The paper you print on makes more difference than most people expect. The right paper keeps lines sharp, colors bright, and marker ink from bleeding through to the table. The wrong paper can make even the best coloring page look flat and frustrating. This guide helps you find the right paper for the coloring tools you actually use — whether that’s crayons in the classroom, colored pencils at home, or markers for a more serious project.
If you also need help with print settings, paper sizes, and printer tips, see our How to Print Coloring Pages guide.
The Short Answer
For most families and classrooms, one paper covers almost everything:
Best all-around choice:
32 lb / 120 gsm premium printer paper, bright white, US Letter or A4.
It’s thicker than standard copy paper, works well with crayons and colored pencils, and handles everyday markers without too much bleed-through. Available at any office supply store.
If markers — especially alcohol-based ones — are your main tool, the sections below have specific picks for you.
Understanding Paper Weight
Paper weight is listed in two ways depending on where you shop:
- US (lb): Standard copy paper is 20–24 lb. Premium printer paper is 32 lb. Heavy cardstock starts around 65 lb.
- Metric (gsm): Standard copy paper is 75–90 gsm. Premium printer paper is around 120 gsm. Art papers run 160–300 gsm.
The simple rule: heavier paper handles more. It resists bleed-through, holds up to layering, and feels sturdier in little hands. The tradeoff is that very thick paper (above 200 gsm) can jam some home printers — check your printer’s maximum paper weight before loading anything that heavy.
One other thing worth knowing: brightness. Paper brightness is rated on a scale from about 80 to 100. Higher brightness means whiter paper, which makes printed lines look sharper and colors appear more vivid. Look for paper rated 92 or above for the best results with coloring pages.
Best Paper by Coloring Tool
Crayons
Crayons are forgiving. Standard 20–24 lb / 75–90 gsm copy paper works fine for everyday classroom use. If you want a small upgrade, 32 lb / 120 gsm premium printer paper gives noticeably better results — colors look slightly richer and the paper holds up better to young hands pressing hard.
🔍 What to search for: Premium printer paper, 32 lb, bright white
Colored Pencils
Colored pencils work best on paper with a little texture — called “tooth” — that the pigment can grip. Standard copy paper is fine for light coloring, but if your child layers colors or blends, step up to 32 lb premium paper or a lightweight drawing paper around 120–160 gsm. The slight texture helps colors build up more smoothly.
🔍 What to search for: Drawing paper pad, 120–160 gsm
School Markers and Felt-Tips (Water-Based)
Water-based markers like Crayola work on 32 lb / 120 gsm paper for light coloring. If your child presses hard or fills large areas, some bleed-through is normal. To reduce it, place a spare sheet of paper behind the coloring page while they work. For heavier marker use, step up to mixed media paper around 160 gsm.
🔍 What to search for: Mixed media paper, 160 gsm
Alcohol Markers (Ohuhu, Copic-Style)
Alcohol markers are the hardest on paper — they soak through quickly and bleed more than any other medium. Two options work well:
- Marker paper (70–90 gsm): Thin but specially coated to resist bleed-through. Best for smooth blending and vivid colors. Always use a backing sheet underneath.
- Bristol smooth (270 gsm): Thicker and sturdier. Less bleed-through, better for pages you want to keep or frame. Check that your printer can feed this weight before printing.
🔍 What to search for: Marker paper pad — or — Bristol smooth 270 gsm
Gel Pens and Fineliners
Smooth paper is best here — gel pens and fineliners leave cleaner lines with less fuzzy spreading on a smooth surface. Look for paper between 120 and 160 gsm with a smooth finish. Avoid textured or watercolor paper for these tools.
🔍 What to search for: Smooth drawing paper, 120–160 gsm
Watercolor and Watercolor Pencils
Standard printer paper buckles and warps as soon as it gets wet. For anything with water, use proper watercolor paper — at least 200 gsm, ideally 300 gsm. Cold press watercolor paper has a slight texture that holds washes well. Note that watercolor paper can be tricky to feed through some home inkjet printers — use the rear feed tray and load one sheet at a time.
🔍 What to search for: Watercolor paper, 300 gsm, cold press
Paper for Special Pages
Sometimes a coloring page is worth keeping — a finished piece to frame, a gift for a grandparent, or a page that took hours to complete. For those, cardstock in the 200–270 gsm range is a good choice. It prints well, feels substantial, and holds up to heavier coloring. In the US, look for “110 lb index” or “80–100 lb cover” on the label.
🔍 What to search for: Cardstock, 200–270 gsm — or — 110 lb index cardstock
Quick Summary Table
| Coloring Tool | Recommended Paper | Weight |
|---|---|---|
| Crayons | Premium printer paper | 32 lb / 120 gsm |
| Colored pencils | Premium or drawing paper | 32–43 lb / 120–160 gsm |
| Water-based markers | Mixed media paper | 43 lb / 160 gsm |
| Alcohol markers | Marker paper or Bristol smooth | 70–90 gsm or 270 gsm |
| Gel pens / fineliners | Smooth drawing paper | 32–43 lb / 120–160 gsm |
| Watercolor | Watercolor paper, cold press | 140 lb / 300 gsm |
| Special / keepsake | Cardstock | 200–270 gsm |
Classroom and Homeschool Tip
For teachers and homeschool parents: For everyday classroom coloring, standard copy paper works fine for crayons and colored pencils. If your budget allows one upgrade, 32 lb premium printer paper costs only slightly more per ream and gives noticeably better results — colors look brighter and pages hold up better to repeated handling. For marker-heavy activities, ask your office staff to load one tray with 32 lb paper and keep standard paper in another.
Common Paper Problems and Quick Fixes
- Marker bleeds through to the table: Use heavier paper (160 gsm or more) and always place a spare sheet behind the coloring page.
- Paper jams when using thick paper: Use the rear feed tray, load one sheet at a time, and select “Heavy Paper” or “Cardstock” in your printer settings.
- Colors look dull after printing: Try higher brightness paper (92+ rating). Brightness makes a noticeable difference in how vivid finished coloring looks.
- Lines look fuzzy: This is usually a print quality issue, not a paper issue. Set print quality to Best or High in your printer settings.
- Paper buckles or warps with wet media: You need watercolor paper — standard paper isn’t designed for wet mediums.
Ready to Print?
Once you’ve got the right paper, the rest is easy. For help with print settings, paper sizes, and printer tips, see our How to Print Coloring Pages guide.
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