12 Free Axolotl Coloring Pages
If there's an axolotl fan in your house, you already know: the smile, the frilly gills, the general pink blobbiness — kids are obsessed, and honestly so are we. These twelve free printable axolotl coloring pages send everyone's favorite smiling salamander to space, into the kitchen, and onto a bubble sled. Thick outlines, US Letter sized, zero cost.
Castle Bubbles
Lily Pad Tea Party
Pancake Chef
Seahorse Ride
Coral Concert
Axolotl Astronaut
These twelve are just the pre-made ones. Type any idea — “a smiling axolotl blowing bubbles beside a little castle in a cozy fish tank” or something only your family would think of — and our generator draws a brand-new page in about twenty seconds. Add a name in bubble letters, too.
Cupcake Party
Underwater Gardener
Bedtime Reader
Sandcastle Builders
Portrait Painter
Bubble Sledding
Download all 12 as one PDF
One click prints the whole axolotl pack — cover page included. Enter your email and the download unlocks right here. We’ll also send you new free coloring pages as we add them (a few emails a month, unsubscribe anytime).
Download the Axolotl Coloring Pack (PDF)Axolotl coloring page FAQs
What colors should an axolotl be?
Real axolotls come in pink-white (leucistic), golden, and dark brown — but on a coloring page, anything goes. Most kids reach straight for pink with red gills, and purple axolotls are strongly encouraged around here.
Are these axolotl coloring pages free to print?
Completely. Print any single page straight from its page, or grab all twelve as one tidy PDF — the bundle just asks for an email address so we can send new free pages your way occasionally.
Can I make a custom axolotl coloring page?
Yes! Type any idea into our coloring page generator — "an axolotl riding a skateboard," "an axolotl princess" — and you'll get a brand-new page in about twenty seconds. You can even add your child's name in bubble letters.
What age group are these pages for?
Roughly ages 3–8. The chunky outlines are forgiving for toddler scribbles, and the sillier scenes (axolotl astronaut, anyone?) keep early-elementary kids entertained too.