Grab your crayons and markers because our 70 SpongeBob coloring pages bring Bikini Bottom right to your table. You can print them for a quick rainy-day activity, a party table filler, or a calm break after school.
You will see a mix of fun scenes and familiar faces, like SpongeBob with Patrick, Gary, Sandy, Squidward, Mr. Krabs, and even a few spooky and holiday moments. Some pages feel simple for little hands, and others have extra details for older kids.
Free Printable SpongeBob Coloring Pages
These free printable SpongeBob coloring pages come in a handy PDF format, so you can download once and print as many times as you want. We like that because kids often want “one more try” after the first coloring gets wild.
Each sheet fits A4 size, which works well for most home printers. Print at 100% for the best results, then color with crayons, pencils, or markers (just add a spare page underneath if markers bleed).
5 Fun Crafts to Use SpongeBob Coloring Pages
Do you have finished pages stacking up, or do you want a fresh way to use them? Try these simple crafts that turn a regular SpongeBob printable into something you can keep, gift, or show off.
1. Bikini Bottom Wall Art Frames
Pick your favorite character page and color it in with your best “ocean” shades, then give it a bold outline so it pops from across the room. This works great with group scenes or a big smiling face.
Cut a slightly larger piece of colored paper to act like a frame, and glue your finished page in the center. Add stickers, glitter dots, or little bubble shapes if you want extra fun.
Punch two holes at the top, tie string through, and hang it on a door or near a desk. You will be surprised how proud kids feel when their art becomes “real” decor.
2. Jellyfish Fields Paper Mobile
Choose a page with jellyfish, underwater shapes, or a playful action scene, then color it with bright contrasts so the pieces stand out. Cut out jellyfish, bubbles, and small character parts.
Use a pencil to curl tentacles and bubble strips, so everything looks like it is floating. Tape or glue each piece onto string at different lengths.
Tie the strings to a hanger or a stick, then hang the mobile near a window. When air moves it, the whole scene feels alive, like a tiny Bikini Bottom above your head.
3. Krusty Krab Menu Placemat Set
Color a SpongeBob coloring page that gives “restaurant” energy, like food, a kitchen moment, or a character holding something tasty. Keep the coloring smooth, because this one will sit under cups and plates.
Write a pretend menu on the back with silly items like “bubble soda” and “seaweed fries,” then sign it as the chef. Kids love that little role-play twist.
Laminate it if you can, or cover both sides with clear tape in strips. Now you have a wipeable placemat for snacks, and you can bring it out anytime you want instant fun.
4. SpongeBob Party Mask and Photo Booth Props
Pick a page with a big face, then color it with strong, clean blocks of color so it reads well in photos. Cut around the outline and leave a small border so it does not tear.
Cut out eye holes with help from an adult, then glue the mask onto thin cardboard for strength. Punch holes on the sides and tie string, or glue on a craft stick as a handle.
Add extra props too, like a paper spatula, a tiny tie, or “bubble” speech signs. Set them on a table, and you get easy party photos without buying anything fancy.
5. Mini Story Booklets From Finished Pages
Pick four to six SpongeBob coloring pages that feel like they belong together, like a day out, a spooky moment, or a holiday scene, then color them as a set. Keep a similar color style so the booklet feels connected.
On the bottom of each page, write one or two simple story lines, like what the characters are doing and why it is funny. Keep it short, because kids like quick scenes.
Stack the pages, fold them in half if needed, then staple or tie yarn along the side. You end up with a handmade SpongeBob story you can reread, trade, or gift.
Have fun, print another batch, and keep the best ones as a little collection of SpongeBob coloring pages.






































































