Jump into a world of fun with these 30 Doraemon coloring pages you can download and print for free, anytime you feel like a calm activity that still feels exciting. If you want a quick win on a rainy afternoon or a simple way to help kids slow down after school, these pages do the job without any fuss.
This set mixes sweet and silly scenes, from Doraemon’s classic smile to gadgets, friends, and little moments that feel straight out of the show. Some pages are easy for younger kids, and some have extra details for older kids who like to take their time, stay inside the lines, and add their own tiny touches.
Free Printable Doraemon Coloring Pages
These free printable Doraemon coloring pages come in a single PDF, so you can grab them in one go and print the ones you want today. Print one for a quick break, or print a handful and keep them in a folder for the next time you hear, “We’re bored.” It is also nice for classrooms, birthdays, and quiet-time corners at home.
Each printable is set up for A4 size, so it works well for most printers without weird trimming. If you print at “actual size” or “100%,” the lines stay crisp, and the pages look clean. Save the PDF to your phone or laptop, and you always have a backup ready for later.
5 Smart Ideas to Repurpose Doraemon Coloring Pages
Finished pages feel too good to toss, right? Try one of these ideas, and you turn a simple coloring session into something you can keep, gift, or use again, without needing fancy craft supplies.
1. Doraemon Door Hanger Signs
Pick one Doraemon coloring page and color it with bold shades so it reads well from a distance, then cut out a big rectangle around the main drawing. Fold a strip of cardstock in half and glue your colored page onto it so it feels stronger, because regular paper bends fast on a door that opens and closes all day.
Cut a circle near the top for the doorknob hole, then add a small message on the back like “Reading,” “Napping,” or “Gadget Lab.” This works great for kids who love having their own space, and it also stops random door barges, which everyone secretly wants.
If you want it to last longer, cover the front with clear tape in neat rows, like a budget lamination trick. It is simple, it looks shiny, and it survives sticky hands surprisingly well.
2. Gadget Sticker Book Pages
Choose a coloring page that has several small elements, like gadgets, expressions, or mini scenes, and color it in a playful way. Then cut out the parts you like most and turn them into “stickers” using double-sided tape, glue dots, or even rolled tape loops if that is what you have.
Grab a small notebook and turn it into a sticker book by lining a few pages with baking paper, since tape-backed cutouts lift off more easily from that surface. Kids love flipping through and choosing a Doraemon gadget for the day, like it is a tiny menu of fun.
To make it feel extra special, label sections like “Funny Faces,” “Anywhere Door,” or “Best Helpers,” even if you make up names. The point is to give the stickers a home instead of losing them under the sofa.
3. Pop-Up Scene Frames
This one looks fancy, but it is mostly cutting and layering. Print two copies of the same Doraemon coloring page, then color one as the background and the other with brighter colors for the main character or objects you want to pop forward.
Cut out Doraemon or key items from the second page, leaving a small tab at the bottom of each piece. Fold the tabs back, then glue the tabs onto the background page so the cutouts sit slightly raised, like a mini stage.
Slide the finished scene into a cheap photo frame, or make a frame from cardstock by cutting out the center. It becomes a little display piece that kids actually want to keep on a shelf, and it feels like a real project, not just “paper stuff.”
If you want more depth, add one extra layer with foam tape, but even folded paper tabs give a nice 3D look.
4. Doraemon Party Masks
Look for a Doraemon face page or pick a page where the head is big enough, then color it with strong contrast so the eyes and smile stand out. Cut around the outline, but leave a little white border so it does not tear when you hold it.
Cut out the eye holes carefully, and if the paper feels thin, glue the mask onto cardstock first and cut again. Use a hole punch on both sides and tie on elastic, string, or even ribbon, depending on what you have.
These masks work for parties, playdates, or a quick “showtime” moment at home. Add a few extras like whiskers made from black paper strips, and suddenly everyone wants a turn being Doraemon.
Quick tip: write the kid’s name inside the mask. It saves drama later when five masks look “exactly the same.”
5. Mini Story Zines
Print four Doraemon pages that feel like they belong together, then fold A4 paper into a simple little zine booklet. Color the pages, but leave space for words, because the fun part is adding your own story, even if it is silly, short, or full of made-up gadgets.
On each page, write one or two lines that push the story forward, like “The gadget went wrong,” or “The time jump landed in the kitchen.” Kids often surprise everyone with how creative they get when the page already gives them characters to work with.
Staple the fold, or punch holes and tie it with yarn, then make a “cover” page with a title and the date. These little zines become keepsakes, and they also make sweet gifts for grandparents who love anything handmade.
Have fun, print a few, and keep the best ones, because Doraemon coloring pages deserve a second life after the crayons are put away.






























