I swear we have the Heeler family playing on a loop in our living room for about 97 hours a week. It finally reached the point where my kids were drawing on the walls just to get more of them.
So here we made our collection of printable Bluey coloring pages for kids. They are completely free and honestly a total lifesaver when you just need a minute to breathe. Grab some markers and let them go wild while you drink your coffee.

Our illustrators spent weeks getting all the little details right on these sheets. You get all the classic games and silly moments that make the show so incredibly relatable.
My youngest is currently obsessed with the rocket ship one. It might cause some inconvenience if they demand to watch the exact episode while coloring but it is worth it for the quiet.
Your kids will also love: Cartoon, Paw Patrol, My Little Pony, Peppa Pig.
Bluey Printable Coloring Pages Highlights
1. Chilli Playing Field Hockey
Our artists drew Chilli looking fierce while holding a field hockey stick out on the grass. She has her game face on and looks ready to absolutely dominate the field.
This is honestly such a cool mom moment to color with the kids. My daughter usually grabs the bright orange for the hockey stick. It is a nice break from princess dresses.
2. Bluey and Bingo Exploring Space
Here are the girls wearing full space helmets inside a massive rocket ship window. You can see little planets and stars floating around them in the background.
This one is an absolute dream for kids who love mashing dark blue crayons into the paper. Let them color the planets some weird neon colors. And what follows from this? The fact that all previous logic goes to hell and you just get a messy table.
3. The Heeler Family Hugging
We designed this big group hug with Bandit, Chilli, Bluey, and Bingo all squeezed together outside. It is just a really sweet scene under the trees and clouds.
Getting the four different fur colors right here takes some serious concentration. Kids usually just mix up the blues and oranges anyway. I think it is fine.
4. Bandit Trying to Fix a Leak
Bandit is stuck under the kitchen sink holding a wrench while getting completely blasted by water. Our illustrators captured that panicked dad face perfectly.
Sam thinks this is the funniest page in the entire collection. The splashing water lines give kids a great excuse to just scribble blue everywhere. It is a very relatable weekend project disaster.
5. Bandit Dancing the Floss
Yes our team actually drew Bandit in the middle of doing the floss dance. He looks completely ridiculous just swinging his arms around in the living room.
I have watched my son try to imitate this exact drawing about 42 times today. You can have them color the furniture in the background or just focus on the dancing dog. Honestly just getting them to sit still is a win.
6. Chilli Dressed as a Witch
Chilli is wearing a tall witch hat and a cape while holding a broomstick for Halloween. There are some carved pumpkins and spooky bats flying around her.
This decision is let’s say not the most obvious choice for a daily coloring page. Or rather it is absolutely perfect if your kids love spooky season all year round. The dark night sky is fun to shade.
7. Bluey Riding Her Bike
We sketched Bluey proudly pedaling her bicycle down the sidewalk with the training wheels still on. There is a cute little fence and some bushes in the background.
Will they stay inside the lines on the tiny bike spokes? No idea. But today it keeps them busy while I answer emails.
8. Bingo Solving a Mystery
Bingo looks so serious wearing a trench coat and holding a magnifying glass like a little detective. She is standing in the house looking for clues next to a tall bookshelf.
This is my absolute favorite drawing the team came up with. The background has tons of little books and lamps to keep older kids hyper focused. It is a really detailed room to bring to life.
Tips for Coloring Bluey Coloring Sheets
Getting the Blues Right
Finding the perfect shade for Bluey and Bandit is strangely difficult. The standard blue crayon is usually way too dark or looks exactly like a stormy sky. I just take a light blue pencil and have them color really softly instead.
You need a lighter blue for the body and a darker navy for the spots. Kids get super stressed when they accidentally mix them up and ruin the whole dog. I tell them to trace the dark spots first. It creates a physical wax barrier that helps keep the scribbles contained.
The Bingo Orange Problem
Bingo and Chilli are not actually orange. If your kid grabs the bright pumpkin crayon they are going to look radioactive. I show Lily how to mix a light yellow with just a tiny bit of orange.
This might cause some inconvenience if you only have an eight pack of crayons. But mixing the colors is a great little art lesson. You can even drag a brown colored pencil lightly over the top. It makes the fur look textured and real.
Dealing with Backgrounds
A lot of these pages have houses and fences behind the characters. Kids look at all that open sky and just give up halfway through the project. I usually tell Sam to break the page into chunks.
If they do the background trees first it somehow makes the main characters pop more. This decision is honestly counter intuitive for most five year olds. They always want to color the dog immediately. But the final result is always better when the page isn’t mostly blank white.
Water and Splashes
The drawing of Bandit getting soaked has a ton of messy water lines. Coloring all those individual splashes is a whole lot of work for a tired kindergartener. I teach them to grab three different blue crayons and randomly scribble.
They can drag a light blue and a teal across the paper. All this math comes down to one thing don’t overcomplicate it. The water ends up looking chaotic and wet without demanding perfect precision. Plus it is fun to just make a mess.
Managing the Outlines
Our illustrators use very specific and thick black outlines for these characters. It matches the animation style perfectly but it can be tricky for little hands. When they color over the black it gets muddy.
When you’ve corralled 29 first graders you learn to improvise. I tell them to color slowly near the edges. Sometimes we use markers for the body and pencils for the tiny details. It keeps the sharp look of the cartoon intact.
Adding Fur Texture
These dogs have a very specific blocky shape. But they are still animals and sometimes it is fun to make them look fuzzy. You don’t have to just color them completely flat.
I show the kids how to make tiny short strokes with their colored pencils. It is like building a little thatched roof out of wax. Will this technique work for a toddler? No idea. But older kids get a huge kick out of it.