Free Kansas City Chiefs coloring pages – 30+ pages featuring Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, Xavier Worthy, Rashee Rice, Isiah Pacheco, Chris Jones, Andy Reid, the arrowhead logo, the helmet, uniforms, the mascot, and character crossover pages with SpongeBob and Minnie Mouse – free printable PDF and online coloring for Chiefs fans of all ages.
The Kansas City Chiefs have appeared in five of the last six Super Bowls – a run of sustained championship-level performance not seen in the NFL since the New England Patriots dynasty of the 2000s and 2010s. The franchise was founded on August 14, 1960, as the Dallas Texans – a founding member of the American Football League – before relocating to Kansas City in 1963 under owner Lamar Hunt, who renamed them the Chiefs. They won Super Bowl IV in January 1970, then waited 50 years for their next title: Super Bowl LIV on February 2, 2020, Patrick Mahomes’ first championship. What followed was one of the most dominant stretches in modern NFL history.
The arrowhead logo – a red arrowhead with “KC” in gold – is one of the NFL’s most recognizable symbols. The red and gold color scheme at Arrowhead Stadium, one of the loudest outdoor stadiums in the world, has registered crowd noise levels that held the Guinness World Record for loudest outdoor stadium when it was set in 2014 at 142.2 decibels.
These 30+ free pages at ColoringPagesOnly.com cover the full Chiefs roster – coaches, players, logos, helmets, and the crossover pages that bring the franchise into contact with some of animation’s most beloved characters. All free, PDF or PNG, print or color online. Kingdom.
What’s Inside
Patrick Mahomes – The Face of the Franchise
Patrick Mahomes Throwing A Football, Patrick Mahomes Coloring Page, Patrick Mahomes Coloring Page Free, and Kansas City Chiefs Mahomes give Mahomes four pages in this collection, which reflects his central position in everything the franchise has become since he took over as the starting quarterback in 2018.
Patrick Lavon Mahomes II was born September 17, 1995, in Tyler, Texas. He was drafted 10th overall by the Chiefs in 2017, became the starter in 2018, and won the NFL MVP in his first full season as a starter – throwing 50 touchdown passes and 5,097 yards at 23 years old. Since then, he has accumulated multiple Super Bowl titles, multiple Super Bowl MVP awards, and multiple regular-season MVP awards. He is in the process of building the statistical and championship case that serious football analysts now openly discuss as potentially the greatest quarterback career in NFL history.
His throwing mechanics are the reason analysts reach for that comparison. Mahomes delivers accurate passes from body positions and release angles that other quarterbacks at the professional level cannot replicate – sidearm deliveries under pressure, off-balance throws on the run, passes released behind his back in emergencies. He makes throws that work, from positions where the throw should not be possible, consistently.
Coloring Mahomes: Chiefs red jersey (warm, slightly orange-tinted red – not a cool red), gold pants, white helmet with the KC arrowhead logo in red on each side. His jersey number is 15. If the page shows a throwing posture, the weight should be forward on the front foot, the throwing arm fully extended toward the release point, capturing the moment the ball has just left his hand, and the follow-through is completed.
Travis Kelce – The Greatest Tight End
Travis Kelce Running, Travis Kelce Coloring Page, and Travis Kelce Coloring Page Free give Kelce three pages, which is appropriate for the player who holds the NFL record for the most consecutive 1,000+ receiving yard seasons by a tight end.
Travis Kelce was born on October 5, 1989, in Westlake, Ohio. He was drafted by the Chiefs in the third round of the 2013 NFL Draft and has spent his entire career with Kansas City. He is, by accumulated statistical evidence, the greatest tight end in NFL history – a position he has redefined through his combination of route running precision, yards-after-catch ability, and the quarterback-receiver chemistry with Mahomes that has become the most productive quarterback-to-tight-end partnership in the game’s modern era.
His off-field presence – television appearances, his relationship with Taylor Swift, which significantly expanded the Chiefs’ cultural reach from 2023 onward, and a public personality that is substantially more accessible than most elite NFL players – has made him one of American professional sports’ most recognizable figures beyond his statistical accomplishments.
Coloring Kelce: Same Chiefs uniform as Mahomes: red jersey, gold pants, white helmet. His jersey number is 87. The running pages show him in the specific motion of a tight end after the catch – turning upfield, using his 6’5″ frame to break tackles, the combination of size and speed that makes him uniquely effective.
Xavier Worthy – The New Weapon
Xavier Worthy Holding Football and Xavier Worthy Celebrating Victory introduce one of the Chiefs’ most exciting recent additions. Xavier Worthy was selected 28th overall in the 2024 NFL Draft from the University of Texas – the fastest player at the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine, running the 40-yard dash in 4.21 seconds, which set a new Combine record. At 5’11” and 165 pounds, he is the Chiefs’ speed threat – the receiver who punishes defensive backs who overplay Kelce by being uncoverable on vertical routes when given a step of space.
His Celebrating Victory page captures the specific energy of a young player realizing that the system he has joined produces wins, and that his role within that system matters.
Rashee Rice, Isiah Pacheco, and the Supporting Cast
Rashee Rice Catching Football depicts the wide receiver drafted in the first round of the 2023 NFL Draft who immediately became a key target for Mahomes in his first season. His athleticism and route-running ability at his size made him an early standout, and his relationship with Mahomes developed quickly into one of the offense’s more reliable connections.
Isiah Pacheco Coloring Page shows the Chiefs’ starting running back – a seventh-round pick from the 2022 draft who earned the starting role through his combination of power, speed, and pass-blocking ability. Pacheco wears number 10 – unusually low for a running back – and has been a critical part of the Chiefs’ offensive balance.
Skyy Moore Coloring Page gives the 2022 second-round pick his page – a slot receiver whose versatility in the Chiefs’ offensive system has given Mahomes another option in the middle of the field.
Jody Fortson Coloring Page, Nick Allegretti Coloring Page, and Mike Caliendo Coloring Page give roster depth players their own pages – a commitment to representing the full team rather than only the stars, reflecting how the Chiefs’ success has been built on roster depth and system execution as much as on the individual brilliance of its headline names.
Chris Jones – The Defensive Cornerstone
Chris Jones Coloring Page gives representation to the defensive side of the Chiefs’ roster – something few team-specific coloring collections bother with. Chris Jones, the defensive tackle who anchors the Chiefs’ defensive line, is one of the best interior defensive players in the NFL. He has been named to multiple Pro Bowls, won multiple Super Bowls, and his ability to generate pressure from the interior of the defensive line gives the Chiefs’ pass rush a dimension that most teams cannot replicate.
Jones wears number 95 and plays a position – interior defensive lineman – that is almost never celebrated in fan culture to the degree that quarterbacks, wide receivers, and tight ends are. His page in this collection is one of the more unusual and valuable for Chiefs fans who understand what he actually does.
Andy Reid – The Coach
Andy Reid Coloring Page is the collection’s only coaching staff page – and it is the right coach to feature. Andy Reid joined the Kansas City Chiefs as head coach in 2013 after 14 seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. Since his arrival, the Chiefs have made the playoffs in 12 of 12 seasons under his leadership, won multiple Super Bowls, and become the most consistently excellent franchise in the current NFL era.
Reid is the sixth head coach in NFL history to reach 250 career victories. He is widely recognized by players and fellow coaches as one of the game’s great offensive minds – the architect of the system that allows Mahomes to do what Mahomes does. His signature is visible on every play the Chiefs run: the motion before the snap, the pre-snap shifts that force defensive adjustments, the play-action designs that exploit defensive tendencies. Mahomes is the talent; Reid is the system that maximizes it.
The Logo, Helmet, and Uniform Pages
Logo-Kansas-City-Chiefs, Free Kansas City Chiefs Logo, Chiefs-Logo, Kansas City Chiefs Helmet, Uniform Kansas City Chiefs Coloring Page, and Kansas City Chiefs Football Player provide the foundational team identity pages – the images that fans who have not yet committed to a player portrait want first.
The arrowhead logo is one of the NFL’s most graphically bold: a red arrowhead with “KC” in gold. It has been the team’s primary mark since the Dallas Texans era in various forms, with the current iteration established in the 1960s. The helmet – white with the red arrowhead logo on each side – is immediately recognizable across the league. The uniform combination (red jersey, gold pants in home configuration; white jersey, white pants in away) is one of the NFL’s most classic color schemes.
The Mascot and Character Crossover Pages
Kansas City Chiefs Mascot shows K.C. Wolf – the Chiefs’ official mascot since 1989, named after the expression “wolfpack” used by Chiefs fans. K.C. Wolf is a large, red, and gold wolf character who appears at home games and promotional events.
Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-SpongeBob, Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-Patrick-and-SpongeBob, Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-Minnie-Mouse, and Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-Winx bring the Chiefs’ visual identity into crossover territory – SpongeBob SquarePants, Patrick Star, Minnie Mouse, and the Winx Club characters all rendered in Chiefs gear.
Kansas City Chiefs Tyreek Hill Cheetah is a legacy page – Tyreek Hill, the wide receiver who was traded to the Miami Dolphins in 2022, was nicknamed “The Cheetah” for his elite speed. The page depicting him as a cheetah in Chiefs gear captures his era in Kansas City before the trade.
What These Pages Do
The Chiefs represent the current standard of NFL excellence. Five Super Bowl appearances in six years is a specific, verifiable claim about sustained excellence that almost no franchise in any professional sport achieves. Coloring pages that feature the players building that record – while parents or older siblings explain the championship context – build sports history knowledge in the most natural way possible: through curiosity generated by something a child is already engaged with.
The dynasty creates genuine conversation across generations. Grandparents who remember Super Bowl IV (January 1970) can sit with grandchildren coloring the Mahomes pages and talk about the 50 years between titles – what the franchise looked like before this era, what it took to get back. The coloring activity creates the context; the generational conversation fills it.
The Aspen Institute’s Project Play identifies team identity formation as a key predictor of sustained sports engagement. A child who colors the Chiefs logo in exactly the right red and gold, who learns why the arrowhead means what it means, who can identify Mahomes and Kelce and Andy Reid from their coloring pages – that child has a relationship with a team that will sustain sports engagement across decades.
Fine motor development through helmet and jersey detail. The helmet pages – with the arrowhead logo, the facemask grid, the chinstrap – provide demanding fine motor challenges. The jersey pages, with the number details and the seam lines of a football uniform, require careful pencil control. The American Academy of Pediatrics identifies fine motor development as a key childhood milestone throughout early childhood. The 2005 Art Therapy Journal study on structured coloring and anxiety reduction applies across the entire collection.
How to Color These Pages Well
Chiefs red is warm. This cannot be overstated. The Kansas City Chiefs’ red – officially a specific shade that leans toward orange rather than a cool, blue-influenced red – is one of the most distinctive team colors in the NFL. When selecting a red for these pages, test on scrap paper: if the red reads as cool or blue-adjacent, it is wrong. Chiefs red should read as warm and slightly vivid, closer to a fire-engine red with orange warmth than to a burgundy or crimson. The difference between warm and cool red is immediately visible to any Chiefs fan.
Chiefs gold is not yellow. The gold on the uniform – helmets, pants, trim – is a specific, warm, slightly muted gold rather than a bright primary yellow. It should read as metallic and rich, not as a school-bus yellow. In colored pencil, layering a warm yellow-ochre over a lighter yellow base, then adding a slight brown shade in shadow areas, creates a more convincing gold than any single yellow pencil alone.
The arrowhead logo has specific geometry. The arrowhead shape narrows to a point at the bottom and widens at the top with two lateral points – the traditional arrowhead shape. The “KC” letters inside the arrowhead are in a specific serif-adjacent style that the team has maintained across decades. When coloring the logo pages, establish the red arrowhead field first, then carefully apply the gold KC letters on top. Any bleed of the red into the KC letters reduces the logo’s readability significantly.
The helmet dome wants three-zone shading. The white helmet dome has a large, curved surface that rewards three-zone treatment: a very light warm cream or pale yellow-white at the top center where direct light hits, standard white across the main surface, and a very subtle cool grey on the lower sides where shadow falls. This takes five minutes of layered pencil work and produces a helmet that reads as three-dimensional rather than flat.
For the crossover pages, maintain Chiefs colors on the characters. The SpongeBob and Minnie Mouse pages work best when the Chiefs elements – jerseys, hats, arrowhead logos – are in the correct Chiefs red and gold while the characters themselves retain their canonical colors (SpongeBob’s yellow, Minnie’s black, white, and pink). The visual contrast between the characters’ own colors and the Chiefs’ gear is what makes these pages work as fan objects rather than as conventional character coloring pages.
5 Creative Craft Ideas
Chiefs Birthday Card
Print the arrowhead logo page and one player page – Mahomes and Kelce together work best if the collection has a duo page; if not, Mahomes alone is the strongest single choice. Color both in the exact Chiefs colors.
Fold A5 cardstock for the card base. Cut out the player figure and logo and layer them on the card front – the logo above, the player below, at a slight dynamic angle. Inside, write the birthday message in Chiefs red. For a Kansas City fan, this card communicates specific team knowledge in a way no purchased card does: the correct shade of red, the right jersey number, the right logo geometry.

Arrowhead Stadium Game Day Setup
Print five to eight pages – the Mahomes, Kelce, logo, helmet, and mascot pages at minimum. Color all in consistent Chiefs colors. Cut out all figures. On a large sheet of green poster board (representing the field), arrange the players and logo in a stadium display: the logo at center, players positioned as if on the field, the mascot in the end zone.
Add hand-lettered banners along the poster board’s edges: “KINGDOM” on one side, “ARROWHEAD” on the other. The finished display works as a game day decoration for any room where a Chiefs fan watches games – or as a permanent fan display in a bedroom or den.

Character Crossover Fan Art
The collection’s SpongeBob and Minnie Mouse crossover pages create a specific craft opportunity: make the crossover explicit as a design project rather than just a coloring activity. Print the Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-SpongeBob and Kansas-City-Chiefs-with-Minnie-Mouse pages. Color both carefully – characters in their canonical colors, Chiefs gear in exact Chiefs red and gold.
Mount both side by side on a red poster board backing with a header: “CHIEFS KINGDOM – EVERYONE’S TEAM.” The idea that a franchise reaches broadly enough to put SpongeBob and Minnie Mouse in its gear is itself a statement about cultural reach, and displaying the two crossover pages together makes that statement visual and funny simultaneously.

Super Bowl Commemorative Poster
Print the Patrick Mahomes throwing page and color it in full Chiefs uniform accuracy – warm red, Chiefs gold, white helmet with the red arrowhead. Once colored, mount the figure on a large piece of deep red or black poster board.
Add hand-lettered text: “KANSAS CITY CHIEFS” across the top, the Super Bowl number(s) the fan wants to commemorate below, and “KINGDOM” across the bottom. The finished poster is a fan declaration – the franchise’s defining player, its championship credential, its fan community identity, on one wall. Frame it in a simple black frame, and it works as permanent sports art.

Andy Reid and Mahomes Coaching Diagram
Print the Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes pages. Color both. Mount them side by side on a backing sheet – Reid on the left (as the coach, the authority), Mahomes on the right (as the player, the executor).
Between the two figures, draw (or print) a simple football play diagram: X’s and O’s, routes drawn in red and gold, showing a basic Chiefs offensive concept – perhaps the motion-heavy, pre-snap shifting play design that Reid is known for. Connect the diagram to each figure with a thin arrow: from Reid, labeled “DESIGNED IT,” to Mahomes, labeled “THREW IT.”
The finished piece is a football literacy object – it shows the collaboration between coaching intelligence and player talent that produces championships, and a fan art piece that demonstrates genuine understanding of what makes the Chiefs work.

Frequently Asked Questions
When were the Kansas City Chiefs founded, and what is their history? The Kansas City Chiefs were founded on August 14, 1960, as the Dallas Texans, a founding member of the American Football League (AFL), which later merged with the NFL in 1970. Owner Lamar Hunt relocated the team to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1963 and renamed them the Chiefs. The team won Super Bowl IV on January 11, 1970, defeating the Minnesota Vikings 23–7 – the last AFL championship game before the merger. The franchise then endured a 50-year Super Bowl drought before Patrick Mahomes led them to Super Bowl LIV in February 2020, the first of multiple championships in the current dynasty era.
Who is Patrick Mahomes, and what has he accomplished? Patrick Mahomes was born September 17, 1995, in Tyler, Texas, and was drafted 10th overall by the Chiefs in 2017. He became the full-time starter in 2018 and won the NFL MVP in his first season, throwing 50 touchdowns and 5,097 passing yards. He has won multiple Super Bowl championships, multiple Super Bowl MVP awards, and multiple regular-season MVP awards with Kansas City. His ability to throw accurately from unconventional arm angles and body positions under pressure has made him widely regarded as the most uniquely talented quarterback of his era and, by some analysts, in the history of the position.
Who is Travis Kelce, and why is he considered the greatest tight end? Travis Kelce was born on October 5, 1989, in Westlake, Ohio, and was drafted by the Chiefs in 2013. He holds the NFL record for the most consecutive 1,000+ receiving yard seasons by a tight end. His career statistics – sustained at the elite level across more than a decade – combined with his multiple Super Bowl championships, place him above previous standards for the position in both production and team success. His partnership with Patrick Mahomes has been the most productive quarterback-to-tight-end combination in modern NFL history.
What are the Kansas City Chiefs’ official colors? The Kansas City Chiefs’ official colors are red (a specific warm red, Pantone 186 C) and gold (Pantone 124 C), combined with white. The red leans warm – slightly orange-influenced rather than cool – which is what distinguishes it from other NFL team reds and makes it immediately identifiable as specifically the Chiefs’ red when colored accurately. The gold is a warm, slightly muted gold rather than a bright yellow. These colors have been the franchise’s identity since the early 1960s, with minor refinements to specific shades.
Who is Andy Reid, and what is his coaching record? Andy Reid became the Kansas City Chiefs’ head coach in 2013 after 14 seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles. Since joining Kansas City, the Chiefs have made the playoffs in every season under his leadership and won multiple Super Bowl championships. He is one of the six head coaches in NFL history with 250+ career victories and is widely regarded by players and peers as one of the game’s premier offensive minds – the architect of the system that maximizes Patrick Mahomes’ abilities. His coaching innovations, particularly in pre-snap motion and play design, have influenced offensive football at all levels of the game.
What is Arrowhead Stadium, and why is it significant? Arrowhead Stadium is the home of the Kansas City Chiefs, located in Kansas City, Missouri. It opened on August 12, 1972, and seats approximately 76,416 fans. In 2014, it set a Guinness World Record for loudest outdoor stadium, recording crowd noise at 142.2 decibels during a regular season game against the New England Patriots – a level that rivals jet engine noise. The stadium’s noise level gives the Chiefs a significant home-field advantage, particularly on third downs when opposing offenses struggle to communicate play calls. Arrowhead is consistently rated among the best stadium experiences in the NFL by fans and players.
What age group are these coloring pages best suited for? The logo and helmet pages – clean, bold, geometric – work well for ages 4–6 for children developing basic pencil control who recognize the Chiefs’ visual identity from family fandom. The mascot page suits ages 4–8. The player portrait pages require the face and jersey number detail that rewards the fine motor control developing from around age 7–8. The character crossover pages (SpongeBob, Minnie Mouse) are accessible for ages 4 upward and particularly popular with children who love both animation and football. Adult fans who follow the team will find the complete player collection – including less prominent roster players and the coaching staff – the most rewarding of the collection for fan knowledge reasons.
Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All pages free, no sign-up, PDF or PNG, print at home or color online.
The Dallas Texans became the Kansas City Chiefs in 1963. They won a championship in 1970. Then they waited fifty years. Patrick Mahomes arrived in 2018 and won the next four Super Bowls the Chiefs appeared in. In between, Andy Reid designed the plays. Travis Kelce ran the routes. Chris Jones pressured the quarterback. The franchise that waited half a century is now the franchise that appears in the Super Bowl so routinely that fans of other teams have started checking the schedule to see when they might play Kansas City.
Pick up your red. Get it warm. Color the Kingdom.
Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #Coloringpagesonly. We especially want to see the Super Bowl commemorative posters and the coaching diagram projects.
Color the arrowhead. Trust the system. Kingdom.
