Easter Coloring Pages is one of the most cheerful and widely used collections at ColoringPagesOnly.com, with 380+ free pages across nine themed sub-collections, so there is something here for every kind of Easter celebration. Whether the goal is the bunny-and-eggs tradition, cross and resurrection imagery for a Sunday school class, or something a little more creative and offbeat, this hub page is organized to guide readers to the right collection.
All pages across every Easter sub-collection are completely free, downloadable as a PDF to print at home or colored online directly in the browser.
Explore Every Easter Collection
Easter Eggs Coloring Pages
The decorated egg is the most hands-on symbol of Easter, and the Easter Eggs collection is built entirely around it. This includes eggs with geometric patterns, floral designs, polka dots, stripes, mandala-style decorations, and simple bold outlines suited to the youngest colorists. These pages offer the most open-ended coloring freedom in the whole Easter hub, with no fixed rules for colors or patterns, making them ideal for kids who want to design their own eggs from scratch.
Easter Bunny Coloring Pages
The Easter Bunny is the face of the holiday for most kids, and the Easter Bunny collection shows him in a wide range of moods and settings, hopping through gardens, carrying baskets overflowing with eggs, sitting in spring meadows, wearing bow ties and little jackets, and posed in portraits ranging from simple cartoon outlines for toddlers to fully detailed illustrations for older kids.
Groovy Easter Coloring Pages
The Groovy Easter collection brings a retro 1970s aesthetic to Easter, bold wavy lines, funky lettering, flowers with thick curving petals, Easter eggs covered in hippie-style swirls and peace symbols, and bunnies with a distinctly vintage feel. These pages appeal to older kids, teenagers, and adults who want something more stylistically interesting than a standard Easter design, and work well with neon markers and bold color choices that would overwhelm a more delicate illustration.
Religious Easter Coloring Pages
Religious Easter is the collection for families and classrooms that want to keep the focus on the spiritual meaning of the holiday. These pages feature the empty tomb, the resurrection, the cross draped with cloth, angels, Bible verses, and scenes from the Easter story as told in the Gospels. This collection is commonly used in Sunday school settings, Holy Week devotionals, and church bulletin inserts, with imagery ranging from simple cross outlines for very young children to more detailed resurrection scenes for older students.
Easter Card Coloring Pages
The Easter Card collection is designed specifically for pages that become something after they are colored, not just artwork to display, but cards to give. Each page is formatted with greeting-card proportions, featuring “Happy Easter” lettering, cheerful spring imagery, and borders that frame the design when folded. These pages are particularly popular for a handmade card from a grandchild or as part of a classroom Easter craft lesson.
Easter Cartoon Coloring Pages
The Easter Cartoon collection features Easter characters and scenes drawn in a playful, animated style, expressive faces, exaggerated proportions, and bold, simple outlines suited for markers and bright crayons. This is the most kid-friendly collection in the Easter hub in terms of visual style, and sees the most use with children ages 3 to 8 who want coloring pages that look like something from a cartoon show.
Easter Cross Coloring Pages
The Easter Cross collection focuses specifically on the cross as a symbol, with designs ranging from simple bold outlines suited to the youngest Sunday school students to ornate crosses decorated with flowers, vines, and Easter lilies, to scenes of the cross on a hillside at sunrise. This collection serves a narrower purpose than the broader Religious Easter collection: where that collection covers the full Easter story, the cross collection centers the cross itself as the visual focal point of Holy Week.
Easter Gnome Coloring Pages
The Easter Gnome collection covers a Scandinavian-inspired decoration tradition that has become popular in American home decor, small bearded figures in pointed hats, holding Easter eggs or spring flowers, with the same cozy charm as Christmas gnomes but in a pastel spring palette. These pages are a favorite with adults who color for relaxation and with families who incorporate gnome decor into their Easter traditions.
Easter Chick Coloring Pages
The Easter Chick collection celebrates one of the sweetest Easter symbols, the fluffy yellow baby chick that represents new life and the arrival of spring. These pages show chicks hatching from eggs, chicks in nests, chicks surrounded by flowers, chicks wearing tiny Easter bonnets, and chick characters with expressive faces. The chick pages tend to be the most popular with toddlers and preschoolers, since the shapes are simple, the subject is universally appealing, and bright yellow is one of the first colors young kids want to reach for.
What Easter Coloring Pages Do
Bringing a cheerful, universally recognized holiday to the coloring table. Because Easter’s color palette and symbols, eggs, bunnies, and chicks, are recognized across a wide range of ages and settings, coloring pages give families, classrooms, and churches a shared, low-cost way to mark the season together.
Fine motor development. The American Academy of Pediatrics identifies fine motor skill development as a core benefit of structured coloring for children ages 2 through 7. The range of complexity across this hub, from simple chick outlines for toddlers to detailed egg patterns for adults, suits a broad range of skill levels within that age range and beyond.
Anxiety reduction through focus. A 2005 study in the Art Therapy Journal documented measurable reductions in anxiety following structured coloring sessions. The detailed, pattern-based pages in the Easter Eggs and Groovy Easter collections in particular suit the kind of slow, repetitive coloring associated with that calming effect.
Supporting both secular and faith-based Easter traditions. Because this hub separates general Easter imagery from the Religious Easter and Easter Cross collections, families and classrooms can choose content that matches their own approach to the holiday, whether that centers on eggs and bunnies, the Easter story, or both.
Easter Coloring Tips: The Spring Palette
Easter has one of the most recognizable and widely used color palettes in any holiday collection, and understanding it makes every page in this hub look more finished and seasonally right.
The classic Easter palette is built on pastels: soft pink, lavender, mint green, pale yellow, sky blue, and peach. These are the colors of new growth, fresh air, and morning light, and they work together because they share the same quality of being soft and light-saturated rather than deep and bold. Staying in the pastel register when coloring Easter eggs, bunny fur, spring flowers, or baby chicks gives the finished page that recognizable Easter feeling.
For Easter eggs, the traditional approach is to pick two or three colors from the pastel palette and use them together in patterns, pale pink with lavender stripes and a mint green border, or sky blue with yellow dots and a peach ribbon. The eggs read as most “Easter-like” when the colors stay light and clean rather than saturated and dark, which is why watercolor pencils and light-touch markers tend to produce more seasonal-looking results than heavy wax crayons pressed hard.
For the Easter Bunny, White or very pale Gray is the most natural choice for the body fur, with soft Pink on the inner ears, nose, and paw pads. The basket and accessories are where the fuller pastel range comes in, a lavender basket with mint green grass inside and eggs in pink, yellow, and blue.
For baby chicks, a warm, bright sunflower Yellow for the body is the defining color, with a slightly deeper golden-orange for the beak and feet. Keeping the background and surrounding elements in pastels helps the yellow chick stand out clearly against them.
For the Groovy Easter pages specifically, the pastel rule reverses: Neon Pink, Electric Blue, deep Orange, and vivid Purple work better, since the collection’s appeal rests on the contrast between the retro aesthetic and unexpected color combinations.
For Religious Easter and Cross pages, the traditional palette is more restrained: deep Purples and Burgundy for Lenten and Good Friday imagery, shifting to Gold, White, and pale sunrise colors for resurrection pages. In Christian tradition, purple is associated with mourning and royalty, while gold and white represent the glory of Easter morning.
Who Is This Collection For?
Easter coloring pages find a home in more places than almost any other holiday collection on the site. Sunday school teachers and church education directors use the religious sub-collections every spring. Kindergarten and elementary school teachers use the egg, bunny, and chick pages as seasonal classroom activities in late March and April. Parents use them at home for rainy-day creative time, Easter basket stuffers, and family coloring sessions on Holy Week evenings. Grandparents keep them ready for when grandkids visit over Easter weekend. Adults who color for relaxation find the Groovy Easter and detailed egg-pattern pages genuinely satisfying as mindful coloring experiences.
The 380+ pages across these nine sub-collections mean there is a page suited to a two-year-old coloring her first Easter chick and a page suited to a grandmother working through an intricate egg pattern while watching a movie.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Easter coloring pages?
Easter coloring pages are printable designs built around the imagery of the Easter holiday, including eggs, bunnies, chicks, and, for families and classrooms who want it, religious resurrection and cross imagery. Every page in this hub can be downloaded as a PDF for printing or colored directly online in the browser, with no software required.
When is Easter 2026?
Easter falls on April 5, 2026. Palm Sunday is March 29, and Good Friday is April 3.
Which Easter collection is best for Sunday school?
The Religious Easter and Easter Cross collections are designed specifically for faith-based use. The Religious Easter collection covers the full resurrection story, while the Cross collection focuses specifically on cross imagery for Holy Week.
Which collection is best for very young children, ages 2 to 4?
The Easter Chick and Easter Bunny collections have the simplest outlines and most age-appropriate designs for toddlers and preschoolers.
Which collection is best for adults who like detailed coloring?
Groovy Easter has the most intricate and stylistically interesting pages for adult colorists. The detailed egg-pattern pages in Easter Eggs also work well for mindful adult coloring.
What colors work best for Easter pages?
The classic Easter palette is built on pastels, soft Pink, Lavender, Mint green, pale Yellow, Sky blue, and Peach. The Groovy Easter collection is the exception, using bold Neon and Electric tones instead, and Religious Easter and Cross pages use a more restrained palette of deep Purple and Gold.
What is the Easter Gnome trend, and why is it included in this collection?
Easter gnomes are a Scandinavian-inspired decoration tradition, small bearded figures in pointed hats, that has become popular in American home decor with the same cozy charm as Christmas gnomes in a pastel spring palette. The collection is included because of strong recent popularity among adults who color for relaxation and families who use gnome decor as part of their Easter traditions.
Can these pages be used for church bulletin inserts or classroom handouts?
Yes. All pages are free to download, print, and use for personal, classroom, and church educational purposes.
Download Your Free Easter Pages Today
Every page across all nine Easter collections is completely free to download as a PDF or color online, with no sign-up and no cost. Pick the collection that fits, print as many pages as needed, and share finished artwork on Facebook or Pinterest with the share buttons at the top of each design page.
