Zombie Coloring Pages
Zombie Coloring Pages cover everything from goofy cartoon undead to eerie portraits and game-style blocky monsters. This set is especially fun because it mixes spooky poses, silly expressions, and unusual characters like zombie animals and fantasy figures. You’ll also find classic graveyard scenes, moonlit pumpkins, and torn clothing full of texture. That range makes it easy to choose a page that feels creepy, cute, or somewhere in between.

Print these sheets on standard letter paper for the cleanest fit, and choose fit-to-page if your printer tends to crop the edges. Heavier white paper works well if you want to use markers without bleed-through, while regular paper is great for crayons or pencils. If you want to save ink, print in grayscale and lower the print quality slightly for the simplest pages.
Related coloring pages
Printable Zombie Coloring Pages

Zombie Coloring Page

Minecraft Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Coloring Page For Kids

Realistic Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Coloring Page For Adults

Marvel Zombies Coloring Page

Zed Zombies Coloring Page

Halloween Zombie Coloring Page

Minecraft Mutant Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Girl Coloring Page

Call Of Duty Zombies Coloring Page

Ghoul Coloring Page

Zombie Apocalypse Coloring Page

Walking Dead Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Shark Coloring Page

Zombie Dog Coloring Page

Zombie Princess Coloring Page

Roblox Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Unicorn Printable

Zombie Sonic Coloring Sheet

Zombie Iron Man Coloring Page

Lego Zombie Coloring Page

Cute Zombie Girl Coloring Page

Zombie Cheerleader Coloring Page

Zombie Head Coloring Page

Baby Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Titan TV Man Coloring Page

Zombie Spongebob Coloring Page

Fortnite Zombie Coloring Page

Funny Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Venom Coloring Page

Zombie Mask Coloring Page

Pvz Zombie Coloring Page

Christmas Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Santa Coloring Page

Fortnite Ghoul Trooper Coloring Page

Female Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Piggy Coloring Page

Zombie Skeleton Coloring Page

Zombie Pirate Coloring Page

Zombie Football Player Coloring Page

Undead Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Animal Coloring Page

Zombie Cat Coloring Sheet

Black Ops Zombies Coloring Page

Lego Minecraft Zombie Coloring Page

Cool Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Birthday Coloring Page

Zombie Love Coloring Page

Zombie Catchers Coloring Page

Zombie Dinosaur Coloring Page

Zombie Deadpool Coloring Page

Creepy Zombie Coloring Page

Zombie Nurse Coloring Page

Zombie Coloring Page Preschool

Zombie Baby Coloring Page
What makes this set so varied
Zombie Coloring Pages work well here because the collection is not limited to one look. Some sheets are simple and cartoon-like, while others lean into cracked skin, hollow eyes, stitched details, and tattered fabric. You’ll also see a wide mix of scenes and characters, including tombstones, fog, ruined streets, and playful undead roles. That variety keeps the pages from feeling repetitive and gives colorers plenty of different textures to explore.
The images range from a zombie peeking out behind a tombstone to a detailed face framed by vines and ragged clothing. There are also classic outstretched-arm poses, which are useful if you want a traditional monster look without too much complexity. At the same time, the set includes friendlier versions like a zombie holding a candy bucket or a cartoon zombie kid with a lopsided smile. That balance makes the collection useful for both seasonal coloring and year-round monster browsing.
Classic undead details to notice
The strongest zombie art usually relies on a few clear visual cues, and this set uses them well. Look for pale skin, cracks, hollow eyes, torn clothes, broken armor, and stiff or shuffling body language. Several pages show a zombie rising near broken gravestones, reaching forward with both arms, or standing in a moonlit pumpkin patch. Those familiar elements instantly signal the undead theme without needing extra explanation.
Settings matter just as much as the characters. A crooked gate, fog, or a moonlit field adds atmosphere, while ruined streets and broken stone make the scene feel more dramatic. Even a small prop like a torch, lantern, or candy bucket can help define the character’s mood. For colorers, that means there are both broad shapes to fill and tiny details that reward careful work.
Kid-friendly and playful undead designs
This collection includes several pages that soften the horror angle. A cute zombie with big eyes, a zombie kid with big shoes, and a zombie girl with pigtails all feel approachable rather than intense. There is also a funny zombie with a goofy grin, two zombies holding hands with a heart, and a zombie in a party hat standing beside a cake. Those kinds of pages are especially good if you want spooky themes without heavy scariness.
For these lighter designs, bright colors and simple shading can work very well. Try warm greens, soft grays, and playful accent colors for shoes, hats, pom poms, or cupcakes. A candy bucket or torn uniform can also be colored in bold Halloween shades like orange, purple, and black. Keeping the palette cheerful helps the character feel humorous instead of grim.
More detailed pages for older kids and teens
Some of the sheets in Zombie Coloring Pages are much more detailed and dramatic. A cracked zombie face, a zombie mask with stitched features, and an ornate portrait with tattered fabric all invite careful shading. There are also armored versions with damaged helmets, cracked suits, and torn accessories that add extra structure to the page. These designs work well if you enjoy slower coloring sessions with pencils or fine markers.
Texture is the main challenge in these pages, so it helps to break the image into sections. Color the skin first, then move to clothing, armor, and background elements such as fog or gravestones. Small highlights around the eyes, teeth, and torn edges can make the figures look more dimensional. If you like contrast, use darker tones in the clothing tears and lighter tones on the face to emphasize the undead effect.
Game-inspired zombies and blocky designs
The collection also includes several blocky, video-game-inspired undead characters. You’ll find a Minecraft-style zombie beside a torch, a Roblox-style zombie near a portal, a Lego-style zombie with a lantern, and other voxel-like figures in caves or ruined courtyards. These pages feel cleaner and more geometric than the classic horror designs, which makes them easy to color neatly. They are a strong choice for anyone who likes game art with simple, readable shapes.
Because the forms are more squared-off, you can use flat color blocks and still get a strong result. Try keeping the outlines crisp and the shading minimal if you want that game-like look. The same approach works well for a mutant blocky zombie with oversized arms or a zombie standing in a courtyard. The shapes do a lot of the visual work for you.
Role reversals, animals, and fantasy twists
One of the most interesting parts of this set is how many familiar roles get reimagined as undead characters. There are pages featuring a zombie sheriff, zombie nurse, zombie pirate, zombie cheerleader, zombie football player, zombie princess, zombie soldier, and zombie Santa. Those costume-based designs make the gallery feel broader than a standard monster pack. They also give colorers a chance to play with uniforms, accessories, and themed props.
The creature pages are just as varied. A zombie dog, zombie cat, zombie pig, zombie shark, zombie unicorn, and zombie dinosaur all keep the undead idea while changing the silhouette. That makes the set appealing for animal lovers and fantasy fans too. If you want a page that feels unusual, a zombie antihero with twin swords or a zombie symbiote hero with sharp teeth can be a strong pick.
Helpful context for coloring zombie art
Zombies are a flexible pop-culture monster because they can be scary, silly, or even oddly charming depending on how they are drawn. In art, the undead look usually comes from signs of decay and damage: cracked skin, ragged clothing, tired posture, and lifeless eyes. Cartoon versions often simplify those details, using big expressions and rounded shapes to make the figure feel less intense. That difference is part of what makes the subject so easy to explore across many ages and styles.
Graveyards, fog, pumpkins, and ruined streets show up so often because they instantly set the mood. They also give the eye a place to rest around the main figure. If you are coloring a scene page, use the background to support the character rather than overpower it. Muted grays, browns, and blue-greens usually work well behind brighter skin tones or clothing.
Ways to use finished pages
Finished undead pages can work as Halloween decorations, notebook covers, party activity sheets, or wall art for a bedroom or classroom corner. Smaller pages can also be used as bookmarks, gift tags, or inserts for seasonal cards. If you are making a themed display, mix one creepy page with one funny one so the mood feels balanced. That contrast shows just how flexible zombie coloring sheets can be.
If you want to build a mini collection, save a few different styles: one classic graveyard scene, one game-inspired figure, one cute character, and one detailed portrait. That gives you a good range of moods and difficulty levels without repeating the same concept. The best part of Zombie Coloring Pages is that they can shift from spooky to playful with just a change in expression, clothing, or setting.
People Often Ask Us…
-
What makes a zombie look undead?
-
Why do zombies show up so often in Halloween art?
-
How are cartoon zombies different from scary ones?
-
Why do zombie pages use graveyards and ruined streets?
-
Are zombie animals and fantasy creatures common?