A baby bunny sits with a carrot clutched in both paws, nibbling one end while gazing up with enormous expressive eyes. Color the fur in soft cream or light gray, use bright orange for the carrot, and try warm amber for the big irises. The heart detail on the back foot deserves a soft pink.
Rabbit Coloring Pages
Fluffy Easter bunnies, sleepy baby kits, realistic woodland rabbits, and intricate mandala designs — these rabbit coloring pages cover every style and skill level. The collection brings together long-eared lops, wild cottontails, garden bunnies nibbling carrots, and detailed nature scenes with rabbits tucked among wildflowers. Simple outlines suit younger kids still finding their lines, while the more elaborate pages reward patient adults who want something quiet and calming.
Every page prints cleanly on US Letter or A4, great for a rainy weekend, an Easter craft session, or a classroom nature unit. Grab your colors, pick a bunny, and hop to it.
All Rabbit coloring pages
Showing 13 of 13 printables ·
A chubby bunny stands tall on his hind legs, front paws tucked against his chest and one ear perked up with curiosity. Try warm cream or soft gray for the fur and a pale pink inside the ears. The empty background makes this one fast and forgiving with any medium.
This fluffy lop-eared bunny sits with a bow tie and huge sparkling eyes, oval paw pads ready to be colored in pastels. Try soft cream or white for the fur and a bright pop of color for the bow. The detailed fur lines all over the body make shading optional but rewarding.
A round bunny sits among floating hearts, paws tucked in and big hind feet splayed wide. Color the body soft cream or white, use pastel pink for the inner ears, and try a mix of red and rose shades for the scattered hearts. The large toe pads are worth a contrasting color.
A rabbit settles into a patch of grass on a sunny day, its detailed fur texture catching the warm light. Color the fur in warm tan and gray tones, use leaf green for the grass and plant, and try bright yellow for the sun and its short rectangular rays.
A rabbit sits bolt upright in a patch of leafy grass, wide eyes fixed forward and ears standing straight up. Fill the fur in warm tan or gray-brown, use leaf green for the plants, and add a darker shade along the leg creases. The bold outlines make shading easy at any skill level.
This lop-eared bunny sits up with both paws pressed to its chest and enormous round eyes fixed forward in a look of pure delight. Try warm cream or soft golden tan for the fur and pale pink for the floppy inner ears. Leave the large eyes for last and go slowly for the eyelash detail.
This chibi-style rabbit sits on a wavy base with a bow tie and a happy open grin. Color the body soft white or pale gray, and try cherry red or sky blue for the bow tie sections. The oval toe pads on each foot look great in warm cream.
A rabbit sits snugly inside a large bowl, head poking up over the rim while its paws grip the outside. The bowl is packed with small oval Easter eggs, each one waiting for its own color. Try soft pastels for the eggs and a contrast color for the bowl to make the scene pop.
A rabbit stands in a field of tall grass, ears pointed straight up against a striped countryside sky. Try leaf green for the grass, soft cream for the rabbit, and pale sky blue for the background. The layered landscape bands give this page a pleasing depth to work with.
This rabbit is showing off its two big buck teeth in the widest, most enthusiastic grin. Color the body warm gray or cream, use pale pink for the inner ears, and leave the teeth white with a thin gray shadow line at the base. The cheerful expression makes this one a crowd favorite.
A rabbit sits in its carrot garden, a freshly pulled top clutched in both paws and more carrots lined up at its feet. Try bright orange for the carrots and leafy green for the feathery tops. A warm cream or light gray works well for the bunny's fur.
A bunny wearing round glasses munches on a carrot in a garden scene full of striped Easter eggs, falling leaves, and small flowers. Try orange for the carrot and bright pastels for the eggs, with greens for the cloud bushes on each side. The glasses are worth outlining carefully before filling.
Fun things to do with your Rabbit coloring pages
Build a backyard burrow diorama
First, color a few bunnies. Then, cut them out and stand them in a shoebox. Line the box with green paper, paper grass, and small pieces of construction paper. Add a tunnel entrance at one end and you'll have a small warren scene for the bookshelf.
Make bunny finger puppets
Color and cut out a few rabbits — a cottontail, a lop-eared, a baby kit — then tape each one to a small paper ring sized for a finger. Act out a chase through the carrot patch or invent a rescue mission with the whole bunny crew.
Map a rabbit family tree
Pick a big parent rabbit and several smaller kits. Color them in matching coat patterns. Arrange them on a poster board with name labels. Each kit can have its own personality — Hazel the bold one, Clover the shy one — turning the page into a storybook family.
Easter basket name tags
Color small bunnies on card stock, cut them out, and write a guest's name across the body in marker. Punch a hole at the top and tie one to each Easter basket so every kid knows exactly which one is theirs.
Design your own rabbit breed
Color the same rabbit outline three times. Use different colors for each version. The first version should be cinnamon and cream. The second version should be silver-grey with white socks. The third version should be jet black with one white ear. Then give each version a made-up breed name. Here's an easy way to try out different colors while making imaginary bunnies.
Build a four-panel bunny comic
Pick four coloring pages and put them together to make a short story. For example, a bunny wakes up, finds a carrot, meets a friend, and hops home. All you need to do to create your own rabbit comic strip is add speech bubbles in pencil. Then, you can pin it on your fridge.
Long-ear bookmarks
Pick pages with tall, floppy ears, color them in, then trim around the body so just the ears stick out at the top. Put the bookmark into a chapter book, and the bunny's ears will poke up over the pages, as if it's reading along.
Classroom rabbit habitat lesson
Print a few realistic rabbits and use them to label parts of a habitat poster. For example, you can label the burrow, foraging meadow, and predator-watch spot. Kids can color pictures of rabbits, draw the wildflowers and grasses around them, and learn how wild rabbits live while they work.