Lilo & Stitch Coloring Pages bring the full cast of one of Disney’s most beloved films to your coloring table – and this collection at ColoringPagesOnly.com covers not just Lilo and Stitch but the entire world of the film: Nani, Jumba, Pleakley, Angel, David, Captain Gantu, Leroy, and dozens of scenes from their Hawaiian adventures together. With 60+ free pages available, there is something here for every fan of the story – whether you grew up with the 2002 original or found the characters through the live-action remake in 2025.

Every page is completely free – download as PDF to print or color online in your browser. No sign-up, no cost.

What Is Lilo & Stitch?

Lilo & Stitch is a Disney animated film from 2002, directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois, set almost entirely in Kauai, Hawaii. The film follows two central relationships simultaneously: the one between Lilo, a lonely and unusual young Hawaiian girl, and Stitch, an alien experiment who crash-lands on the island; and the one between Lilo and her older sister Nani, who is trying to keep their small family together after the death of their parents.

Stitch – officially Experiment 626 – was engineered by the scientist Jumba Jookiba to be perfectly destructive: indestructible, highly intelligent, and programmed to cause chaos. He escapes custody, crashes on Kauai, and is adopted from a shelter by Lilo, who thinks he is a dog. The film is fundamentally about what happens when something created to destroy is given, for the first time, a family that doesn’t give up on it.

The film’s emotional core is the Hawaiian concept of ohana“Ohana means family. Family means nobody gets left behind or forgotten.” A live-action remake was released in May 2025, starring Sydney Elizebeth Agudong as Lilo, which brought a new wave of fans to the story and significantly renewed interest in all Lilo & Stitch content. You can explore the full world of Disney coloring pages beyond this collection if you want to keep coloring in the Disney universe.

Meet the Full Cast

Lilo Pelekai is the human heart of the story – a young Hawaiian girl with long black hair, warm brown skin, and a personality that is deeply her own: she loves Elvis Presley, photographs people she finds interesting, and is fiercely, stubbornly herself even when the world doesn’t quite know what to do with her. Her signature red floral muumuu, warm skin tones, and the vivid greens and blues of her Hawaiian setting define her color palette throughout the collection.

Stitch – Experiment 626 is the film’s other protagonist – a medium blue alien with large, round ears, sharp teeth, and an expressiveness that is one of the great achievements of the film’s animation. His canonical color is a warm medium blue, never purple or electric, and his lighter underbelly and inner ears create the depth that makes him immediately readable as a character. For 60+ additional pages focused exclusively on Stitch in solo portraits, kawaii scenes, and holiday designs, visit our dedicated Stitch Coloring Pages collection.

Nani Pelekai is Lilo’s older sister and legal guardian – working to keep their family together while managing her own grief. Her warm Hawaiian skin tones, long dark hair, and her yellow Birds of Paradise cafe t-shirt define her visual identity across all her pages.

Jumba Jookiba is the large, purple, four-eyed alien scientist who created Stitch – hired by the Galactic Federation to recapture Experiment 626, he ends up becoming an unlikely member of Lilo’s extended ohana. His deep violet-purple coloring makes him one of the most visually distinct characters in the collection.

Pleakley is the one-eyed, green-yellow alien agent assigned to work with Jumba. His obsession with Earth culture – including his memorable habit of dressing in human women’s clothing, captured in the Pleakley Dresses Like a Woman page – gives him some of the film’s funniest moments.

Angel – Experiment 624 is Stitch’s love interest from the animated series – a pink female experiment with long dark-tipped antennae. Her Angel in Kimono page is one of the most delicate in the collection.

David Kawena is Nani’s friend and love interest – a young Hawaiian surfer whose pages capture the warm, sun-drenched energy of beach life.

Captain Gantu is the film’s primary antagonist – a massive, gray-blue, whale-like alien with a military bearing that makes him one of the more striking figures to color.

Leroy is the villain clone of Stitch from the 2006 Disney Channel film Leroy & Stitch – visually similar to Stitch but in red instead of blue, distinguishing him immediately as the antagonistic version of the same design.

What’s Inside the Lilo & Stitch Coloring Collection

The Lilo and Stitch pair pages are the heart of the collection: Lilo and Stitch, Lilo and Stitch Hugging, Lilo & Stitch Hugging, Happy Lilo and Stitch, Happy Lilo & Stitch, Lilo And Stitch Dancing, Lilo And Stitch Eating Ice Cream, Lilo And Stitch Enjoying Summer, Lilo And Stitch Relaxing On Hammock, Lilo And Stitch Rescue Each Other, Lilo and Stitch Run Away from the Monster, Lilo and Stitch for Kids, Stitch and Lilo Ohana, How Stitch Became Lilo’s Family. These pages cover the full emotional arc of their relationship – from the chaos of early encounters to the warmth of an established ohana.

The Lilo solo pages – Lilo with Sunglasses, Lilo Holds a Flower, Lilo Dancing Happily, Lilo Say Hi, Lilo Is Shocked, Lilo Petrified Of Stitch, Lilo Reading To Stitch, Lilo Washes Stitch, Lilo With Her Doll, Lilo with a camera, Lilo Holds A Big Fish, Lilo Enjoying At The Beach, Lilo Dances Hula hula, Lilo Dancing and Stitch Playing Guitar, Lilo With Nani, Lilo Speaking Loudly – capture the full range of Lilo’s personality across different moments and moods.

The Stitch solo pages – Good Stitch, Stitch Growling, Stitch Grimacing, Stitch Sticking to the Screen, Stitch Standing on his Head, Stitch in a Suit, Stitch in Winter, Stitch on a Spaceship, Stitch eating Sweets, Stitch eating Banana, Stitch with ice cream, Stitch Drinking Milk with Lilo – show Stitch across the full spectrum from mischievous to tender.

The full family pages – Nani, Lilo And Stitch; Lilo, Stitch, Nani; Stitch and Lilo Experiments; Lilo from Lilo and Stitch diving under the sea – place the characters in their wider family and setting context.

The secondary character pages – Jumba and Pleakley, Jumba Jookiba Gets Hold Stitch, Pleakley Holds the Phone, Pleakley Dresses Like a Woman, Captain Gantu, David From Lilo And Stitch, Leroy And Lilo, Angel from Lilo and Stitch, Angel in Kimono – are the pages that fans of the film and series specifically seek out.

The seasonal pages – Stitch in Winter and the extended holiday designs – connect naturally to our Disney Christmas Coloring Pages for a full holiday Disney coloring experience. Our dedicated Stitch collection also has Halloween, Thanksgiving, New Year, and St. Patrick’s Day Stitch designs if you want the complete seasonal range.

Coloring Tips for Lilo & Stitch Pages

The film’s visual palette is built around Hawaii – warm, saturated, and deliberately tropical: vivid greens, warm ocean blues and teals, sandy beach tones, the golden light of a Hawaiian afternoon.

Lilo’s palette centers on her bright red floral muumuu – a true, saturated red that pops naturally against her warm skin tones and the greens and blues of Hawaii. Her hair is a deep, warm black, and her eyes are dark brown.

Stitch’s blue is a medium warm blue – not purple, not electric, not navy. His underbelly and inner ears should be noticeably lighter, close to a pale blue-white, which creates the three-dimensional quality of his rounded design. His eyes are very dark blue-black with small white highlight points.

Jumba’s purple is the richest, most saturated color in the supporting cast – a deep violet-purple for his main body with gray-lavender for his underbelly. His four eyes should maintain balanced coloring: the outer two slightly smaller than the inner pair.

Pleakley’s yellow-green is lime-adjacent – bright and slightly acidic, unmistakably alien against the warm Hawaiian palette of the human characters.

For Hawaiian setting pages – beach scenes, summer scenes, the Hammock page – use warm sand tones (not white, not brown, but the gold of actual beach sand), shallow turquoise for coastal water rather than deep ocean blue, and dense, vivid green for tropical vegetation. These background colors are what make Stitch’s blue, Lilo’s red, and Nani’s yellow all read correctly.

5 Activities to Do With Your Lilo & Stitch Pages

Color the ohana arc. Choose three pages that tell the story of Stitch’s journey from alien to family member – Stitch on a Spaceship (before Hawaii), Good Stitch (his early uncertain days with Lilo), and Stitch and Lilo Ohana (the resolved family). Color each with a consistent Stitch palette but shift the surrounding colors dramatically: cold space blues and dark grays for the spaceship page, neutral tones for his early days, and the full warm Hawaiian palette for the Ohana page.

Create a “Lilo’s World” display. Color four Lilo solo pages and arrange them as a window into her inner world: Lilo with a camera (observer), Lilo Dances Hula hula (performer), Lilo Holds a Flower (quiet), Lilo Is Shocked (dramatic). Label each with a word that captures that facet of her personality. This makes a beautiful gift for someone who identifies with Lilo specifically.

Do a Hawaii color study. Before coloring any pages, find five or six photographs of Kauai, Hawaii – beaches, jungle paths, hibiscus flowers. Pull the exact colors from these photographs and use them as your guide for every background element you color. The finished result will feel connected to a real place rather than a generic tropical background.

Build a full cast portrait gallery. Color one solo portrait page for each major character – Lilo, Stitch, Nani, Jumba, Pleakley, Angel, Gantu – using each character’s canonical palette. Arrange them in a row and label each with their name and role in the story. For children new to the film, this becomes a character guide they built themselves.

Make a scene-and-response pair. Find two pages showing the same characters in very different emotional states – Lilo Petrified Of Stitch paired with Lilo and Stitch Hugging; Stitch Growling paired with Good Stitch. Color each pair with contrasting palettes: cooler, more desaturated tones for tense pages, warmer and more vivid colors for joyful ones. Display the pairs together so the color shift tells the emotional story of how the relationship changed.

Download Your Free Lilo & Stitch Pages Today!

All 60+ Lilo & Stitch Coloring Pages are completely free – download as PDF or color online with one click. No sign-up, no cost. Whether you’re coloring with a child who just discovered the story or returning to a film that meant something to you growing up, we hope this collection does justice to one of the most genuinely moving stories Disney has ever told.

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Jennifer Thoa – Writer and Content Creator

Hi there! I’m Jennifer Thoa, a writer and content creator at Coloringpagesonly.com. With a love for storytelling and a passion for creativity, I’m here to inspire and share exciting ideas that bring color and joy to your world. Let’s dive into a fun and imaginative adventure together!