Free Todoroki Coloring Pages: 20+ printable PDF pages featuring Shoto Todoroki, multi-colored hair, Todoroki Smiles, the sly look, Todoroki Power, multi-colored eyes, and a full range of expressions from cute to fierce. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

A Todoroki page is built around contrast. One side invites pale, cool colors. The other side asks for red tones, orange glow, and stronger energy. His face often stays calm between both sides, which makes the coloring challenge more interesting than a regular anime portrait.

Shoto Todoroki is a Class 1-A student hero from My Hero Academia, known for his half-cold, half-hot ability, red-and-white hair, two-toned eyes, and calm expression. That gives these pages a clear creative direction: temperature balance, two-sided shading, anime face detail, and power effects. Younger fans can start with cute, smiling, or simple portrait pages that have larger spaces, while older kids, teens, and My Hero Academia fans can move on to detailed power scenes, fierce expressions, and fine eye work.

They suit a wide range of ages and skill levels, from quick, cute pages to detailed power scenes, and work equally well at home or in the classroom. These are fan coloring activities and are not official anime stills, manga panels, posters, merchandise, or endorsed My Hero Academia products.

Quick Answer

Todoroki coloring pages are free printable PDFs and online coloring sheets featuring Shoto Todoroki, red-and-white hair, different eye tones, his half-cold/half-hot power, and a wide range of expressions. They are useful for anime coloring, hot-cold palette practice, hero cards, bookmarks, fan folders, and screen-free creative time.

Best for: My Hero Academia fans, anime fans, manga fans, older kids, teens, parents, teachers, and fan-art activities

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring

Popular themes: red-and-white hair, different eye tones, icy effects, flame glow, calm portraits, cute pages, and intense hero expressions

Creative uses: temperature-map cards, dual-power bookmarks, posters, emotion wheels, hero notes, and MHA fan folders

What’s Inside Todoroki Coloring Pages

Shoto Todoroki Portrait Coloring Pages

Shoto Todoroki portrait pages are the best starting point because they focus on his face, hair division, eyes, and calm anime expression. These designs help colorists understand the character before adding large power effects.

A strong Todoroki portrait does not need a crowded background. The most important areas are the hairline, eye contrast, face shadows, and collar. Once these parts are clean, the page already feels recognizable.

These pages work well for character cards, profile sheets, fan-folder covers, and quiet anime portrait practice. They are also a good choice for users who want a finished page without too much action detail.

Coloring Todoroki portraits: Start with the hair split and eyes. Keep the pale side light, deepen the red side gently, and use soft shadows on the face so the expression stays calm.

Red-and-White Hair Coloring Pages

Todoroki’s hair is one of the main reasons these pages are fun to color. The design gives users two separate color zones on one character, which makes the page feel organized from the beginning.

The white side should stay bright. Use pale gray, silver, or icy blue only for shadows. The red side can use crimson, dark red, warm brown, or soft orange to create depth. Avoid making both halves equally heavy.

These pages are useful for practicing clean separation, color planning, and small hair strokes. Even a simple portrait can look strong when the hair contrast is handled carefully.

Coloring Todoroki’s hair pages: Use fewer strokes on the light side and richer layering on the red side. Leave small highlights so the hair does not become flat.

Multi-Colored Eyes and Face Detail Pages

Todoroki with multi-colored eyes pages are excellent for careful detail work. The eyes may be small, but they help define the whole expression.

Use a cool tone for one side and a warmer, muted tone for the other. Keep the highlights small and clean. A little shadow under the upper eyelid can make the face look more focused.

These pages are best for colored pencils, fine-tip markers, or digital coloring with a zoom tool. They are useful for older kids and teens who enjoy anime face details.

Coloring Todoroki’s eye pages: Add the highlight first, then shade around it. Keep the brows and upper eyelids slightly darker so the gaze stays sharp.

Todoroki Power and Two-Temperature Coloring Pages

Todoroki Power pages are the most dramatic designs in this collection. They are not just character pages; they are temperature pages. One side can carry cold edges and pale light. The other can carry heat, glow, and movement.

For the cold side, use white, pale blue, silver, and sharp angular shapes. For the warm side, use yellow centers, orange middle tones, red outer edges, and smoky shadows. Keep the face cleaner than the effects, so the character does not disappear.

These pages are better for older kids, teens, and anime fans who enjoy action coloring. Younger fans can begin with smiling, cute, or simple portrait pages first.

Coloring Todoroki power pages: Build the cold side with pale edges and white centers. Build the warm side from yellow to orange to red. Keep the middle of the face readable.

Cool and Handsome Todoroki Coloring Pages

Cool Todoroki and Handsome Todoroki pages focus on his quiet confidence. These pages work best when the color choices are clean, balanced, and not too loud.

Use a polished palette: pale blue, red, charcoal, white, soft skin tones, and one simple background color. A thin frame or light shadow can make the page look complete without turning it into an action scene.

These pages are useful for profile cards, bookmarks, fan posters, and character display pages. They are also good for users who want a calm Todoroki design instead of a power-heavy page.

Coloring cool Todoroki pages: Keep the background simple. Let the hair, eyes, and expression carry the design. Add one small hero-style label if the page has open space.

Sad, Sly, and Surprised Todoroki Coloring Pages

Sad Todoroki, Todoroki’s sly look, and Surprised Todoroki pages are strong for expression practice. These pages show that the same character can feel very different depending on shadows and color temperature.

A sad page can use softer blue-gray tones. A sly look can use sharper eye shadows and stronger contrast. A surprised page can stay lighter, with clearer highlights and less background weight.

This group is useful for older kids and teens who want to practice mood through color rather than only filling shapes.

Coloring Todoroki expression pages: Let the eyes, brows, mouth, and hair shadows carry the feeling. Use cooler tones for quiet emotion and stronger contrast for sly or surprised looks.

Angry, Furious, and Fierce Todoroki Coloring Pages

Angry Todoroki, Furious Todoroki, and Fierce Todoroki pages are useful for dramatic anime coloring. These designs can handle deeper shadows, stronger reds, sharper blue tones, and more intense background energy.

The key is control. If every area becomes dark, the expression loses power. Keep the face readable, then increase contrast around the hair, collar, eyes, and power effects.

These pages are better for older fans who enjoy hero-training intensity and action mood.

Coloring fierce Todoroki pages: Darken the brows, collar, and background corners. Add bright highlights near the eyes, hair split, and power edges so the page still has focus.

Cute and Fun Todoroki Coloring Pages

Cute Todoroki and Fun Todoroki pages are the easiest designs for younger fans or short coloring sessions. These pages usually feel lighter, softer, and easier to finish.

Use pastel blue, soft red, pale gray, pink cheeks, and simple backgrounds. Keep power effects small, friendly, and easy to understand. These pages also work well for mini cards and bookmarks.

Fans who enjoy cute anime character designs may also like Chibi Anime coloring pages.

Coloring cute Todoroki pages: Use larger color blocks, shiny eyes, soft cheeks, and a light background. Keep the warm and cold sides gentle rather than dramatic.

Todoroki from My Hero Academia Coloring Pages

Todoroki from My Hero Academia pages connect this character to the wider hero-school world. These pages may show student-style poses, hero training mood, or character-focused designs.

This group is useful for fans who want to build a Class 1-A fan folder. Todoroki pairs naturally with Deku, Uraraka, Momo, and other My Hero Academia characters.

For related collections, explore Deku coloring pages, Uraraka coloring pages, and Momo Yaoyorozu coloring pages.

Coloring MHA Todoroki pages: Keep the character’s two-sided color identity clear, then add light hero-school details such as training lines, a clean label, or a simple background frame.

Printable PDF and Online Todoroki Coloring Pages

This collection is easy to use for anime coloring, contrast practice, and fan crafts. Download the PDF when you want a clean paper page for a craft or display project; use online coloring when you want to test red, white, blue, and orange combinations before committing to paper.

For the cleanest print, use full page size on standard paper so the fine details, such as hair divisions, eye highlights, and ice or flame edges, stay crisp.

Because the collection includes portraits, power pages, emotional expressions, cute pages, and MHA designs, users can choose a page that fits both skill level and age.

Using printable and online Todoroki pages: Print for crafts and display projects; color online first to lock in the hot-cold palette before choosing final colors.

What These Pages Do

Todoroki coloring pages work best as a two-temperature character study. They ask users to think about contrast: pale against warm, calm against intense, sharp ice lines against moving flame shapes, and a steady face between both sides.

For broader My Hero Academia collections, fans can explore My Hero Academia coloring pages and My Hero Academia Characters coloring pages. For related character pages, Deku coloring pages, Uraraka coloring pages, and Momo Yaoyorozu coloring pages can help build a fuller Class 1-A fan folder.

The special value of this collection is balance. A Todoroki page is not finished just because one half is blue and one half is red. The colorist has to decide where the cold side stays pale, where the heat should glow, how much shadow the face needs, and how both sides can meet without fighting for attention.

These pages also help with emotion-based coloring. Sad, sly, surprised, angry, cool, cute, and fierce designs all need different color decisions. A quiet page may need softer shadows. A power page may need brighter edges. A cute page may need pastel tones. This gives the collection more range than a single-expression anime portrait set.

In its clinical report, The Power of Play (Yogman et al., Pediatrics, 2018; reaffirmed January 2025), the American Academy of Pediatrics describes play as a key way children build social-emotional, language, thinking, and self-regulation skills. With a Todoroki coloring page, that play becomes a small design challenge: deciding which side feels colder, where the glow should sit, what color shows anger or calmness, and how to keep the face steady between two powers. Children are not only filling spaces; they are choosing, comparing, and explaining a visual idea.

A study on structured coloring: Can Coloring Mandalas Reduce Anxiety? (Curry and Kasser, Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2005, vol. 22, pp. 81–85), found that coloring organized designs, such as mandalas or plaid patterns, was linked with greater anxiety reduction than unstructured coloring on a blank page. Todoroki coloring pages should not be described as therapy. Still, they do provide strong structure: divided hair, two eye tones, costume areas, power shapes, facial expression lines, and clear hot-cold zones. That structure can make the activity easier to enter because the page already gives users a visual path.

Small details such as hair divisions, eye highlights, collar lines, flame edges, ice angles, expression marks, and face shadows give children useful spaces to practice careful hand control. These details can support pencil pressure, patience, color planning, and attention to small forms.

Together, that range, from calm portraits to dual-power scenes, expressions, and cute pages, is what lets the collection fit different ages and moods rather than offering a single look.

How to Color Todoroki Coloring Pages

The per-section tips above cover the palette for each design. This section is about the order to work in, which keeps any Todoroki page clean, no matter which one you choose.

Plan the two sides before you start. Lightly decide where the cold area, warm area, face, hair, and background will go. A clear plan is what keeps the page from looking muddy later.

Work from light to dark. Lay down the pale areas and skin tones first, then build the red hair and shadows on top. This keeps your colors clean and leaves room to deepen contrast gradually.

Lock in the face and eyes before the effects. Settle the calm expression first, with clean eye highlights and soft face shadows, while the page is still simple. Adding power effects around a finished face is easier than fixing a face buried under them.

Add the cold and warm effects last. Shape the cold side with angular ice lines and build the warm side from a bright center outward. Keep both lighter than the character so the face stays the focal point.

Match the intensity to the page. Let calm portraits stay light and clean, push fierce pages with deeper shadows and stronger contrast, and keep cute pages soft and pastel. The design tells you how far to go.

Turn the finished page into a hero card. Add a short original caption such as “Cold Focus,” “Heat Rising,” or “Shoto Todoroki.” This works well for portraits, power pages, and fan-folder displays.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Todoroki Coloring Pages

Two-Temperature Hero Card

Print a Todoroki portrait or Todoroki Power page. Color one side with pale cold tones and the other with warm glowing tones.

Cut the finished page into a card shape. Add a name label, power title, and one short original caption such as “Balance the Heat” or “Cold Focus.”

Hot-Cold Bookmark Set

Print Cute Todoroki, Cool Todoroki, or a simple portrait page. Color the hair and eyes carefully, then cut the page into bookmark shapes.

Make one bookmark with mostly icy tones and another with warmer colors. Add small snowflakes, flame shapes, or a thin red-blue border.

Todoroki Power Poster

Choose a Todoroki Power, Fierce Todoroki, or Angry Todoroki page. Color the character first, then add angular cold shapes on one side and glowing heat on the other.

Glue the finished page onto poster board and add a title such as “Shoto Power Study” or “Half-Cold, Half-Hot.”

Expression Wheel Craft

Print several Todoroki pages with different expressions, such as Sad Todoroki, Todoroki Smiles, Surprised Todoroki, Cool Todoroki, and Furious Todoroki.

Color each expression with a different mood palette. Place the finished images around a paper wheel and label each section with a feeling word.

My Hero Academia Fan Folder Cover

Print a clean Todoroki portrait or full character page. Color it with a balanced red-white-blue palette.

Glue the finished page onto a folder. Add small labels such as “Class 1-A,” “Hero Notes,” or “Shoto Todoroki.” Use the folder to store finished My Hero Academia coloring pages.

FAQ About Todoroki Coloring Pages

Are these Todoroki coloring pages free to print?

Yes. These Todoroki coloring pages are free to download and print as PDF pages for fan folders, character cards, bookmarks, posters, and anime coloring time.

Can I color Todoroki pages online?

Yes. Online coloring is available and useful for testing the red-white hair design, cold effects, warm glow, eye tones, and background ideas before printing.

What Todoroki designs are included?

The collection includes Shoto Todoroki, multi-colored hair, Todoroki Smiles, the sly look, Todoroki Power, multi-colored eyes, and Sad, Handsome, Furious, Cute, Cool, and Angry Todoroki pages.

What format should I use for printing?

Use the PDF version for printing. PDF keeps the page layout stable and works well for hero cards, bookmarks, posters, classroom handouts, and fan folders.

Are Todoroki coloring pages good for younger children?

Some pages work well for younger anime fans, especially Cute Todoroki, Fun Todoroki, Todoroki Smiles, and simple portraits. Detailed power pages and intense expressions are better for older fans.

Which Todoroki pages are best for beginners?

Begin with simple portraits, Cute Todoroki, Fun Todoroki, or Cool Todoroki pages with larger spaces. Save power effects, fierce expressions, and detailed eye pages for later.

What colors should I use for Shoto Todoroki?

Use white, pale gray, icy blue, red, crimson, orange, silver, and soft skin tones. Keep one side cool and one side warm so his half-cold, half-hot design stays clear.

Can teachers use Todoroki coloring pages in class?

Yes, if the pages are age-appropriate. Simple portraits and cute pages can support anime art breaks, color contrast lessons, fine motor practice, and character description activities.

What crafts can I make with Todoroki coloring pages?

You can make two-temperature hero cards, hot-cold bookmarks, power posters, expression wheels, My Hero Academia fan folder covers, or anime portrait display pages.

How can I make a Todoroki coloring page more creative?

Add ice lines, flame shapes, split backgrounds, emotion words, hero-card frames, or a short original caption. Keep the two sides balanced so the page stays readable.

More My Hero Academia, Anime, and Manga Coloring Pages

Browse the full collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com. All 20+ pages are free, available as printable PDF pages, ready to print from PDF or color online.

These Todoroki pages are created for personal, classroom, anime, manga, My Hero Academia, character, and fan-art coloring use. They fit many moments: hero cards, hot-cold bookmarks, power posters, expression wheels, fan folder covers, classroom art breaks, rainy-day coloring, and screen-free anime fan time.

For the final pass, make the page feel balanced. Keep the cold side pale and sharp, the warm side active and bright, and the face clear between both powers.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We especially want to see your Two-Temperature Hero Card, Hot-Cold Bookmark Set, and Todoroki Power Poster.

These related coloring collections will help you explore more My Hero Academia characters, anime pages, manga art, and action-style coloring fun:

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.