Chhota Bheem coloring pages bring one of India’s most beloved animated characters straight to your kids’ coloring table – and for families discovering this show for the first time, that is exactly as exciting as it sounds.

Chhota Bheem is not just popular in India. The series has quietly built a massive following among families worldwide, including a growing audience in the United States, where parents are actively looking for cartoons that teach courage, kindness, and teamwork without relying on conflict or dark themes. The show follows a brave, strong-hearted boy named Bheem and his tight-knit group of friends – Chutki, Raju, the talking monkey Jaggu, and others – as they protect their village of Dholakpur from every kind of trouble that comes their way. Bheem gets his superhuman strength from eating laddus, the traditional Indian sweet, which gives parents one of the easiest conversation starters about Indian culture that any cartoon has ever offered.

This collection features 60+ free Chhota Bheem coloring pages covering every major character and scene type. Every page can be downloaded as a printable PDF or colored directly online – no account, no fees, and no limits on how many copies you print.

What’s Inside This Free Chhota Bheem Coloring Pages Collection

The collection covers the full Dholakpur cast – organized by character so you can find exactly what your child is looking for without scrolling through unrelated content.

Bheem Solo Coloring Pages Bheem himself appears in the largest variety of poses in this collection: standing strong, running, jumping, sitting in meditation, riding a tiger, playing guitar, skateboarding, eating fruits, practicing kung fu, doing a cowboy pose, and even holding a rock above his head. The range matters because it gives you options for every mood – a calm, seated Bheem for a quiet activity, or a punching, action-packed Bheem for a kid who wants something exciting. Solo Bheem pages are the most versatile starting point in the entire set.

Chutki Coloring Pages Chutki is Bheem’s closest friend – a smart, caring girl who is often the voice of reason in the group. Her pages show her walking, holding fruits, and in her classic outfit with the bindi and traditional Indian dress. For parents and teachers looking for a strong female character to complement the Bheem pages, Chutki is the natural choice. Her design is clean and uncomplicated, which makes her pages especially good for younger colorists who are still developing confidence with staying inside the lines.

Raju and Jaggu Coloring Pages Raju is the youngest and most timid member of the friend group, which makes him instantly relatable for many kids. Jaggu is a talking monkey and one of Bheem’s most loyal companions – and predictably, one of the most popular characters with children under eight. Pages featuring Raju and Jaggu together capture the lighthearted, comedic side of the show and tend to be the ones kids ask to color more than once.

Krishna Coloring Pages from Chhota Bheem Lord Krishna appears in the series as a wise, playful friend who guides Bheem through his toughest challenges. Krishna’s design – the peacock feather crown, the flute, the flowing clothes – makes for some of the most visually rich pages in the collection. These pages also carry genuine cultural weight: coloring Krishna gives teachers and parents a natural, pressure-free way to introduce students to Hindu mythology and Indian spiritual traditions through an activity that children already enjoy.

Kalia, Dholu, and Bholu Coloring Pages Kalia is the neighborhood bully who constantly tries – and fails – to outdo Bheem. His sidekicks, the twin brothers Dholu and Bholu, add comedy to every scene they appear in. These characters give the collection its humor, and kids who enjoy the show’s funny moments will gravitate toward these pages immediately. From a coloring perspective, Kalia’s larger build creates broad, open areas that are satisfying and easy for small hands to fill.

Group and Friend Coloring Pages Several pages feature the entire Dholakpur gang together – Bheem with all his best friends, Raju and Chutki with Jaggu and Bheem, and various adventure scenes. Group pages are ideal for collaborative coloring activities where two or three children work on the same sheet, each taking a different character.

Why Chhota Bheem Characters Work So Well for Coloring Pages

The Chhota Bheem art style hits a sweet spot that many cartoons miss. The character designs use bold, clean outlines with large, well-defined areas of color – no tiny details that frustrate young kids, but enough variety in clothing, accessories, and expressions to keep older children engaged. Bheem’s simple shorts-and-no-shirt design is immediately recognizable and forgiving for beginners. Chutki’s traditional dress adds pattern work for kids who want a bit more challenge. Krishna’s ornate design provides real complexity for those who are ready for it.

That range within a single collection – from the simplest Bheem solo page to a detailed Krishna scene – means you do not need to search multiple websites to find pages that match your child’s skill level. Everything scales naturally within this one set.

The Indian cultural setting also adds a visual richness that is genuinely different from most cartoon coloring pages available in the American market. The architecture of Dholakpur, the traditional clothing, the food, the festivals – all of these appear in the backgrounds and character details, giving children something visually fresh while quietly broadening their awareness of another culture.

Coloring Tips: How to Bring the Dholakpur Gang to Life

Bheem’s signature color palette:

  • Skin – warm golden-brown
  • Hair – jet black
  • Shorts – bright yellow-green
  • Headband – yellow
  • Laddus – rich golden yellow (when they appear in a scene)

Chutki’s colors:

  • Hair – black with a red ribbon
  • Dress – pink and magenta
  • Bindi – bright red dot on forehead
  • Skin – lighter warm brown

Krishna’s colors:

  • Skin – blue (traditionally depicted with blue skin)
  • Peacock feather – iridescent green, blue, and gold
  • Clothing – golden yellow dhoti with orange or red accents
  • Flute – brown or bamboo tone

For younger kids (ages 3–6): Start with the simple Bheem solo pages. Use thick crayons or washable markers. Bold, flat color fills look fantastic on these designs – there is no need for blending or shading at this age. Let the child choose any colors they want. The confidence that comes from finishing a page matters far more than accuracy at this stage.

For older kids (ages 7–12): Try adding a light background color to the scene – a blue sky, green grass, brown earth. Even a simple wash of color behind the character adds depth that transforms a coloring page from a filled-in outline into something that looks like an actual illustration. Colored pencils work best for this because they allow lighter, more controlled application than markers.

Educational Value: Using Chhota Bheem Coloring Pages in the Classroom

Coloring pages are low-prep, high-engagement classroom tools when paired with the right context – and Chhota Bheem offers more context than most cartoon collections.

Cultural awareness and global perspectives. Chhota Bheem is set in a fictional Indian village, but the cultural details are real – the clothing, the food, the social dynamics, the references to Hindu mythology through Krishna. For American classrooms, these pages offer a tangible, hands-on way to introduce South Asian culture during social studies units, multicultural weeks, or Diwali celebrations. A student coloring Chutki’s traditional dress or Krishna’s peacock feather crown is absorbing visual information about another culture in the most natural way possible.

Character education and social-emotional learning. The show’s core themes – bravery, helping others, standing up to bullies, loyalty to friends – align directly with social-emotional learning standards used in elementary schools across the country. Coloring a page of Bheem protecting his village can anchor a classroom conversation about what it means to use your strengths to help others rather than to dominate them.

Fine motor development. The variety of line weights and area sizes across this collection supports progressive skill building. Kalia’s large body areas are easy for preschoolers. Chutki’s dress patterns require more precision. Krishna’s ornate crown and accessories challenge even the most careful young colorists. Teachers can assign specific pages based on student ability without singling anyone out.

Quiet-time and transition activities. A stack of printed Chhota Bheem pages requires zero explanation. Students know what to do, the activity is self-paced, and the results give children something to take home, which is more than most filler activities offer.

How to Download and Print These Free Chhota Bheem Coloring Pages

Every page in this collection is available in two formats.

Download as PDF. Click the download button beneath any page to save a clean, print-ready file. PDFs maintain sharp outlines at any print size, which matters more than most people realize – screenshots and image saves often print blurry at full page size. Standard letter-size paper (8.5 × 11″) works for all pages. For marker use or heavy crayon pressure, 24 lb paper or light cardstock prevents bleed-through and keeps lines crisp on both sides.

Color online. Open any page directly in the browser-based coloring tool. No download, no printing, no app required. This works especially well for car rides, waiting rooms, tablet time at school, or any situation where paper and crayons are not available.

Teacher tip: Print one test copy before running a full classroom set. Line thickness and margins shift between printer models, and a quick test prevents wasted paper and frustrated students.

Explore More Cartoon Coloring Pages

This collection is part of the broader Cartoons Coloring Pages library at ColoringPagesOnly.com.

If your children love Chhota Bheem’s humor and heart, they will likely enjoy Sonic Coloring Pages for fast-paced action characters, or Spirit Riding Free Coloring Pages for another adventure-driven series with strong friendships at its core. For a character with a similar superhuman-strength-from-food concept, Popeye Coloring Pages draws a fun parallel – Popeye gets his power from spinach, the same way Bheem gets his from laddus. And for families exploring more characters from the same cultural universe, Sanrio Coloring Pages offers a gentler, cuter aesthetic that many younger siblings gravitate toward.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these Chhota Bheem coloring pages completely free? Yes. Every page in this collection is free to print, download as a PDF, or color online – no subscription, no account, and no payment required.

What ages are Chhota Bheem coloring pages best for? Simple Bheem solo pages and Jaggu pages work well for ages 3–6. Character pair pages and group scenes suit ages 6–10. Detailed Krishna pages and complex adventure scenes appeal to ages 10 and up, including teens and adult fans of the series.

Who is Chhota Bheem? Chhota Bheem is the main character of a popular Indian animated series. He is a brave, kind, and extraordinarily strong boy who protects the village of Dholakpur with the help of his friends. He gets his superhuman power from eating laddus, a traditional Indian sweet.

Can I use these pages in a classroom or after-school program? Yes. These pages are free, print-ready, and appropriate for school use. Teachers can download and print as many copies as needed without any restrictions.

Which characters are included in this collection? The collection features 60+ pages, including Bheem (in many poses and activities), Chutki, Raju, Jaggu the monkey, Krishna, Kalia, Dholu, Bholu, and Raja Indravarma, along with group scenes featuring the full Dholakpur friend group together.

Can I color online without downloading anything? Yes. Every page includes an online coloring option that opens directly in your browser – no app, plugin, or account required.

What makes Chhota Bheem different from other cartoon coloring pages? The Indian cultural setting gives these pages a visual richness and educational depth that most Western cartoon coloring pages do not offer. Children are exposed to traditional Indian clothing, food, architecture, and mythology through Krishna – all while doing an activity they enjoy. The character designs also feature unusually clean, bold outlines that work especially well for younger colorists.

Emily Lewis – Website Technology Engineer

I am Emily Lewis, a passionate technical designer from Las Vegas. I love art and want to create a community of people passionate about drawing and coloring, especially children. I am proud to create a website that allows everyone's creativity to be realized most easily and enjoyably.