Easter Bunny Coloring Pages: 20 Free Printable PDFs

These 20 pages are a mix of classic Easter imagery and a few surprises. The expected elements are here — cartoon bunnies with Easter baskets, large decorated eggs with geometric and floral patterns, baby chicks emerging from eggs, and ribbon banners. But the character variety makes this set more interesting than a standard bunny collection: there’s a penguin character holding Easter eggs, an owl wearing a bow tie surrounded by flowers, pairs of bunnies sharing scenes, and several compositions where a single large decorated egg takes center stage as the main coloring subject. The art style leans cartoon-cute, with rounded shapes and clear outlines throughout.

The range of subjects means there’s something for kids who are drawn to animal characters and something for kids who prefer the more pattern-focused approach of coloring a detailed Easter egg. Neither the character pages nor the egg designs are particularly complex — the outlines are clean and the shapes are large enough for kindergarten-age hands. Early elementary kids will find the decorated egg pages especially worth taking time on, since the patterns within the shells reward careful, deliberate color choices. Everything here is free to download and easy to print.

Free Printable Easter Bunny Coloring Pages

This collection includes 20 printable Easter bunny coloring pages featuring cartoon bunnies with Easter baskets and flowers, large decorated Easter eggs with geometric and floral patterns, baby chicks, a penguin character, an owl in Easter attire, and paired bunny illustrations. The mix of animal characters and decorated egg designs gives the set more variety than a single-subject Easter collection. All pages are formatted as letter or A4 PDFs ready to download and print.

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Who Are These Easter Bunny Coloring Pages Best For?

Kindergarteners will find the single-character bunny pages easiest to start with — the cartoon style keeps shapes large and outlines thick, and the subjects are familiar enough that most kids will already have color ideas ready before they pick up a crayon. The decorated Easter egg pages in this set are also accessible at this age, since the pattern sections are large enough to fill without requiring precision.

Early elementary kids in grades 1–3 will get more out of the pages with detailed egg patterns and the pair compositions, where two characters share a scene and the background requires some thought about how to differentiate elements. The decorated egg pages in particular invite a more intentional coloring approach — using different colors for alternating sections, experimenting with complementary color pairs, or trying to recreate the look of a real dyed Easter egg.

As a spring classroom activity, these work well in the days before Easter break. The character variety — bunnies, chicks, an owl, a penguin — means conversations can naturally drift toward what animals actually do in spring, which connects the holiday theme to seasonal science content without requiring a separate lesson.

Interesting Easter Facts to Share While Coloring

The Easter Bunny has German origins. The tradition of a gift-bringing rabbit associated with Easter dates to 17th-century Germany, where a hare called the “Osterhase” was said to lay colored eggs in nests for good children. German immigrants brought the custom to the United States in the 18th century, where it evolved into the modern Easter Bunny who fills baskets with candy and eggs.

Real rabbits do not lay eggs — but they were associated with spring fertility. The rabbit’s connection to Easter likely predates the Christian holiday, rooted in spring fertility symbolism. Rabbits reproduce rapidly and were visible in fields as winter ended, making them natural symbols of the season’s return. The egg carries similar symbolism — new life emerging — which is probably why the two ended up combined in Easter tradition despite the obvious biological mismatch.

Americans buy about 1.5 billion Peeps every Easter. Those marshmallow chick and bunny candies — made in colors that closely match what kids put in these coloring pages — are the best-selling non-chocolate Easter candy in the United States. The Just Born candy company, which makes Peeps, was founded in 1923 and originally produced each chick by hand; machines now produce roughly 5.5 million per day.

Easter egg hunts have been a White House tradition since 1878. President Rutherford B. Hayes held the first official White House Easter Egg Roll, after Congress banned egg rolling on Capitol grounds. The event has been held almost every year since, making it one of the oldest recurring annual events in American political life. The tradition survived two World Wars and a pandemic, resuming each time after interruptions.

Creative Easter Coloring and Craft Ideas

Pastel Palette Only Challenge yourself to color the entire set using only soft pastel shades — no bright primary colors. Compare the gentle, springlike feel against a version done in bold primary colors.

Egg Pattern Design On the decorated egg pages, plan the pattern before coloring: decide which sections get which colors, and stick to a two- or three-color palette to create a coordinated look.

Easter Card Color the simplest, cleanest bunny page, cut it out carefully, and mount it on folded card paper to give as an Easter card with a handwritten message inside.

Spring Animal Gallery Color five different animal pages from this set and arrange them as a “Spring Animal Gallery” display on a wall or bulletin board — label each animal with its name.

Compare the Eggs Color four different egg pages using completely different color schemes — one all-warm, one all-cool, one holiday-traditional red and green, one in neon colors — and compare how the same pattern design feels in each palette.

Coloring Book Cover Pick your favorite completed page, cut it to fit a folded sheet of cardstock, and staple several blank pages inside to make a personalized Easter coloring mini-book for a younger sibling or friend.

How to Print These Easter Bunny Coloring Pages

Each page downloads as a PDF for US Letter or A4 paper. Plain copy paper handles crayons and colored pencils well; if kids plan to use markers on the egg pattern pages, 65 lb cardstock prevents bleed-through and keeps the colors from muddying on the back side. Printing in grayscale works perfectly and saves color ink.

Explore More Holiday Coloring Pages

If you enjoyed these pages, you may also like:
Disney Halloween Coloring Pages
Leprechaun Coloring Pages
Father’s Day Coloring Pages
Monthly Coloring Pages
Holiday & Seasonal Coloring Pages

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