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Trains & farm machines

Train coloring pages

Free printable trains · Ages 3-8

A modern train is the longest vehicle most kids will ever see — a sleek engine pulling a long line of cars or carriages. Coloring-page trains often show a side view with the engine at the front and 2-5 cars trailing behind. The repeating shape of each car gives kids a great chance to repeat colour patterns across the page.

Used for
Passenger and freight transport over long distances
Operator
1-2 train drivers in the cab
Top speed
150-200+ mph for bullet trains
Best for
Ages 3-8

Printables

Train printables

4 variations

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

About this vehicle

Meet the train

A modern train is the longest vehicle most kids will ever see — a sleek engine pulling a long line of cars or carriages. Coloring-page trains often show a side view with the engine at the front and 2-5 cars trailing behind. The repeating shape of each car gives kids a great chance to repeat colour patterns across the page.

Used for
Passenger and freight transport over long distances
Operator
1-2 train drivers in the cab
Top speed
150-200+ mph for bullet trains
Best for
Ages 3-8

Coloring tips

How to color a train

Modern passenger trains come in every colour — bullet trains are often white-and-blue, freight trains are typically dark green, yellow or red. The engine is the star: try a bold base with a long horizontal stripe. Add rows of small rectangular windows along each passenger car, and a curve of railroad tracks running beneath the wheels.

Looking for more in the same style? Browse the other trains & farm machines or head back to the full vehicles hub.

Step-by-step

How to color this train

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 train 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. Start with the engine or cab

    Modern trains often have white-and-blue bodies; steam trains are deep green with red wheels; tractors live in brand colors (green for John Deere, red for Massey Ferguson). Fill the main body first.

  3. Wheels, smoke and details

    Train and tractor wheels look best in a slightly darker shade than the body. Steam trains need a puff of gray smoke rising from the chimney; modern trains skip the smoke and add an LED-style headlight.

  4. Set the scene

    A pair of parallel gray train tracks running off the page, a brown-and-green farm field, or a small wooden station building rounds the page out. Keep the background simple — the vehicle is the hero.

  5. Finishing touches

    When the colors are where you want them, trace the main outlines with a thin black pen to make the train 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?

Train fun facts to share while you color

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

  • The fastest train ever built (Japan's L0 maglev) reached 375 mph in a 2015 test.

  • A single freight train can carry as much cargo as 400 trucks.

  • Train wheels are slightly conical so they self-correct on the track — a 200-year-old design that's still in use.

  • China's high-speed rail network is over 40,000 km long — longer than every other country's combined.

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FAQ

Train coloring pages — FAQ

Are these train coloring pages free to print?
Yes — every train 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 train coloring pages best for?
Ages 3-8. The repeating shape of each car gives kids a great chance to repeat colour patterns across the page.
What colors should I use for a train?
Modern passenger trains come in every colour — bullet trains are often white-and-blue, freight trains are typically dark green, yellow or red. The engine is the star: try a bold base with a long horizontal stripe. Add rows of small rectangular windows along each passenger car, and a curve of railroad tracks running beneath the wheels.
What is a train used for?
1-2 train drivers in the cab. Passenger and freight transport over long distances.
What other vehicles are similar to a train?
Try our steam train, tractor, bus coloring pages — kids who finish a train 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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