Bring a meaningful holiday activity into your home with these Passover coloring pages, all free to download and print. From seder plates and matzah to Elijah’s cup and scenes tied to the story of freedom, these sheets give you a fun way to slow down, color, and spend time with the themes of Passover in a hands-on way.
Whether you want a quiet activity for kids, something creative for a classroom, or a simple printable to add to your holiday plans (even Easter), this collection has plenty to enjoy. We always like crafts that feel calm but still connect to the season, and these pages do that very nicely without needing much setup at all.
Free Printable Passover Coloring Pages
These free printable Passover coloring pages are easy to use at home, in school, or during holiday gatherings when you want something simple that still feels special. You can print them for younger children who enjoy bold shapes and familiar symbols, or for older kids who like adding more detail and color to their work.
Each design is made to print clearly as a PDF, which makes it easy to save the file and come back to it whenever you need more copies. They also fit nicely on standard A4 size paper, so printing at home should be smooth and stress-free for most families and teachers.
5 Creative Crafts You Can Make With Passover Coloring Pages
Once you finish coloring, you can turn the pages into simple keepsakes, decorations, and holiday activities that feel a little more personal. That is one of the best parts, honestly, because a finished page does not need to stop at the crayon stage.
1. Passover Placemats for the Seder Table
A colored Passover page can become a homemade placemat that adds warmth to your holiday table. This works especially well with pages that show a seder plate, matzah, wine cups, or other familiar symbols, because the finished piece looks festive right away and still feels personal in a way store-bought decorations often do not.
After the page is colored, trim the edges if needed and glue it onto a sheet of slightly heavier paper or thin cardstock. If you have a laminator, run it through for a cleaner finish that can handle spills. If you do not, clear contact paper on both sides works surprisingly well and takes only a few minutes.
You can make one for each person at the table and even write names on them to turn them into place settings. For children, this makes the meal feel more exciting. For adults, it adds a handmade touch that usually gets noticed right away.
2. Seder Plate Learning Wheel
This idea is part craft and part learning tool, which is always a nice mix. Start with a Passover coloring page that includes a seder plate or draw one around the finished picture after coloring. Then glue the page onto cardboard so it has enough strength to hold its shape when handled.
Cut out small flaps or sections for the traditional foods, and under each one write the name of the item and a short note about what it represents. You can keep it very simple for younger children or add more detail for older ones who are learning the meaning behind each part of the seder.
If you want to make it interactive, attach a paper arrow in the center with a brass fastener so children can spin it and talk about each item one by one. It is the kind of project that keeps hands busy while also helping the story and symbols stay in mind, which we think is a pretty good combination.
3. Passover Window Decorations
Finished Passover coloring pages can look lovely in a window, especially when they feature stars, cups, candles, or patterned borders that stand out when the light comes through. This is one of the easiest crafts to make, but it still has that cheerful holiday look that changes the feel of a room almost instantly.
Color the page with bright pencils or markers, then cut out the main shape or leave it as a full sheet if the design fills the page nicely. Tape it to the inside of a window, or glue it onto a darker piece of paper first so the colors pop more when sunlight hits it.
You can also cut small openings in parts of the design and tape tissue paper behind them for a stained-glass effect. That extra step looks great and gives kids a little more to do. By the time everything is hung up, the room feels more festive without much cost or mess.
4. Holiday Cards for Family and Friends
A Passover coloring page can turn into a thoughtful card with very little work, and that is part of the charm. Fold a piece of cardstock in half, then cut out the colored image or a section of it and glue it to the front. A seder plate, matzah stack, or decorative holiday border works especially well for this.
Inside the card, add a short handwritten message for a grandparent, teacher, friend, or family member. Children usually enjoy this part because it feels like they are making something real, not just completing an activity page and setting it aside. That little shift makes the project more meaningful.
If you want a neater finish, add a second paper layer behind the artwork before gluing it down, almost like a frame. It gives the card more color and helps the design stand out. Simple projects like this often end up being the ones people keep the longest.
5. Passover Story Garland
This is a fun way to use several Passover coloring pages at once, especially if each page shows a different symbol or moment connected to the holiday. Once the pages are colored, cut out the main images and arrange them in an order that tells a small visual story, moving from symbol to symbol across a string or ribbon.
Punch holes near the top of each cutout and thread them onto twine, or tape them evenly across a long ribbon. Hang the garland on a wall, above a doorway, or near the table where your family gathers. It makes a room feel ready for the holiday without needing anything fancy.
You can keep the garland purely decorative, or turn it into a conversation starter by writing a word or short phrase on the back of each piece. That way, children can flip them over and talk about what each symbol means. It is simple, colorful, and surprisingly effective for bringing the holiday into everyday space.
We hope these Passover coloring pages bring a little creativity, meaning, and fun to your holiday season.



























