Free Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages: 40+ printable PDF pages featuring Tuca, Bertie, Speckle, duo, and trio scenes, Season 2 pages, a Vibe Check design, Bertie thinking and posing, funny, fat, cute, and happy variants. All free, download PDF to print, or color online.

What makes Tuca and Bertie pages distinctive is the show’s color logic. Tuca is a bold, saturated magenta-pink with a bright yellow beak, and Bertie is a softer blue-green with warm accents. The two were designed to read as opposites at a glance: Tuca is louder, more saturated, and more immediately eye-catching; Bertie is cooler, quieter, and more restrained. Getting that contrast right on a page with both of them is the whole visual challenge.

The pages are divided into two types. Solo pages, Tuca alone, Bertie alone, or Speckle alone, focus on getting one character’s palette exactly right before worrying about how characters interact. Duo and trio pages, Tuca and Bertie posing, the Season 2 designs, the three of them together, ask you to hold all three palettes in balance while keeping the characters readable against each other and against the background. Simpler single-character outlines suit fans who want a quick, satisfying session; the scene and group pages reward more time and care.

These pages work well at home or as fan art for any viewer of the series. These are fan-made coloring pages and are not official, licensed, or endorsed by Netflix, Adult Swim, or any rights holder of the Tuca and Bertie franchise.

Quick Answer

Tuca and Bertie coloring pages are a free set of 40+ printable PDFs and online coloring sheets covering the main trio of Tuca, Bertie, and Speckle in solo, duo, and group pages, plus Season 2 designs, a Vibe Check page, and funny, cute, and happy variants. The contrasting palettes of the two leads make every page a study in how two bold colors can share a design without fighting each other.

Best for: Tuca and Bertie fans, adult animation fans, older teens and adults, and anyone who enjoys expressive cartoon character coloring. 

Formats: printable PDF and online coloring.

Popular characters: Tuca, Bertie, Speckle, duo, and trio scenes.

Creative uses: fan art practice, color contrast study, adult animation character work, friendship-themed displays, and Season 2 fan art

What’s Inside Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages

Tuca Coloring Pages

Several sheets focus on Tuca alone: a standard Tuca, a happy Tuca, funny Tuca variants, a fat Tuca design, and a printable solo version.

Coloring Tuca: her body is a vivid, warm magenta-pink, bold enough to dominate any page. Her beak is a saturated yellow-orange, and her feet and accents echo that warm tone. Eyes are large and expressive. Do not let the pink go too pale or too cool: Tuca’s whole energy is in the saturation, and a washed-out version loses everything that makes her feel like her.

Bertie Coloring Pages

Bertie appears in several solo sheets: a standard Bertie, cute Bertie, funny Bertie, Bertie thinking, and Bertie Season 2.

Coloring Bertie: Bertie’s palette is the counterpoint to Tuca’s. Her body is a muted blue-green or teal, cooler and less saturated than Tuca’s magenta. Her beak and accents are warm tan or pale ochre, providing just enough warmth to keep her from reading as cold. The thinking and Season 2 pages put her expression front and center, and her face carries more anxious, reflective detail than Tuca’s broader comedy expressions.

Speckle Coloring Pages

Speckle, Bertie’s boyfriend, appears in solo pages and group scenes.

Coloring Speckle: Speckle is the most naturalistic of the three, drawn in warm tans, soft browns, and creamy whites that reference real songbird coloring. His calmer design makes him a grounding presence next to Tuca and Bertie’s more saturated palettes. When coloring him in a group scene, treat his palette as the neutral anchor that keeps the other two from overwhelming the page.

Tuca and Bertie Duo Pages

The largest group of scene pages shows Tuca and Bertie together: posing, the Vibe Check design, Season 2 versions, free printable duo pages, and the funny and fat duo variants.

Coloring Tuca and Bertie together: the visual challenge here is giving each character enough space on the page without letting the palettes merge. Place warm colors (Tuca’s magenta and yellow) on one side of the composition and cool colors (Bertie’s teal) on the other, wherever possible. A neutral or white background helps both read clearly; a busy or strongly colored background risks swallowing one of them.

Trio Pages (Tuca, Bertie, and Speckle)

Several sheets bring all three characters together, including dedicated trio pages and group scenes.

Coloring the trio: with three characters in one frame, tone separation becomes even more important. Tuca’s warm magenta, Bertie’s cool teal, and Speckle’s neutral tan form a natural three-way contrast that the show’s designers built in deliberately. Keep each character’s palette distinct, and the trio will read clearly without any extra effort.

Bertie Is Trying to Fix Herself Page

One page carries this title, referencing one of the show’s recurring character threads around Bertie’s personal growth.

Coloring this page: approach it like any thoughtful Bertie solo page: her cooler, more muted palette and the particular attention to her expression. The title connects to the show’s themes, but the page itself is simply a Bertie illustration and suits the same coloring approach as the other Bertie solo sheets.

Printable PDF and Online Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages

Every design comes in two ways: a printable PDF for paper, or the same artwork colored on screen.

Using both formats: print the PDF when you want a clean sheet for markers, pencils, or crayons, and use the on-screen version when there is no printer nearby. The PDF holds the show’s bold, clean outlines well on standard letter or A4 paper.

What These Pages Do

Tuca and Bertie was built around a friendship between two people who are genuinely different from each other, and the show’s color design makes that visible before a single line of dialogue. Tuca is loud color and big energy; Bertie is quiet color and careful thought. Working through a page with both of them means making a practical decision about how two strong, different personalities share space without canceling each other out. That is a real skill in character illustration and in color theory more broadly. The solo pages let you study each character on their own terms before bringing the contrast into play, which is the same approach a character designer would take before building a scene. Cartoon coloring pages is the parent hub, and for fans of adult animation in the same spirit, Bojack Horseman coloring pages and Big Mouth coloring pages offer similar character-driven coloring from shows with comparable visual styles.

The American Art Therapy Association is clear that everyday coloring is recreation and self-care rather than clinical therapy. For a Tuca and Bertie fan, spending time with these pages is simply a calm, screen-free way to engage with characters and a show they care about. The American Academy of Pediatrics notes that creative, expressive activities support healthy development at any age. These pages are best suited to older teens and adults, given the show’s themes. For that audience, they offer exactly what the AAP describes: open-ended, focused creative time built around something personally meaningful.

How to Color Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages

These steps work for any page in the set, from a solo outline to a full trio scene.

Decide each character’s palette before touching the page. Tuca’s warm magenta, Bertie’s cool teal, and Speckle’s neutral tan all need to be chosen and committed to before any color goes down. Changing a character’s base tone mid-page is the most common way group pages lose coherence.

Keep Tuca’s pink saturated. The temptation on any page with Tuca is to tone her down so she does not overwhelm everything else. Resist it. Her saturation is the point. Let Bertie’s cooler tones do the calming work, not a diluted version of Tuca.

Use Speckle as the neutral anchor. In trio pages, his warm tan reads as neither hot nor cold, which is exactly what a three-character composition needs in the middle. Color him last so you can adjust his warmth slightly to balance whatever Tuca and Bertie’s interaction has created.

Match the expression to the coloring energy. Tuca’s pages suit bold, confident strokes and high contrast. Bertie’s thinking and Season 2 pages reward slightly more careful work around the face and expression. The characters’ emotional registers are different, and the coloring approach can reflect that.

Keep backgrounds simple. The show’s own backgrounds are often flat washes of color or simple patterns. A plain deep teal, warm cream, or soft lavender behind the characters keeps the focus on the figures and feels true to the show’s aesthetic.

5 Creative Craft Ideas with Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages

Color Contrast Character Study

Color a solo Tuca page and a solo Bertie page separately, each in their series-accurate palette.

Pin them side by side to show the warm-cool contrast the show’s designers built in deliberately, as a visual study in how color alone communicates personality.

Season 2 Fan Art Display

Color the Season 2 Tuca page and Season 2 Bertie page together using slightly evolved or bolder versions of the standard palettes.

Display them with the season label as a fan celebration of the show’s continued run on Adult Swim.

Vibe Check Scene

Color the Vibe Check page using bold, expressive colors, leaning into Tuca’s warmth and Bertie’s cool.

Add a hand-drawn speech bubble or caption that captures the characters’ energy for a fun fan art piece.

Trio Portrait

Color a trio page with Tuca, Bertie, and Speckle, keeping all three palettes distinct and using Speckle’s neutral tan to separate the two leads visually.

Frame the finished page as a group portrait with the show’s name written below.

Friendship Card

Color the duo posing page and fold it into a card for a friend who also loves the show.

Write a short message inside referencing a favorite moment from the series for a personalized fan card that means more than a generic greeting.

FAQ About Tuca and Bertie Coloring Pages

Are these Tuca and Bertie pages free, and can I color them online?

Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or color the design on screen in the browser.

Which characters are included?

The set covers Tuca, Bertie, and Speckle in solo, duo, and trio pages, along with Season 2 designs, a Vibe Check page, a Bertie thinking page, and funny, fat, cute, and happy variants for each character.

What is Tuca and Bertie?

Tuca and Bertie is an adult animated comedy series created by Lisa Hanawalt, first released on Netflix in 2019 and continued on Adult Swim for three seasons through 2023. It follows Tuca, a bold toucan, and Bertie, an anxious songbird, as best friends navigating careers, relationships, and personal growth in Bird Town. You can read more on the Wikipedia page.

What colors should I use for Tuca?

Tuca’s body is a vivid, warm magenta-pink with a saturated yellow-orange beak. Her feet and small accents carry the same warm yellow tone. Keep the pink bold and fully saturated: her visual energy depends on it.

What colors should I use for Bertie?

Bertie’s body is a muted blue-green or teal, cooler and less saturated than Tuca’s magenta. Her beak and facial accents are warm tan or pale ochre. The contrast between her cool body and warm face details is what makes her design feel balanced.

What colors should I use for Speckle?

Speckle is the most neutrally colored of the three: warm tan, soft brown, and creamy white, referencing naturalistic songbird coloring. In group pages, his neutral palette naturally separates and balances Tuca’s warm magenta and Bertie’s cool teal.

Is Tuca and Bertie suitable for younger children?

The show itself is made for adults and older teens, with themes of mental health, relationships, and personal growth. The coloring pages are simple fan art and contain nothing inappropriate, but the series is best suited to older fans who know and enjoy the show.

Are there Season 2 pages in the set?

Yes. Several sheets are specifically labeled as Season 2 designs for both Tuca and Bertie, making them a good fit for fans who followed the show through its Adult Swim run.

Are these official Tuca and Bertie coloring pages?

No. They are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with Lisa Hanawalt, Netflix, Adult Swim, or any rights holder of the Tuca and Bertie series.

What crafts can I make with these pages?

Popular options include a color contrast character study, a Season 2 fan art display, a Vibe Check scene, a trio portrait, and a friendship card.

More Cartoon and Adult Animation Coloring Pages

Browse the full set at ColoringPagesOnly.com, then open any design to print it or color it on screen.

These pages are made for personal and fan use and are best suited to older fans of the series. They are fan-made coloring designs and are not official products of the Tuca and Bertie franchise.

For the final pass, keep Tuca’s pink saturated, Bertie’s teal cool, and Speckle’s tan neutral. Those three anchors keep every page in the set readable, whether you are working on a solo outline or the full trio.

Share your work on Facebook and Pinterest and tag #ColoringPagesOnly. We would love to see your color contrast studies, Season 2 displays, and Vibe Check scenes.

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.