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Emergency vehicles

Ambulance coloring pages

Free printable ambulances · Ages 3-7

An ambulance is the third member of the emergency trio (alongside the fire truck and the police car). The shape is a tall, boxy van — basically a small house on wheels — because the back has to fit a stretcher, medical equipment and two paramedics standing up. The bright white body with a big red cross is one of the most recognised vehicle designs in the world.

Used for
Transporting injured or ill people to hospital
Crew
Driver + 1-2 paramedics
Lights & sirens
Flashing red & blue, multi-tone siren
Best for
Ages 3-7

Printables

Ambulance printables

4 variations

Tap any sheet to view full size, then save or print.

About this vehicle

Meet the ambulance

An ambulance is the third member of the emergency trio (alongside the fire truck and the police car). The shape is a tall, boxy van — basically a small house on wheels — because the back has to fit a stretcher, medical equipment and two paramedics standing up. The bright white body with a big red cross is one of the most recognised vehicle designs in the world.

Used for
Transporting injured or ill people to hospital
Crew
Driver + 1-2 paramedics
Lights & sirens
Flashing red & blue, multi-tone siren
Best for
Ages 3-7

Coloring tips

How to color a ambulance

Keep the body bright white — leave most of the page blank or pale grey to suggest gloss. Add a single red cross on the side and big red 'AMBULANCE' lettering (sometimes written in mirror image at the front, so it reads correctly in other drivers' rear-view mirrors). The flashing light bar on top is red and blue.

Looking for more in the same style? Browse the other emergency vehicles or head back to the full vehicles hub.

Step-by-step

How to color this ambulance

Five short steps that work for any age. Crayons, colored pencils and markers all work — pick whichever your child reaches for first.

  1. Print the page

    Save the ambulance coloring page to your device, then print it on standard letter or A4 paper. Thicker paper (around 90 gsm or 60 lb) handles markers without bleed-through; regular printer paper is fine for crayons and colored pencils.

  2. Use the classic color code

    Stick to the real-world palette: bright red for fire trucks, blue-and-white for police cars, white with a red cross for ambulances. Fill the body first, then move on to detail work.

  3. Light bar and sirens

    Alternate red and blue rectangles for the light bar on top — never blend the two. A subtle yellow halo around the lights suggests they're flashing. Don’t forget hazard stripes on the bumpers.

  4. Add lettering and equipment

    Trace the letters on the door (FIRE, POLICE, AMBULANCE) in solid black. Hoses on a fire truck stay white with thin gray coils; the ladder on top can be a clean light gray.

  5. Finishing touches

    When the colors are where you want them, trace the main outlines with a thin black pen to make the ambulance pop off the page. Date the back, snap a photo for the family album, then stick the finished page on the fridge.

What you'll need

A quick supplies checklist

Don't have everything? A printer, a piece of paper and a single crayon is enough to get started. The rest is optional.

  • Printer

    Color or black-and-white both work. Set the print size to 'fit to page' and use letter or A4 paper.

  • Paper

    Standard 20 lb (75 gsm) printer paper for crayons; 60+ lb (90+ gsm) for markers so the ink doesn't bleed.

  • Crayons

    Best for ages 3-5 — forgiving on small hands, no smearing, and bright enough to feel finished in minutes.

  • Colored pencils

    Best for ages 6+ and adults — perfect for shading, blending and the detailed pattern variants.

  • Markers

    Bold, fast results. Pair with heavier paper so the ink stays on the page and doesn't soak through.

Did you know?

Ambulance fun facts to share while you color

Read these out loud — a 20-minute coloring session doubles as a vehicle-curriculum moment.

  • The word 'AMBULANCE' is often written backwards on the front so it reads correctly in other drivers' mirrors.

  • Modern ambulances carry a small mobile hospital — defibrillators, IV drugs, oxygen tanks and more.

  • Helicopter ambulances ('air ambulances') can reach patients in places no road ambulance could go.

  • The very first ambulance was a horse-drawn cart used in war in the late 1700s.

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FAQ

Ambulance coloring pages — FAQ

Are these ambulance coloring pages free to print?
Yes — every ambulance coloring page on this site is free to download, print and color for personal, classroom and library use. No watermark, no signup.
What age are ambulance coloring pages best for?
Ages 3-7. The bright white body with a big red cross is one of the most recognised vehicle designs in the world.
What colors should I use for a ambulance?
Keep the body bright white — leave most of the page blank or pale grey to suggest gloss. Add a single red cross on the side and big red 'AMBULANCE' lettering (sometimes written in mirror image at the front, so it reads correctly in other drivers' rear-view mirrors). The flashing light bar on top is red and blue.
What is a ambulance used for?
Driver + 1-2 paramedics. Transporting injured or ill people to hospital.
What other vehicles are similar to a ambulance?
Try our fire truck, police car, helicopter coloring pages — kids who finish a ambulance page usually move to those next.

Looking for something else?

Browse all 34 vehicles — cars, emergency, construction, racing, planes, boats and trains.

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