Frogs aren’t just a spring thing. Kids spot them in backyards, hear them at night, chase them after rainstorms. They show up in fairy tales, science class, and pretty much every pond within walking distance. That’s what makes frog coloring pages one of those activities that never gets old.
Here’s what you’ll find: free printable frog coloring pages, sorted by style.
Cute cartoon frogs for little kids, kawaii frogs for the aesthetics crowd, easy pages for toddlers, realistic species for budding biologists, life cycle diagrams for classrooms, detailed designs for teens and adults, and a few frogs doing things frogs have absolutely no business doing.
The difficulty range goes from simple thick outlines for 2-year-olds all the way to intricate mandala patterns for grown-ups. No matter who’s holding the crayons, there’s something here.
35 Free Frog Coloring Pages to Download and Print
Cute and Cartoon Frog Coloring Pages
These pages are the crowd pleasers. Big eyes, goofy grins, and frogs doing things that frogs definitely don’t do in real life. Bold outlines.
Simple shapes. Enough detail to keep older kids interested, but nothing so fiddly that a 4-year-old would throw the crayon across the room.
Preschoolers through early elementary kids will have the most fun here. The designs are cheerful, and the shapes are easy to fill in with chunky crayons, colored pencils, or thick markers.
1. A Happy Frog Enjoying His Favorite Lily Pad

Every frog coloring collection needs this one. A cheerful little frog sitting on his lily pad, grinning like he owns the whole pond.
2. This Little Guy Just Hatched and He’s Already Adorable

Tiny legs, a round little body, and eyes that take up half his face. This baby frog is looking up at a butterfly like he’s seeing the world for the first time.
3. A Sweet Frog Picked This Daisy Just for You
This frog is standing upright and holding out a big daisy like he’s about to hand it to someone. It makes a nice homemade card if you cut it out after coloring.
4. Kiss This Frog and See What Happens
A frog prince with a crown and a tiny cape, sitting on a stone with a castle in the distance. If your kid knows the fairy tale, they’ll love this one. If they don’t, it’s a good excuse to read The Frog Prince together before or after coloring.
5. Three Frog Friends and Their Tiny Teacups
Three frogs are sitting around a little table with teacups and a teapot. One of them is wearing a bow tie, which, for some reason, makes the whole thing funnier.
6. Rainy Days Are the Best Days If You’re a Frog
A frog in little rain boots holding an umbrella while raindrops fall around him. There are puddles on the ground that kids can color blue, plus all the individual raindrops if they’re feeling patient.
7. Bubbles, Bubbles Everywhere
A frog on a rock, puffing out soap bubbles with a bubble wand. The bubbles floating around the page are the real highlight here because kids can make each one a different color. Rainbow bubbles, neon bubbles, whatever they want.
8. Captain Frog Sets Sail on a Puddle Adventure
A little frog sitting in a paper boat, holding a tiny flag, sailing across the water. There are small waves underneath, and the whole thing looks like the beginning of a story.
Kawaii Frog Coloring Pages
9. The Cutest Little Frog You’ll Color Today
A round, chubby kawaii frog with heart-shaped blush marks on his cheeks. Tiny stubby arms, sparkly little eyes, and that classic kawaii blob shape that kids (and plenty of adults) can’t resist.
10. That Strawberry Is Almost Bigger Than He Is
A kawaii frog nibbling on a strawberry that’s nearly the size of his head. Eyes closed, happy little expression, just completely content with his oversized fruit. Kids love coloring the strawberry bright red next to a green frog.
11. Who Put a Frog in My Tea?
A tiny frog peeking out of a decorative teacup, just his eyes and the top of his head visible over the rim. There’s a saucer underneath,h and little steam swirls above.
12. Three Frogs, One Tower, Zero Balance
Three kawaii frogs stacked on top of each other. The bottom one looks a little squished, the middle one is trying to hold it together, and the top one is totally clueless.
Kids can color each frog a different shade of green or go completely off script and make them purple, pink, and blue.
13. This Frog Just Saw Something Amazing
A kawaii frog with big star-shaped eyes and its little hands pressed against its cheeks in a surprised pose.
Whatever he just saw, it was clearly the most exciting thing that’s ever happened. The minimal background keeps the focus on that ridiculous expression, which is the whole point of this page.
Easy Frog Coloring Pages for Preschoolers and Toddlers
14. A First Frog for Little Hands
This is the simplest frog in the collection. Extra thick bold lines, a big open body, round eyes, and a wide smile. No background details, no tiny sections, nothing that would frustrate a toddler who’s still learning how to grip a crayon.
15. F Is for Frog and Also for Fun
A big uppercase letter F on one side and a simple, friendly frog on the other. Below that, the word FROG is in large dotted letters that kids can trace. This page pulls double duty as a coloring activity and a letter recognition exercise.
16. Say Hello to This Big Froggy Face
A zoomed-in frog face that fills most of the page. Two huge round eyes, a wide grin, and nothing else to worry about.
The shapes are big and rounded, so even the youngest kids can color inside them without getting frustrated.
17. Count the Lily Pads: One, Two, Three!

One frog, three lily pads, each numbered in big, clear font. You color, and you count. Two activities on one page.
It’s simple math reinforcement wrapped in a coloring activity, and the big chunky shapes make it easy for preschoolers to handle on their own.
18. Jump! This Frog Can’t Sit Still

A frog mid-leap with his legs stretched out and motion lines showing the jump. Big smile, minimal background, and lots of open space to color. The thick outlines are forgiving enough that even if a toddler goes outside the lines (and they will), the page still turns out looking good.
Realistic Frog Coloring Pages
19. The Rock Star of the Frog World
The red-eyed tree frog is probably the most recognizable frog on the planet. Bright red eyes, a green body, and blue and yellow stripes on the sides.
This page shows one gripping a thin branch with its toe pads, tropical leaves behind it.
20. Bright Colors Mean Don’t Touch in the Wild
A poison dart frog covered in bumpy skin texture and spotted patterns, sitting on a fallen leaf on the forest floor.
These frogs use bright colors as a warning signal in nature. Talking about that while your kid colors is a painless way to slip in a biology lesson.
21. The Bullfrog You Might Actually Find in Your Backyard
A chunky American bullfrog is sitting at the edge of a pond. Detailed skin folds, muscular back legs, cattails, and reeds behind it.
This is the frog most kids in the US have actually seen (or at least heard) in real life, so there’s a connection point there.
22. Smooth, Green, and Gripping On Tight
A green tree frog perched on a large leaf, toe pads gripping the edge. The skin is smooth,h unlike the bumpy dart frog, and the body shape is slender and athletic. A vine in the background adds a little extra detail.
23. Round, Red, and a Little Bit Grumpy
The tomato frog from Madagascar is round and plump, looking vaguely annoyed about something. Kids love this one because the shape is so different from a typical frog. It’s basically a red-orange ball with legs and a face.
24. You Can Almost See Through This Frog
Glass frogs have translucent skin, which means you can actually see their internal organs. This page hints at that with faint anatomy outlines visible through the body. It’s sitting on a broad tropical leaf with water droplets, and it’s a natural conversation starter about why some animals evolved to be see-through.
Frog Life Cycle Coloring Pages
25. It All Starts with a Clump of Tiny Eggs
A cluster of frog eggs floating in pond water. Each egg is a small circle with a dark dot inside, all held together in a jelly-like mass. Simple pond plants sit nearby. This is Stage 1 of the life cycle series, and it’s a good place to talk about how a single frog can lay thousands of eggs at once.
26. No Legs Yet, Just a Tail and a Whole Lot of Wiggling
A single tadpole swimming through water plants. Long tail, small, round body, tiny gills on the side, and a few air bubbles trailing behind. At this stage,e they breathe through gills just like fish, which is a fun fact that usually surprises kids. This is Stage 2 of the series.
27. Wait, Are Those Legs? The Froglet Stage
The in-between stage where tiny back legs have appeared, but the tail is still there, just shorter. The froglet is sitting on a rock at the water’s edge, halfway between aquatic and land life. Kids think this stage is both cool and a little weird, which makes it one of the more interesting pages to talk about while coloring stage 3.
28. From Egg to Frog: The Whole Story on One Page

All four stages are arranged in a circle with arrows connecting them clockwise. Eggs, tadpole, froglet, adult frog. Each stage is labeled. This is the poster page. Color it, cut it out, stick it on the classroom wall. Teachers can use it as a standalone science activity, and it covers metamorphosis without needing any extra materials.
Frog Coloring Pages for Adults and Teens
29. Frog Mandala That Takes You to Another Zone
You know that feeling when you’re coloring something detailed, and everything else goes quiet? That’s what this page does.
The frog outline is filled with layered geometric patterns, tiny repeating shapes that loop into each other. Circles inside circles, petal formations, diamond grids.
30. Every Section Is a Different Pattern to Get Lost In
A frog with zentangle patterns filling every part of its body. The head has one pattern, the front legs another, the back legs another, the belly another.
Crosshatching, spirals, dots, waves, scales. It stays interesting because you’re constantly switching between different types of detail work as you move across the page.
31. Not Just a Frog, a Full Pond Scene to Color
This isn’t just a frog on a blank page. It’s a frog on a lily pad surrounded by more lily pads, cattails, dragonflies, water ripples, and reeds.
The whole scene is drawn with fine,e intricate line work. It takes time, which is the point. If you’re looking for something to work on over a few evenings with a cup of tea, this is the one.
32. Flowers, Ferns, Mushrooms, and One Lucky Frog
A frog is sitting right in the middle of an elaborate botanical garden. Detailed flowers, curling ferns, little mushrooms, layered leaves, and climbing vines fill every corner of the page. There are many color combination possibilities here because of the variety of plant types.
Fun Adventure and Seasonal Frog Coloring Pages
33. One Small Hop for Frog, One Giant Leap for Frog-kind
A frog in a space helmet and full spacesuit, floating past planets and stars. There’s a small rocket ship in the background and a crescent moon nearby. The space background is where the fun is because kids get to use dark blues, purples, and blacks, which is a nice change from all the greens and pond colors in the rest of the collection.
34. Surf’s Up, Dude
A cool frog wearing sunglasses stands next to a surfboard on a beach, with waves in the background, a palm tree to one side, and the sun in the sky.
Full summer energy. Bright yellows for the sand, oranges for the sunset, blue for the ocean. This is one of those pages where kids end up using colors they normally skip over.
35. Chef Frog’s Special of the Day: Fly Soup
A frog in a tall chef hat and apron, standing at a kitchen counter and stirring a pot with a wooden spoon. There’s a shelf with jars behind him and a cutting board with vegetables on the counter. Kids always want to know what a frog would cook.
The answer is fly soup, obviously. It’s a fun page to end the collection on because it’s completely ridiculous, and that’s the point.
DOWNLOAD PDF
Conclusion
That’s all 35 frog coloring pages. Cute ones, kawaii ones, easy ones for toddlers, realistic species, life cycle diagrams, detailed pages for adults, and a frog in a space helmet, because why not?
Pick the ones your kids are drawn to, print a few extras for the classroom or a playdate, and don’t toss the finished pages.
Turn them into puppets, bookmarks, or that life cycle poster your kid’s teacher will quietly be impressed by.
Bookmark this page so you can come back when you need a fresh batch. And if your crew has already colored every frog here and wants more, check out our turtle coloring pages, butterfly coloring pages, and dinosaur coloring pages next.
Happy coloring!





























