Elsa has been one of the most popular coloring page characters since Frozen arrived in 2013 — and with good reason. These 34 free printable Elsa coloring pages cover every version of the Snow Queen worth coloring: classic Elsa in her ice gown, baby Elsa, Queen Elsa in her coronation dress, mermaid Elsa, Frozen 2 Elsa, kawaii Elsa, and Anna and Elsa duo pages. Plus seasonal pages, cozy pages, and the mandala and Fifth Spirit pages for older kids and adults who want something worth framing.
Each page features bold clean outlines on a pure white background, sized to print on US Letter and A4 with no resizing needed. Easy and baby pages use the thickest outlines in the set for little hands. The mermaid Elsa section, ice powers pages, and Frozen 2 scenes are drawn for older kids and adults who want real coloring depth. With 34 Elsa coloring pages across 9 themed sections — free Elsa coloring sheets for every age and every version of the character.

Great for Frozen-themed birthday parties, classroom quiet time, or a quiet afternoon at home with a fan who knows every word of Let It Go. The cozy Elsa and mandala pages work especially well for adults — the kind of free printable Elsa coloring pages worth spending an hour on.
Every page in this collection is a free printable PDF — click the Download button underneath any image to open it directly in your browser. No account, no email, no sign-up required. Every file is pre-formatted for both US Letter and A4 at 100% print scale.
New to printing? Check our How to Print Coloring Pages guide. This collection is part of our 1,000+ free coloring pages at CPforKids.com.
Baby Elsa with Her Ice Crown
Young Elsa Making Her First Snowflake
Easy Elsa in Her Ice Dress
Baby Elsa and Anna Together
Elsa in Her Signature Ice Gown
Elsa Spinning with Joy
Queen Elsa Coronation
Elsa in Frozen 2
Elsa Building Her Ice Palace
Elsa Unleashing Her Ice Powers
Elsa’s Ice Patterns Spreading
Elsa and Anna’s Heart
Elsa and Anna’s Big Hug
Young Elsa and Anna Playing in the Snow
Elsa and Anna in the Enchanted Forest
Mermaid Elsa Under the Ocean
Mermaid Elsa and Anna Swimming
Elsa Riding the Nokk
Elsa and Her Unicorn
Kawaii Elsa with a Snowflake
Elsa and Jack Frost
Elsa as a Cat
The Full Frozen Family
Elsa and Olaf’s Gentle Hug
Elsa and Bruni the Fire Spirit
Cozy Elsa by the Window
Elsa Snowflake Mandala
Elsa Decorating the Christmas Tree
Elsa’s Christmas Look
Elsa’s Frozen Halloween
Elsa’s Ice Birthday Cake
Elsa Calling the Ocean
Elsa and the Four Elemental Spirits
Elsa the Fifth Spirit
WHO IS ELSA
Elsa is the Snow Queen of Arendelle from Disney’s Frozen, first released in 2013 — the highest-grossing animated film of its time and one of the most successful Disney movies ever made. Born with the power to create ice and snow, Elsa spends most of her childhood hiding her abilities until the moment everything breaks loose and she builds her ice palace on the mountain, finally free.
Frozen 2 took her further into her own story, answering the question the first film left open: where did her powers come from? The answer — the Enchanted Forest, the elemental spirits, and Ahtohallan — made Elsa one of the most developed characters in Disney’s modern era. She remains one of the most searched coloring characters online, more than a decade after the original film.
How to Color Elsa
Elsa’s signature palette is built around ice — platinum blonde hair, ice blue dress, pale skin. The dress in the classic Frozen look is that specific shade of pale blue-white that sits right between blue and silver. Most people go too dark with it and end up with a royal blue that looks nothing like the film. Start lighter than you think you need to, add a slightly deeper blue for the shadows on the fabric folds, and let the white of the page do the work for the highlights.
The braid is the most distinctive part of Elsa’s design — platinum blonde, almost white, with a slight warm gold tone. Pure yellow looks wrong. A very pale golden-yellow mixed with white, or a dedicated platinum blonde colored pencil, gives the right result. The ice crown and ice details on her dress work best in very pale blue or left almost white with just the outlines showing.
For ice powers pages, the key is contrast. The ice crystals and snowflakes themselves look best in pale blue and white, but the energy lines radiating outward can go brighter — electric blue, silver-white, or even a slight purple tint where the magic is most concentrated. These pages reward light layering with colored pencils far more than flat marker fills.
Mermaid Elsa is the most colorful section in the set. Her tail works in icy blue-white with slightly darker blue at the base, fading lighter toward the fins — the opposite direction of most mermaid tails. The coral and ocean background is where warm colors come in: orange coral, golden sand, turquoise water. The contrast between Elsa’s cold palette and the warm ocean background is what makes these pages so satisfying to finish.
Anna and Elsa duo pages give you two completely different palettes on one page — Elsa’s cold ice blues next to Anna’s warm magenta and teal. This contrast is worth leaning into rather than trying to match them. Anna’s copper-red braid, her magenta cape, and her teal dress make her one of the most colorful Disney characters to color alongside her sister.
For younger kids, the baby and easy sections have large open areas that work perfectly with chunky crayons. The kawaii Elsa page is ideal for first attempts — simple shapes, rosy cheeks, nothing too detailed. For adults, the snowflake mandala and Fifth Spirit pages are the two worth saving for proper colored pencils and a long session.
What to Do with Finished Elsa Coloring Pages
Make a Frozen-Themed Birthday Banner
Print the Anna and Elsa heart hands page, the full cast group page, and the Olaf hug page at half size. Color them, cut them out, punch a hole in the top of each, and thread blue ribbon through to make a banner. Hang it across a table or doorway. Free printable Elsa coloring pages for a birthday party cost nothing and take an afternoon — the finished banner looks like something from a party supply store.
Turn the Mermaid Pages into an Underwater Gallery
Print the three mermaid Elsa pages — solo, with Anna, and the Nokk — and color them with an underwater palette. Add watercolor paint washes for the ocean background if the kids are old enough. Tape them together in a row on a light-colored wall. The cold blue palette on all three pages means they look designed to hang together even when colored differently.
Use the Ice Powers Pages for Mixed-Media Art
The ice patterns spreading from Elsa’s hand and the ice palace page are built for mixed-media. Color Elsa with markers or colored pencils, then use silver glitter glue for the ice crystal lines and sparkle gel pen for the snowflakes. The outline-only areas are deliberately large to give room for this kind of layering. This is the kind of free Elsa colouring pages activity that produces results kids actually want to hang on their walls.
Build a Frozen Story Book
Print the young Elsa and Anna playing page, the coronation dress page, the Let It Go ice palace page, and the fifth spirit page in that order. Color them, add handwritten captions beneath each one, and staple them together. Kids who know the films understand the story arc immediately — and kids who don’t have just read the whole thing in four pages.
Use the Cozy Elsa Page for a Mindful Coloring Session
The cozy Elsa by the window page is the calmest in the set — no action, no powers, just Elsa with a warm drink and snow outside. This page and the snowflake mandala are the two designed for adults who want coloring as a relaxation activity. Print them on cardstock, use fine-tip colored pencils, and take your time. These are the Elsa coloring pages for adults that are actually worth the effort.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are these Elsa coloring pages really free?
Yes — every page is free to download and print. No account, no email, no payment.
Are there mermaid Elsa coloring pages?
Yes — three dedicated mermaid pages: solo mermaid Elsa, mermaid Elsa and Anna swimming together, and Elsa riding the Nokk water horse.
Are there Anna and Elsa coloring pages?
Yes — four Anna and Elsa duo pages: forming a heart with their hands, hugging, young Elsa and Anna playing in the snow, and both in Frozen 2 in the Enchanted Forest.
Are there Frozen 2 coloring pages?
Yes — a dedicated Frozen 2 section with Elsa calling the ocean, Elsa with all four elemental spirits, and Elsa as the Fifth Spirit with Northern Lights.
Which pages are easiest for toddlers?
The baby and easy section has four pages with the thickest outlines — baby Elsa with her ice crown, young Elsa making her first snowflake, easy Elsa in her ice dress, and baby Elsa and Anna holding hands.
Is there a kawaii Elsa coloring page?
Yes — a kawaii chibi Elsa with rosy cheeks and a snowflake in her palm.
Are there Elsa coloring pages for adults?
Yes — the snowflake mandala, the Fifth Spirit page, the ice palace building page, and the cozy Elsa by the window are all drawn with enough detail for older kids and adults.
Is there a Queen Elsa coronation coloring page?
Yes — Elsa in her coronation dress with crown and hair up, set against the Arendelle palace background.
Disclaimer: Elsa and all related Frozen characters belong to their respective owners. The coloring pages on CPforKids.com are original inspired illustrations for personal use. CPforKids.com is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Frozen brand owners.
These pages work just as well for a quiet afternoon at home as they do for a Frozen birthday party — print the easy and baby section for the youngest kids, the mermaid and duo pages for anyone who wants something more detailed, and the snowflake mandala or Fifth Spirit page for adults who want a proper coloring session. All 34 pages are here, free, as printable Elsa colouring pages and coloring sheets.
For more princess and Disney character coloring pages, the Moana coloring pages and Stitch coloring pages are just as popular with the same age group — or browse the full princess coloring pages collection for more.











