These free printable fruits coloring pages with names are a fun, no-prep way for kids to learn their fruits while practicing crayon skills. This pack includes 17 coloring sheets — apple, banana, orange, strawberry, grapes, watermelon, and many more — each one labeled with the fruit’s name in big, traceable outline letters. Download any single page with its Download PDF button, or grab the whole set at once with the Download All bundle below. Every sheet is free for home, classroom, and homeschool use.
Coloring is one of the easiest ways for young children to build the hand strength and pencil control they need for writing — and pairing each picture with its printed name turns a quiet coloring session into early reading practice too. These pages suit toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergartners: little ones can simply fill the big shapes, while older kids trace the words and color the smaller details.
What’s Inside the Fruits Coloring Pages Pack
The pack contains 17 letter-size pages — 16 single-fruit sheets plus a bonus fruit-basket scene. Each fruit is drawn in a friendly, kid-pleasing style with its name printed in bold outline letters at the top. You’ll find:
- Apple
- Banana
- Orange
- Strawberry
- Grapes
- Watermelon
- Pineapple
- Mango
- Pear
- Peach
- Cherry
- Kiwi
- Blueberry
- Pomegranate
- Avocado
- Papaya
- Fruit basket (all fruits together)
Download the Free Fruits Coloring Pages with Names (17 PDFs)
Each fruit below has a preview, a short description, and its own Download PDF button. Want them all? Use the Download All button at the bottom of this page to get every fruit coloring page — plus the cover — as one ready-to-print PDF.
Apple Coloring Page
Start with the fruit every child knows: a plump apple with a single leaf and a big friendly smile, with the word APPLE printed in bold outline letters at the top. The simple rounded shape is perfect for little hands still learning to stay inside the lines, and tracing the name links the picture to the printed word. It’s an easy confidence-builder to open a fruit coloring session.
Banana Coloring Page
This cheerful banana curves across the page with a happy face and the word BANANA ready to trace and color. Kids practice guiding a crayon along a long, gentle curve while connecting the yellow fruit to its name. Parents of toddlers love it because the large open shape fills in quickly without frustration.
Orange Coloring Page
A round, smiling orange with a leaf and a sprinkle of texture dots waits to be colored, with the name ORANGE spelled out above. The dotted skin gives older preschoolers a chance to practice careful detail work, while younger ones can simply fill the circle. Talk about the color and the word together so the fruit’s name really sticks.
Strawberry Coloring Page
Dotted with tiny seeds and topped with a leafy crown, this strawberry page invites kids to add color seed by seed or in one bright sweep. The little seed dots build fine-motor precision and patience, and the clear STRAWBERRY label reinforces early reading. Print a few so the whole table can color berries together.
Grapes Coloring Page
A full bunch of round grapes hangs beside a curly vine and a single leaf, labeled GRAPES at the top. Coloring each grape one at a time is a satisfying counting-and-coloring combo — ask your child to count the grapes as they go. The repeated circles make it a great page for practicing a steady, even fill.
Watermelon Coloring Page
This page pairs a whole striped watermelon with a smiling triangular slice complete with seeds, under the bold word WATERMELON. Kids get two textures to color — smooth rind stripes and a seedy slice — in one summery sheet. It’s a favorite for warm-weather themes and quick chats about inside-versus-outside colors.
Pineapple Coloring Page
A cheerful pineapple shows off its crisscross diamond pattern and spiky crown, with PINEAPPLE printed above. The grid of little diamonds is ideal for older kids who enjoy coloring lots of small sections, building focus and hand control. Younger children can simply color the whole fruit golden and still feel proud of the result.
Mango Coloring Page
A smooth, smiling mango with a pointed leaf fills this page, the name MANGO ready to trace and color. Its simple curved outline suits beginners, while the leaf adds a second color to talk about. Use it to introduce a tropical fruit some children may not have tried yet.
Pear Coloring Page
This friendly pear has a tall, rounded body, a single leaf, and a few freckle-like dots, all under the word PEAR. The gentle hourglass shape helps kids practice changing direction smoothly as they color around the curves. Pair it with the apple page to compare two everyday fruits side by side.
Peach Coloring Page
A soft, cheerful peach with a leaf and a wide smile waits to be colored, with PEACH spelled out at the top. The single rounded shape is quick and rewarding for toddlers, and the printed name supports word recognition. Bring out warm pinks and oranges and talk about how a real peach feels.
Cherry Coloring Page
Two cherries joined at the stem share one leaf and two happy faces on this sweet page labeled CHERRY. Coloring the matching pair encourages symmetry and the idea of “two of the same,” and the small shapes refine crayon control. It’s a quick, joyful page that even very young children can finish in one sitting.
Kiwi Coloring Page
This kiwi page shows the fuzzy whole fruit beside a sliced half bursting with tiny seeds around a star center, under the name KIWI. The detailed seed ring is a fun challenge for steady hands, while the outer fruit is simple enough for anyone. It’s a great way to show kids what a fruit looks like on the inside.
Blueberry Coloring Page
A round blueberry topped with its little flower-shaped crown smiles up from this page labeled BLUEBERRY. The single bold circle is easy for small children to fill, making it a relaxing, low-stress page. Use it to introduce one of the smallest fruits — and chat about why real blueberries look blue and purple.
Pomegranate Coloring Page
This pomegranate page pairs a smiling whole fruit with an open half packed with juicy seeds, under the word POMEGRANATE. The cluster of seeds gives older kids plenty of detailed coloring, while the whole fruit keeps it approachable for beginners. It’s a lovely page for introducing a less-common fruit and a longer new word to read.
Avocado Coloring Page
A pair of avocados — one whole, one halved to show its big round pit — share happy faces on this page labeled AVOCADO. Kids color the smooth skin and the creamy center, learning that some fruits hide a single large seed inside. The two-shape layout makes it easy to chat about whole versus cut fruit.
Papaya Coloring Page
This papaya page shows the long whole fruit next to a juicy half filled with round seeds, with PAPAYA printed above. The seed-filled center offers detailed coloring practice, and the tropical shape introduces a fruit many kids haven’t met. It rounds out the pack with another colorful, name-labeled exotic fruit.
Fruit Basket Coloring Page
The pack finishes with a big woven basket overflowing with apples, a pineapple, grapes, a banana, a strawberry, and an orange — a grand finale that brings all the fruits together. With so many shapes and colors in one scene, it’s the most absorbing page in the set and a great reward after the single-fruit sheets. Use it to review every fruit name your child has learned along the way.
Want every fruit in one file? Download all 17 fruits coloring pages with names together — including the cover — as a single ready-to-print PDF.
How to Use These Fruit Coloring Pages
- Name it first. Before coloring, point to the fruit and read its name together so the picture and word connect.
- Trace the letters. The outline names are perfect for tracing — have your child color or trace the title before filling the fruit.
- Talk about real colors. Ask “what color is a banana?” so coloring doubles as a quick learning chat.
- Make it last. Print on cardstock and laminate a set for dry-erase reuse, or bind the whole pack into a fruit coloring book.
Why Fruit Coloring Pages Help Kids Learn
Coloring is far more than a quiet-time filler. Gripping a crayon and filling a shape builds the small hand muscles and hand-eye coordination children need before they can write, and staying inside the lines trains focus and control. When each picture is paired with its name, coloring also becomes early literacy practice: kids begin to recognize whole words and connect them to real objects they know and eat. Fruit is an ideal first vocabulary set because it’s concrete, colorful, and part of daily life — a child who colors a strawberry and reads its name is far more likely to remember both. Add in conversations about colors, counting the grapes, or sorting fruits by where they grow, and a simple coloring sheet turns into a rich, multi-skill activity. Best of all, these free printable fruits coloring pages with names make that learning effortless for parents and teachers: just print and hand over the crayons.
Fruits Coloring Pages FAQ
Are these fruits coloring pages really free?
Yes. All 17 pages — and the complete bundle — are free for personal, classroom, and homeschool use. There’s no email signup or account required; just download and print.
What fruits are included in this coloring pack?
The pack has 16 single-fruit pages — apple, banana, orange, strawberry, grapes, watermelon, pineapple, mango, pear, peach, cherry, kiwi, blueberry, pomegranate, avocado, and papaya — plus a bonus fruit-basket scene that shows several fruits together.
What age are these fruit coloring pages for?
They work for toddlers through early elementary. Toddlers and preschoolers can fill the large, simple shapes, while kindergartners can trace the fruit names and color the finer details like seeds and patterns.
Do the coloring pages include the fruit names?
Yes — every single-fruit page has the fruit’s name printed in big outline letters at the top, so kids can read and trace the word while they color. That’s what makes these coloring pages with names so useful for early vocabulary and reading.
How do I print and download the pages?
Click the Download PDF button under any fruit to open that page, or use the Download All button to get the whole pack as one file. Print on standard letter-size paper in portrait orientation; plain paper is fine for crayons and colored pencils, and cardstock works well if you want to laminate and reuse them.
Related Free Printables
- Cute Fruit Colouring Pages for Kids — more adorable fruit pages to color when your child wants extras.
- Cute Fruits Flashcards With Names — printable flashcards that pair each fruit with its name for quick vocabulary practice.
- Healthy Food Coloring Pages for Preschool — extend the theme with wholesome foods kids can color.
- Fruits and Vegetables Alphabet Flashcards — connect each letter of the alphabet to a fruit or vegetable.
- Vegetables Flashcards for Kindergarten — the perfect veggie companion to this fruit pack.
- Cute Kawaii Food Coloring Pages for Toddlers — adorable food coloring sheets for your littlest artists.
- Free Printable Ice Cream Coloring Pages — a sweet treat to color once the fruit is done.
- ABC Fruits and Vegetables Flash Cards — alphabet flashcards built entirely from fruits and veggies.
Looking for more to print? Browse all our free coloring pages for animals, holidays, shapes, and more fun themes for kids.

























