Our biggest set, sorted so you can find one fast
Our Pokemon set is the biggest on the site, and it keeps growing. Browsing all of them at once is a lot, so here's the short version: the famous faces, full evolution lines you can print as a set, the legendaries, and the newest arrivals. Every page is original line art, free to download and print.
Want to skim them yourself first? Here's the full set: /coloring-pages/pokemon.
Start with the faces kids already know
If your kid is new to coloring Pokemon, start here. These are the ones they'll recognize on sight:
- Pikachu's happy grin
- Confident Charizard strikes a pose
- Snorlax taking a big nap
- Gengar floating and smiling big
- Jigglypuff's magical song
- Magikarp making a splash
Magikarp and Jigglypuff are mostly big, simple shapes — good picks for ages 4 and 5. Charizard has more detail in the wings and flame, so it suits 7 and up.
Print a whole evolution line
Here's a trick kids love: print a Pokemon next to what it grows into and color them side by side. We have several complete lines:
- Grass starter: Bulbasaur → Ivysaur → Venusaur
- Water starter: Wartortle → Blastoise
- Foxfire: Vulpix → Ninetales
- Snake duo: Ekans → Arbok
- Gas pair: Koffing → Weezing
- Metal dragons: Duraludon → Archaludon
Coloring an evolution line is a quiet way to talk about how each form changes — same colors, bigger body, new details.
Legendaries and the big hitters
For an older kid who wants a challenge, the legendaries have the most to color:
- Legendary Groudon rules the land
- Suicune walking with grace
- Solgaleo's mighty stance
- Regigigas the ancient giant
- Mighty dragon Salamence
These have busy outlines and lots of small sections, so they work best for ages 8 and up.
Fresh faces from the newest games
If your kid plays the latest Pokemon, they'll spot these right away:
- Wooloo with super fluffy wool
- Yamper and its bolt tail
- Cheerful electric Bellibolt
- Crocalor with its mouth open
- Mighty Iron Treads charging up
Build a Pokemon party pack
Hosting a birthday? Print a stack of six and set them out with crayons: Pikachu, Charizard, Snorlax, Jigglypuff, Magikarp, and Wooloo. Kids can trade and take home whichever they finish.
For crisp black lines that hold up to markers, see how to print our coloring pages first.
Ready to pick? Browse the whole set at /coloring-pages/pokemon.