DuckTales coloring pages: 35+ printable PDF designs based on Disney’s animated adventure series about Scrooge McDuck, the world’s richest duck, and his grand-nephews Huey, Dewey, and Louie. Every page can be downloaded as a PDF to print or colored online in the browser.

This set works well for young kids just starting to color, for DuckTales fans of any age, and for parents or teachers looking for a simple, no-prep activity for a rainy afternoon or a classroom coloring corner. Because the show has run across two generations, it also gives grandparents and parents a set of characters they recognize just as well as the kids do.

Most of the main cast shares the same basic duck shape and near-identical face, so shirt and outfit color, not costume or hairstyle, carry almost all of the identity in this set. Huey, Dewey, and Louie in particular are told apart only by their red, blue, and green shirts.

The pages are split into two types. Solo character pages let you focus on one figure’s specific colors at a time. Group pages, especially the ones with all three nephews together, put that color knowledge to a real test.

These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Disney or any other rights holder of DuckTales.

Quick Answer

DuckTales coloring pages are a free set of 35+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets featuring Scrooge McDuck, Huey, Dewey, Louie, Webby Vanderquack, and the rest of the Duckburg cast, most of them sharing the same duck shape and told apart almost entirely by color.

Best for: young kids, DuckTales fans of any age, and anyone who grew up with the original 1987 series

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring

Popular pages: Scrooge McDuck, Huey, Dewey, Louie, and Webby Vanderquack.

Creative uses: postcards, bookmarks, fridge magnets, and a hangable triplet banner

What’s Inside DuckTales Coloring Pages

The set covers the core Duckburg cast across solo portraits and group scenes, so there is a match for both quick coloring sessions and more detailed ones.

Scrooge McDuck Pages

Scrooge appears across the largest cluster of solo pages in the set, shown with his money bag, a pet goldfish, blowing bubbles, and directing Donald.

Coloring Scrooge: his blue frock coat and red waistcoat are the two colors to get right first. The black top hat, round pince-nez glasses, and cane are smaller details that finish the look once the coat is in place.

Huey, Dewey & Louie Solo Pages

Each triplet gets several solo pages doing an individual activity: Huey reading or skateboarding, Dewey playing golf, Louie looking unimpressed. This makes it the best place to practice the color rule on one character at a time.

Coloring the triplets: Huey is red, Dewey is blue, and Louie is green, no exceptions, since their faces and outfits are otherwise identical.

Huey, Dewey & Louie Together

Several pages bring all three nephews into one scene, sometimes with Webby included, which turns the color rule into a real test with three near-identical figures side by side.

Coloring group scenes: finish one nephew, top to bottom, before starting the next, rather than coloring the same shirt color across all three at once.

Webby Vanderquack Pages

Webby appears solo, mid-activity, and alongside Scrooge, giving a range of expressions from calm to excited.

Coloring Webby: her pink outfit and pale, near-white hair are her two identity markers. Keeping the pink consistent across every page is what makes her recognizable at a glance.

Launchpad, Mrs. Beakley & Gyro Gearloose Pages

The supporting cast rounds out the set: Launchpad McQuack in his pilot gear, Mrs. Beakley in her role as Scrooge’s housekeeper, and Gyro Gearloose, the family’s inventor, plus a full cast group page.

Coloring the supporting cast: keep this group’s palette calmer than Scrooge and the triplets, using muted blues and browns rather than bright primary colors, so they read as background family rather than the leads.

Printable PDF and Online DuckTales Coloring Pages

Every design in this set is available in two ways: a printable PDF or the same artwork colored on screen.

Using both formats: print the PDF for a sit-down session with crayons, markers, or colored pencils, and use the online version when there is no printer nearby or for a quick session on a tablet.

What These Pages Do

DuckTales presents a coloring challenge of its own. When most of the main cast share the same duck shape and face, color choice becomes the primary way a page communicates who’s who. Getting Huey’s red, Dewey’s blue, and Louie’s green right matters more here than in almost any other coloring set.

More than hand control: a real matching skill. Choosing the correct color for the correct character, rather than any color at all, adds a matching step on top of basic coloring practice. The American Academy of Pediatrics’s clinical reports on play, published in 2007 and updated in 2018, describe this kind of hands-on, choice-based creative activity as supporting children’s cognitive and social development, coloring included.

A calming option for older fans, too. A widely cited 2005 study in Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association found that adults who colored a structured, detailed pattern showed a bigger drop in anxiety than those coloring freehand. That study used geometric mandalas rather than cartoon ducks, but the underlying idea still applies. A page built around specific, correct colors and small details, such as Scrooge’s pince-nez or Webby’s bow, gives adults in the room a similarly structured way to unwind, not just the kids.

A set that spans two generations. DuckTales has run as both a 1987 original and a 2017 reboot, so this is one of the few coloring collections where a parent who watched the show as a kid and a child watching it now can recognize and debate the right shade of blue for the same characters.

How to Color DuckTales Coloring Pages Well

These steps work for any page in the set, from a Scrooge solo portrait to the full group scenes.

Keep Huey red, Dewey blue, and Louie green on every page. This is the one rule that keeps the triplets distinguishable, and it is worth double-checking before filling in large areas.

Give Scrooge a blue coat and a red waistcoat, not the reverse. The show’s specific palette puts blue over red, and swapping the two makes him read as a different duck.

Keep Webby’s outfit consistently pink. Use the same pink across every page she appears on, including the group scenes, so she reads correctly at a glance.

Use muted, practical tones for Mrs. Beakley and for Launchpad’s uniform blue. The supporting cast is meant to look calmer and less flashy than Scrooge and the triplets.

Save gold or yellow for coins, the Money Bin, and Scrooge’s cane handle. These small accents are what make his wealth-obsessed personality visible on the page.

On group pages, finish one character’s colors before moving to the next. Working this way, rather than coloring the same shade across all figures at once, makes it easier to keep track of who is who.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with DuckTales Coloring Pages

Duckburg Postcard

Color a Scrooge or Huey, Dewey, and Louie page, glue it to a folded piece of card, and write “Greetings from Duckburg!” inside.

A quick, mail-ready keepsake for a grandparent or friend. Takes about ten minutes.

Money Bin Bookmark

Color a Scrooge with money page, trim it into a narrow strip, and tape or glue it to a strip of cardboard.

A simple bookmark that doubles as a reminder to keep saving. Takes about ten minutes.

Fridge Gallery Magnet

Color any page, cut around the character, and stick a small magnet to the back.

An easy way to display a finished page without a frame. Takes about five minutes.

Triplet Trio Banner

Color one Huey, one Dewey, and one Louie page, cut around each figure, and string them together with a length of yarn or ribbon.

A fun way to reinforce the red, blue, and green rules while making something to hang up. Takes about fifteen minutes.

Comic Speech Bubble

Color any page, then cut a simple speech bubble shape from white paper, write a short line on it, and tape it near the character’s mouth.

Turns a finished page into a one-panel comic. Takes about ten minutes.

FAQ About DuckTales Coloring Pages

Are these DuckTales coloring pages free, and can I color them online?

Yes. Every page is free, with no sign-in or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color it directly on screen in the browser.

How can I tell Huey, Dewey, and Louie apart when I’m coloring them?

By shirt color alone: Huey wears red, Dewey wears blue, and Louie wears green. Since the triplets share the same face and body shape, getting these three colors right is the only way a colored page reads correctly.

What is DuckTales?

DuckTales is a Disney animated series built around Scrooge McDuck, the adventuring billionaire duck created by Carl Barks in 1947, and his grand-nephews Huey, Dewey, and Louie. The original series ran from 1987 to 1990, and a reboot aired from 2017 to 2021, both following the family’s treasure-hunting adventures out of Scrooge’s Money Bin in Duckburg.

What color is Scrooge McDuck’s coat, and does the shade matter?

In DuckTales, Scrooge wears a blue frock coat over a red waistcoat, with a black top hat, round pince-nez glasses, and spats. The blue coat is specific to the show. Classic comic art often shows him in red instead, so blue is the version to use for this set.

What colors should I use for Webby Vanderquack?

Webby is usually shown with pale, near-white hair and a pink outfit. Keeping her pink consistent across pages is the main way to distinguish her at a glance from the rest of the cast, most of whom wear blue or muted tones.

Does the set include Launchpad, Mrs. Beakley, or Gyro Gearloose?

Yes. Launchpad McQuack appears in his pilot gear, Mrs. Beakley (Scrooge’s housekeeper) appears in more muted, practical colors, and Gyro Gearloose, the family’s inventor, rounds out the supporting cast alongside the main four.

Are these official DuckTales coloring pages?

No. These are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by Disney, the Carl Barks estate, or any other rights holder of DuckTales.

Why do small color choices matter so much in this set?

Because Huey, Dewey, Louie, Scrooge, and most of the cast share the same basic duck shape, color is doing most of the identity work that a costume or hairstyle would do in another show. A wrong shirt color on the triplets, or a red coat on Scrooge, changes who the finished page actually shows.

Start Coloring

Download any page by clicking the design. No account, email, or payment is required. Pages print directly from the browser at full resolution or open in the online coloring tool for screen use. Share finished pages on Facebook or Pinterest with the share buttons at the top of each design page.

These related coloring collections will help you explore the wonderful world of colors. Let’s choose, be creative, and show us your great pictures!

Jennifer Thoa – Content Editor & Designer

Jennifer Thoa is Content Editor and Designer at ColoringPagesOnly.com. Degree in Journalism and Creative Writing, University of Kansas. She writes and edits long-form educational articles on anime, film, animals, world cultures, and automotive history - verified against named primary sources before publication.