Spider-Man springs forward in the foreground while Iron Man swoops in from behind, both in full action poses with nine outlined stars scattered across the background. Color Spider-Man in classic red and deep blue, Iron Man in his signature red and gold, and leave the stars a clean bright yellow to make the whole scene pop. Two suits at once means twice the panel work.
Iron Man Coloring Pages
Free printable Iron Man coloring pages — clean line art, sized for US Letter and A4. Every page is a single-tap PDF download, ready to print at home or in the classroom.
All Iron Man coloring pages
Showing 13 of 13 printables ·
Iron Man pushes toward the viewer in a close-up, one arm fitted with a large circular weapon attachment with four rings, the other fist clenched at his side. Color the suit in red and gold, with steel gray for the weapon attachment rings and bright blue for the arc reactor. The weapon arm takes up much of the foreground and rewards careful panel-by-panel work.
Iron Man plants his feet wide and drives a fist into the ground, mountains rising in the background behind him. Color the suit in classic red and gold, with dark gray for the joint sections and earthy browns for the rocky terrain. The mountain backdrop and detailed armor together make this one of the busier Iron Man pages to color.
Iron Man stands in a powerful upright pose with two large nanotech blade wings extending from his sides, suit fully deployed. Color the armor in deep red and burnished gold, with silver for the blade edges and blue for the arc reactor. The blade wings add long sweeping shapes that contrast nicely with the blocky armor sections.
The Iron Man helmet takes up the full page in a front-facing close-up, with the visor, ear panels, and layered chin sections all clearly drawn. Color the main dome in deep red and use gold around the visor surround and ear pieces, with bright blue or yellow for the eye slots. The plain background keeps all the attention on the helmet itself.
Tony Stark stares straight ahead with both hands raised toward the camera, the Iron Man suit's mechanical fingers and forearm panels filling the foreground. Color his face with warm skin tones, his dark hair and goatee, then move to the suit in deep red and gold with silver-gray on the mechanical finger joints. The hand and forearm detail alone will keep experienced colorists busy.
Iron Man shoots through a cloudy sky, one repulsor arm thrust forward in full attack mode. Color the suit in deep red and warm gold, with electric blue on the arc reactor and repulsor palm. The layered armor panels have enough detail to reward a steady hand with markers.
Iron Man is seen from a dramatic overhead angle, body angled in a steep dive with the helmet and chest armor facing the viewer and the legs trailing behind. Color the suit in deep red and gold, with silver-gray for the exposed joint sections and blue for the eye visors. The unusual top-down perspective makes the armor geometry read differently than any of the other upright poses.
Iron Man rockets forward with both fists thrust toward the viewer in a chunky, cartoon-style rendering, suit panels simplified into bold shapes. Color the suit in classic red and gold with blue for the eye slots and arc reactor area, and leave the white background clean. The thick outlines and broad armor shapes make this one of the more forgiving Iron Man pages to color.
Iron Man's helmet and upper chest face forward in a clean portrait view, with five outlined stars arranged around him on a plain background. Color the suit in the classic red and gold combo, with bright blue for the arc reactor and matching blue or white for the eye slots. The five stars can take any accent color that complements the suit.
Iron Man glides over a dense city skyline packed with skyscrapers, storefronts, and a clock tower. Color the suit in bold red and gold against the city, with warm grays and tans for the buildings and bright accent colors on the shop signs below. The building grid alone will keep even experienced colorists busy for a while.
Tony Stark looks straight ahead in his Iron Man suit, helmet removed, with a city skyline behind him that includes a clock tower and a large Ferris wheel. Color his hair dark brown, his goatee a warm black-brown, and the suit chest panels in deep red and gold. The city silhouette in the background adds a second layer of color once the figure is done.
Tony Stark stands with arms crossed, wearing tinted glasses and a casual zip-up jacket, looking straight ahead with a serious expression. Color his hair dark brown, the jacket in warm gray or navy, and the glasses frames a cool silver or gunmetal. The plain wall behind him keeps the focus entirely on his face and posture.
Fun things to do with your Iron Man coloring pages
Design your own Mark suit
Use three different colors to draw the same Iron Man outline. Try black and purple, ocean blue and silver, or sunset orange and bronze. Each one should have a new Mark number. Older kids can sketch extra panels, weapons, or a custom faceplate.
Make a chest arc reactor badge
Take the glowing reactor from the chest of an Iron Man page. Cut it out. Then, tape it to a circle of card stock. Finally, punch a hole for a yarn loop. Wear it like Tony's signature reactor for the rest of the day.
Build Iron Man trading cards
Print Iron Man, War Machine, Rescue, and the Hulkbuster on card stock and color each one. On the back, write each suit's stats — repulsor power, flight speed, armor rating, special weapon — then trade them with friends.
Comic strip the next mission
Number a few colored pages and use them as panels in a homemade comic. Add speech bubbles, sound effects (BOOM, ZAP, FZZT), and a final showdown to invent a brand-new Iron Man story for Tony and the team.
Make a helmet bookmark
Color a close-up of the Iron Man helmet, cut tightly around the edges, and slip it into a favorite book so the faceplate peeks out the top. Perfect for marking the chapters of a summer-reading list.
Throw an Iron Man birthday display
Use colored pages as table centerpieces, place cards, and wall posters for an Avengers-themed party. Put the Mark suits in a row on the table and let each guest take a favorite home.
Stage an Avengers team-up scene
Cut out Iron Man, War Machine, and Rescue, and tape each to a popsicle stick. Then, stand them inside a shoebox diorama. Build a Stark Tower backdrop or a battle scene with cotton-ball smoke and crumpled-paper rubble.
Film a stop-motion repulsor blast
Tape a colored Iron Man to a stick. Move him frame by frame across a desk. Take a photo at each step. Make a short video with the photos on a tablet or phone. This will be a "hero clip" that the family can watch again.