If you’ve ever taken a kid to a monster truck rally, you know the look on their face when that first truck launches off a ramp. Eyes wide, jaw open, completely frozen.
These free monster truck coloring pages are basically that, but for the kitchen table.
I put this collection together with a mix of everything: easy pages with big outlines for little hands, famous trucks like Grave Digger and Megalodon for the Monster Jam fans, Hot Wheels designs, action scenes, and even some detailed pages for adults who want in on the fun.
Every page is a free and ready to print. No email required.
Best coloring supplies for monster truck pages
Not every coloring tool works the same for every age. Here’s what I’d actually recommend depending on who’s doing the coloring:
- Toddlers and preschoolers (ages 2 to 4) Jumbo crayons are the way to go. Their hands are still figuring out grip, and regular ones just snap. Washable markers work too, but expect some table art along the way.
- Kids ages 5 to 9: Standard crayons, colored pencils, and fine-tip markers all work well at this age. Pencils are great for staying inside the lines. Markers are better for those who like saturated colors.
- Tweens, teens, and adults: Gel pens, artist-grade pencils, or watercolor pencils make these pages look surprisingly good. If you’re coloring the detailed or mandala-style pages, a set with 24+ colors makes a real difference.
One tip that saves a lot of cleanup: always put a scrap sheet underneath, especially with markers. Learned that one the hard way.
Easy monster truck coloring pages for kids
These pages are designed for younger kids. Simple shapes, chunky outlines, and not too much detail inside the truck body. Perfect for ages 2 through 6, or for any kid who just wants to grab a crayon and go.
1. Simple smiling monster truck
A friendly truck with a big grin and large wheels. About as simple as it gets, and toddlers love the face on it.
2. Big Wheels Monster Truck
Just a truck with huge, chunky tires and heavy line work. No background clutter, easy to color.
3. Cartoon monster truck with stars
Stars and lightning bolts on the side panels. Gives kids a chance to use a few different colors without being overwhelming.
4. Baby monster truck with clouds
A cute, rounded truck floating through puffy clouds. More whimsical than realistic.
5. Monster truck with racing number
A bold number on the door panel, like the trucks at a real rally. Kids can pick their own lucky number and fill it in.
6. Round face-friendly truck
Another character truck with big eyes and a bumper smile. Works well for the youngest colorists.
7. Monster truck with a rainbow
A truck driving under a rainbow arc. One of those pages where the background is just as fun to color as the truck itself.
8. Monster truck on a sunny road
A simple side-view truck rolling down a road with a sun in the corner. Classic, no fuss, easy to finish in one sitting.
Famous monster truck coloring pages
These are for the kids (and parents) who actually know the trucks by name. If your child watches Monster Jam, they’ll recognize most of these immediately.
9. Grave Digger
The most famous monster truck there is. Black and green with graveyard graphics and a spooky theme. Gets requested more than any other page in the collection.
10. Bigfoot
The original monster truck. Bob Chandler built the first Bigfoot back in 1975 by putting massive tires on a Ford F-250. Every monster truck on the road today exists because of that build.
11. El Toro Loco
The red bull-themed truck with horns on the hood. Wild-eyed and aggressive-looking, and a favorite among Monster Jam fans.
12. Megalodon
A shark-inspired truck with fins and teeth. Kids who are into both trucks and ocean creatures go crazy for it.
13. Max-D (Maximum Destruction)
Silver and red with a sharp, angular design. Known for doing backflips in competition.
14. Blue Thunder
A clean, blue, and white truck that looks fast even sitting still. Good for kids who like a more classic truck look.
15. Mohawk Warrior
A truck with a giant mohawk on the roof and tribal-style graphics. One of the more unusual designs in the Monster Jam lineup.
16. Avenger
Red, white, and blue with a patriotic paint job. A solid pick around the Fourth of July or any time, really.
Hot Wheels monster truck coloring pages
Hot Wheels monster trucks have their own design language, a little more exaggerated and toy-like than the Monster Jam trucks. These pages capture that style.
17. Hot Wheels monster truck with flames
The classic flame paint job running down the side. Been a Hot Wheels staple for decades.
18. Hot Wheels Bone Shaker
A hot rod truck with an exposed engine and a menacing front grille. Looks mean, but kids love it.
19. Hot Wheels Tiger Shark
Half tiger, half shark, all monster truck. The kind of design only Hot Wheels would come up with.
20. Hot Wheels Demo Derby truck
Dented panels, cracked windshield, battle scars everywhere. For kids who like their trucks looking like they’ve been through it.
21. Hot Wheels monster truck racing scene
Two trucks side by side on a track. Good for coloring with a sibling or friend, one truck each.
Monster trucks in action coloring pages
These pages show trucks mid-stunt: jumping, crushing, drifting, and flying through the air. They’ve got more background detail than the easy pages, so they work best for kids ages 6 and up.
22. Monster truck jumping over crushed cars
The classic stunt. A truck launching off a car pile with all four wheels in the air.
23. Monster truck mid-air off a ramp
A steep ramp launch with dust clouds below. The angle makes the truck look absolutely massive.
24. Monster truck crushing a row of cars
A ground-level view of a truck rolling over three flattened sedans. Satisfying to look at, even more satisfying to color.
25. Monster truck racing through mud
Mud is spraying in every direction from the tires. This page practically begs for brown crayons and finger paints.
26. Monster truck in a stadium with a cheering crowd
An arena scene with a truck in the center and stands full of fans in the background. More detail here, but the truck stays the focal point.
27. Monster truck doing a wheelie
Front wheels way up in the air, back tires gripping the dirt. A good one for showing how powerful these machines are.
28. Monster truck drifting on a dirt track
Sideways on a banked turn with a trail of dust. The motion on this page is hard to miss.
Monster truck coloring pages for adults
These aren’t just “harder versions of the kids pages.” They’re designed with real complexity, the kind that makes you want to pull out the good pencils and spend an hour on a single sheet.
29. Realistic monster truck with suspension
Visible shocks, springs, axle detail, and tire tread. If you know what a four-link suspension looks like, you’ll appreciate this page.
30. Monster truck with mandala background
The truck itself is standard, but the background is filled with layered mandala patterns. A nice mix of mechanical and meditative.
31. Steampunk monster truck
Gears, pipes, rivets, and brass fittings all over the body. Steam puffing from the hood. Weird and cool.
32. Monster truck in a post-apocalyptic city
Crumbling buildings, overgrown vines, cracked roads, and a truck rolling through the middle of it all. Takes time, and it’s worth it.
Unique and creative monster truck coloring pages
These are the pages you won’t find in most collections. A little unexpected, a little offbeat, and kids tend to love them for exactly that reason.
33. Unicorn monster truck
A truck with a horn, wings, and sparkle graphics. I spotted a parent request for exactly this on another coloring site, and it makes sense. Not every monster truck fan wants skulls and flames.
34. Dinosaur driving a monster truck
A T-Rex behind the wheel of a lifted truck. The short arms make it funnier than it should be.
35. Monster truck at the beach
Palm trees, waves, sand, and a truck tearing through the shoreline. A summer vibe that works year-round.
Fun monster truck facts for kids
While the coloring pages dry, here are some things worth knowing about monster trucks:
- The first monster truck was Bigfoot, built in 1975. Bob Chandler took a regular Ford F-250 and kept adding bigger tires until it wasn’t really a pickup truck anymore. That build started the entire sport.
- Monster truck tires are about 66 inches tall and weigh around 800 pounds each. That’s taller than most kindergartners.
- Grave Digger has been around since 1982. Dennis Anderson built the original, and over 40 versions have been made since then. It’s the most recognizable monster truck in the world.
- A competition monster truck weighs about 10,000 to 12,000 pounds. For context, that’s roughly two full-size SUVs stacked together.
- The engines in these trucks produce around 1,500 horsepower. A typical family car has somewhere between 150 and 300.
- Monster Jam events happen in over 30 countries now. What started as a few guys putting big tires on pickup trucks in the American Southeast turned into a global thing.
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Wrapping up
That’s all 35 monster truck coloring pages, sorted by difficulty and style so you can find the right ones fast.
Whether your kid is two years old and just learning to grip a crayon, or ten and wants to color every detail on a realistic Grave Digger, there’s something in here for them. The adult pages work surprisingly well for a quiet evening, too.
If your house runs through coloring pages as fast as mine does, you might also want to check out our fire truck coloring pages and race car coloring pages for more of the same kind of fun.
Bookmark this page and come back whenever you need a fresh batch.


































