions of recent years.

Sanrio, Kawaii, and Character Collections

A distinct cluster within the Cartoons category covers the Japanese character merchandise world that generates its own illustration tradition. Sanrio, as a brand hub, encompasses Hello Kitty (including Hello Kitty Mermaid), Kuromi, My Melody, Cinnamoroll, and the broader Sanrio character universe. Pusheen, Sumikko Gurashi, Rilakkuma, and Molang are additional character brands in this space – not animated series in the traditional sense, but animated characters with dedicated illustration communities. Chibi, as a style sub-category, covers chibi-format illustration across any character. Kawaii covers the broader aesthetic category. Unicorn Cat, Unicorn Cat, and related fantasy-animal character collections sit in this same space.

International and Global Animation

One of the most interesting aspects of the Cartoons category is its international scope. Korean animation is particularly well represented: Miniforce, Tobot, Safety Sheriff Labrador, Pororo the Little Penguin, Pucca, and several others. French animation includes Ladybug and Cat Noir (Miraculous), Barbapapa, Totally Spies, and Marsupilami. Russian animation includes Masha and the Bear, KikoRiki, Prostokvashino, and Ilya Muromets. Chinese animation includes Ne Zha, the critically acclaimed 2019 Nezha film that became the highest-grossing animated film in Chinese box office history. British animation includes Shaun the Sheep, Ben and Holly, Puffin Rock, and Octonauts. Australian animation includes Bluey and Bilby. Japanese animation (treated distinctly from the Anime category on this site) includes Doraemon, Astro Boy, Ponyo, My Neighbor Totoro, Spirited Away, and Howl’s Moving Castle. Brazilian and Latin American properties appear through Bolofofos, and the broader international YouTube animation world is represented by series like Wolfoo (Vietnamese) and Booba (French/international).

New and Trending Additions

The Cartoons category is actively updated with new releases and recently popularized series. Recent additions include Arcane, Nimona, The Mitchells vs. The Machines, Ruby Gillman Teenage Kraken, Migration, Bilby, Wings of Fire, Boy & Dragon, Lyla in the Loop, Scarygirl, Toopy and Binoo the Movie, and numerous others. The YouTube animation space has added Murder Drones, Hazbin Hotel, Helluva Boss, Fundamental Paper Education, and The Amazing Digital Circus (which also appears in the TV Show and Films category). Star Wars sub-categories continue to expand with dedicated pages for the series’ animated spin-off productions.

Mantasstonys Allen – Designer

Hello! I'm Mantasstonys Allen, a web designer at Coloringpagesonly.com. My passion is bringing creativity to life through beautiful and user-friendly designs. I'm here to make your experience on our site smooth, fun, and inspiring—so you can focus on what matters most: coloring and unleashing your imagination!