Free Flower Coloring Pages

Curated by Coloring Therapy

Pair of blooming roses with leaves sitting in a small round pot on a flower coloring page

Free flower coloring pages to print at home, for every age. Below you will find pretty, easy flowers drawn with bold lines for kids, plus a full set of intricate floral mandalas with detailed petal patterns for adults. Pick a single page, or print a whole flower coloring book as one PDF.

Every flower coloring page is sized for standard 8.5x11 paper, works with crayons, colored pencils, and markers, and is free to print with no signup and no ads. Click any flower to open it in the viewer, or build a custom coloring book to mix flowers with other favorite themes.

Single blooms, bouquets, and intricate floral mandalas

The collection moves from the simple kids book through the intricate floral mandalas in four loose styles, so you can pick a page based on how much time you have and how much you feel like coloring.

Pretty single blooms for everyone

Put one big, friendly flower front and center with large, open petals that are quick and satisfying to fill. These are the easiest pages to start with and finish in one relaxed sitting.

Bouquets and garden scenes

Gather flowers into vases, bunches, and little garden settings. They give you a whole picture to color and a chance to play with several colors at once.

Symmetrical floral mandalas

Arrange petals and leaves into radial mandala symmetry. These are the friendliest of the intricate adult pages, since the mirrored design lets you plan a palette once and repeat it around the circle.

Intricate floral detail

Weave dense petals, vines, and zentangle pattern work across the whole page. These reward slow, patient coloring with colored pencils and sit at the most detailed end of the collection.

Why flower coloring pages are a favorite

Flowers are one of the most loved coloring themes, and the appeal cuts across ages. They are instantly recognizable and naturally colorful, so you skip the figuring out stage and drop straight into the fun part of choosing a palette. That shift from analyzing to doing is what makes a coloring session feel like a small mental break, whether you are six or sixty.

Flowers are also wonderfully forgiving. There is no single right way to color a petal, so a child can make a daisy bright blue while an adult chases a realistic rose, and both look lovely. The repeating petals in the mandala pages have a gentle, rhythmic quality that many colorists find especially soothing.

The benefits of coloring at any age

Coloring is one of the simplest ways to give your mind a rest. For adults, focused, repetitive coloring has been linked to lower stress and a calmer, more present state of mind, a lot like a short meditation. It is screen free, asks for no special skill, and leaves you with a finished page to feel good about, which is a rare and satisfying thing in a busy day. The intricate floral mandalas are especially good for this, with plenty of petals to work through slowly.

For younger colorists, the same pages quietly build real skills. Staying inside the bold outlines develops fine motor control and pencil grip, choosing and naming colors supports early learning, and completing a page builds focus and a genuine sense of accomplishment. Coloring together is also a screen free way for families to spend relaxed time side by side, each working at their own pace on a page they picked themselves.

Who these pages are for

With two books in one place, this collection welcomes everyone. The bold kids flowers are a comfortable starting point for young children and complete beginners, who can lay down flat color and feel proud of a finished bloom in well under an hour. The intricate floral mandalas give experienced colorists room to practice shading, blending soft petal gradients, and color theory like complementary and analogous palettes.

The large open areas on the kids pages are gentle on tired eyes and easy for little hands, while the mandala pages offer the kind of absorbing detail that makes for a long, calming session. Whatever your age or experience, there is a flower page here to match the mood you are in.

Best tools and paper for this style

For paper, standard printer paper is perfectly fine for crayons and colored pencils on the kids flowers. For the intricate mandala pages, step up to a heavier sheet, around 70 to 90 lb cardstock, if you plan to use markers, so the color does not bleed through. A smooth surface helps with burnishing big petals, while a slight tooth grabs pencil pigment for subtle shading.

Tool wise, crayons and washable markers are easiest on the bold kids flowers. Colored pencils give the most control on the floral mandalas for layering soft petal gradients, adding depth to a rose, and shading along the curves of a leaf, and fine tip markers add bold contrast. A white or metallic gel pen is a lovely finishing touch for dew drops and highlights.

Building a coloring ritual

Because the kids pages are quick and the mandalas reward a longer sit, this collection fits both a short daily practice and a slower weekend project. Pair a page with your morning coffee or an evening podcast, or make it part of an after school wind down, working in 15 to 30 minute increments and finishing a piece across two or three sittings. That rhythm is gentle on hands and wrists and gives your brain a predictable, screen free pause in the day.

If you want a little structure, color a flower a day and build a colorful bouquet on the fridge, or print a small stack for a quiet afternoon, a get together, or a craft project. Keep your supplies in a small basket near your favorite chair so setup never becomes a barrier. The easier you make it to start, the more often you will reach for the book, and the more those small calm moments add up.

How to print flower coloring pages at home

Printing takes about a minute. The kids book is one PDF you can print in full or page by page; the floral mandalas open in the full viewer where you can print or download any sheet.

  1. Open the book in the embedded viewer. Scroll to the embedded viewer at the bottom of this page, or click any kids thumbnail to jump straight to that flower page inside the viewer.
  2. Choose Print or Download from the toolbar. Use the viewer's toolbar to print directly from your browser or download the full PDF. Both options are free.
  3. Pick the right paper. Standard 24 lb (90 gsm) printer paper works fine for crayons and colored pencils. For markers on the intricate mandala pages, step up to 70 to 90 lb cardstock to prevent bleed through.
  4. Set print quality and scaling. Select your printer's highest quality setting and set scaling to None or Actual Size to keep the petal detail crisp on 8.5x11 paper. On A4, enable Fit to page.

Love these flowers? Try another theme with the same mix of easy and intricate designs.

Butterfly coloring pages

Cute, easy butterflies for kids plus intricate butterfly mandalas for adults, a natural pairing with flowers.

Browse butterfly pages →

Unicorn coloring pages

Cute, magical unicorns plus intricate unicorn mandalas, with designs ranging from simple to detailed.

Browse unicorn pages →

All coloring pages

Browse the full library of free printable coloring pages and pick your next favorite theme.

Browse all pages →

Flower coloring pages: frequently asked questions

Are these flower coloring pages really free?

Yes. Every flower coloring page here is free to print and download as a PDF, with no signup and no ads.

Do you have flower coloring pages for both kids and adults?

Yes. The first set is pretty, easy flowers with bold lines for kids, and the second set is intricate floral mandalas with detailed petal and pattern work for adults.

How many flower coloring pages do you have?

There are 51 pretty flower pages in the kids book and 30 intricate floral mandalas for adults, so 81 free flower coloring pages in total.

What size paper do these flower PDFs print on?

All flower coloring pages are sized for standard 8.5x11 inch (US Letter) paper, and print cleanly on A4 with the Fit to page option enabled.

Can I print just one flower page instead of the whole book?

Yes. Click any flower in the gallery to open that page in our viewer, then print the single sheet from your browser.

What tools work best on flower coloring pages?

Crayons and markers work great on the bold kids flowers, while colored pencils and fine tip markers give the most control on the intricate mandala petals. Colored pencils are especially good for blending soft petal gradients.

Are the floral mandalas relaxing for adults?

Yes. The repeating, symmetrical petal patterns make the adult floral mandalas a calming, meditative way to unwind, much like a short meditation.

What skill level are these pages for?

Every level. The bold kids flowers are perfect for beginners and young children, while the floral mandalas give experienced colorists room to practice shading, blending, and color theory.

Can I color these flower pages digitally?

Yes. The PDFs work on iPad and tablet apps that support PDF import, such as Procreate, GoodNotes, and Notability, though most people enjoy printing them and coloring by hand.

Are there more coloring themes like this to try?

Yes. If you love these flowers, our butterfly and unicorn coloring pages carry the same mix of cute kids designs and intricate adult mandalas.