Boat coloring pages
Free printable boats · Ages 3-7
A boat in the broad sense is any small water vehicle — a motorboat, a rowboat, a fishing skiff, a speedboat. Coloring-page boats are usually drawn from the side, with the hull half-in and half-out of the water and a small wake of waves trailing behind. They're the easiest water vehicle for kids to draw and recognise.
- Used for
- Fishing, water sports, short trips
- Crew
- 1-6 people
- Top speed
- 5-80 mph depending on type
- Best for
- Ages 3-7
About this vehicle
Meet the boat
A boat in the broad sense is any small water vehicle — a motorboat, a rowboat, a fishing skiff, a speedboat. Coloring-page boats are usually drawn from the side, with the hull half-in and half-out of the water and a small wake of waves trailing behind. They're the easiest water vehicle for kids to draw and recognise.
- Used for
- Fishing, water sports, short trips
- Crew
- 1-6 people
- Top speed
- 5-80 mph depending on type
- Best for
- Ages 3-7
Coloring tips
How to color a boat
Most small boats are a single bold colour — red, white, blue or yellow — with a contrasting trim along the top edge. The water around the boat is the second canvas: pale blue with wavy white lines. A tiny fisherman or driver in the boat, and maybe a fish jumping nearby, finishes the scene.
Looking for more in the same style? Browse the other boats & ships or head back to the full vehicles hub.
Step-by-step
How to color this boat
Five short steps that work for any age. Crayons, colored pencils and markers all work — pick whichever your child reaches for first.
Print the page
Save the boat 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.
Hull color
Most ship hulls are dark — navy blue, deep red, or black — while the upper deck stays bright white. Sailboats are a free-paint: pick any color for the hull and let the sail be the star.
Sail, mast or smokestack
If the page has a sail, fill it with a single bold color (red, yellow or striped). For a cargo ship, color the smokestack to match the hull and add a small flag at the top in red or blue.
Water and waves
Soft blue water under the hull, with a few wavy white lines for the wake. A distant lighthouse, a flying seagull, or the silhouette of an island finishes the scene without crowding the boat.
Finishing touches
When the colors are where you want them, trace the main outlines with a thin black pen to make the boat 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?
Boat fun facts to share while you color
Read these out loud — a 20-minute coloring session doubles as a vehicle-curriculum moment.
Humans have been making boats for over 10,000 years.
Most modern boat hulls are made of fibreglass — lightweight and won't rust.
A boat's left side is called 'port' and the right is 'starboard' — words used since the 1500s.
The fastest speedboats top 300 mph on water.
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Ship coloring pages
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Submarine coloring pages
A submarine is the only vehicle that goes UNDER the water on purpose. The page usually shows a sleek tube with a small tower (called a sail or conning tower) on top, fins at the back and a periscope sticking up. Submarine pages are story-rich — schools of fish, sunken ships, sea creatures and underwater plants make easy backgrounds.
Ferry coloring pages
A ferry is the bus of the water — a wide flat-bottomed boat that carries people, cars, and sometimes whole trucks across short stretches of water. Ferry pages are full of small details: cars lined up on the deck, passengers leaning on the rails, life rings on the side. The wide flat hull is one of the easiest ship shapes to draw.
Plane coloring pages
A passenger plane is the giant of the sky — a long tube with two huge wings, a tail at the back and a row of tiny round windows down each side. Plane pages give kids a familiar but mysterious vehicle: every child has either flown in one or seen one fly overhead, and every plane page invites them to imagine where they'd fly.
FAQ
Boat coloring pages — FAQ
- Are these boat coloring pages free to print?
- Yes — every boat 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 boat coloring pages best for?
- Ages 3-7. They're the easiest water vehicle for kids to draw and recognise.
- What colors should I use for a boat?
- Most small boats are a single bold colour — red, white, blue or yellow — with a contrasting trim along the top edge. The water around the boat is the second canvas: pale blue with wavy white lines. A tiny fisherman or driver in the boat, and maybe a fish jumping nearby, finishes the scene.
- What is a boat used for?
- 1-6 people. Fishing, water sports, short trips.
- What other vehicles are similar to a boat?
- Try our sailboat, ship, submarine coloring pages — kids who finish a boat 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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