Soccer Coloring Pages
6 Sheets

Soccer Coloring Pages

Download and print these high-quality coloring sheets for free. Perfect for creative kids and adults alike!


Got a kid who’s obsessed with soccer? Coloring pages might just be your secret weapon for rainy afternoons, birthday parties, or those fifteen minutes before dinner when everyone needs to sit still.
Let’s get into it.

What Are Soccer Coloring Pages, Really?

At their core, these are simple line drawings—outlines of players, balls, goals, trophies—printed on paper and left blank for your child to fill in however they like. No paint. No mess. Just a pencil, some crayons, and a kid’s imagination.

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But here’s what makes them more than just a way to pass time. They’re working overtime as learning tools, even when your child has no idea that’s happening.

Think about it. A four-year-old gripping a crayon and staying inside the lines of a soccer ball is practicing fine motor control. A six-year-old picking which crayon to use for a jersey is making decisions, building focus, exercising patience. Teachers have known this for decades. Occupational therapists too. The humble coloring page does a lot of quiet work.

And for parents? It’s an activity that requires almost zero setup. Print it, hand it over, done.

What Do These Pages Typically Show?

Open up any collection and you’ll start noticing patterns pretty quickly.

Action shots dominate. Players mid-kick, mid-dribble, sometimes diving for a save. These tend to be the most requested because, well, kids want to draw themselves doing the cool stuff.

Trophies and medals show up constantly too—perfect for end-of-season parties or team celebrations. A blank trophy outline is basically an invitation for a kid to imagine winning.

Then there’s the simpler stuff. A single soccer ball. A goal with a net. A pair of cleats sitting by themselves. These minimalist pages matter more than people give them credit for, especially for toddlers and preschoolers who aren’t ready for a busy scene packed with detail.

Stadium backdrops appear in the more elaborate sheets, often tied to big tournaments. World Cup themes especially. Mascots, flags, crowds in the stands—these add complexity for older kids who’ve graduated past basic outlines.

As for file formats, PDF is king. Overwhelmingly so. It prints cleanly, doesn’t shift around on different devices, and looks the same whether you’re opening it on a phone or a laptop. PNG and JPG versions float around too, mostly for quick previews before printing.

Beyond Soccer: Where Else to Look

If your household has more than one sport-obsessed kid (or one kid with shifting obsessions, which, let’s be honest, describes most kids), it’s worth knowing that soccer pages are just one corner of a much bigger world.

Sports coloring pages as a whole category cover everything from basketball hoops to baseball diamonds to hockey rinks. If today’s request is soccer but tomorrow’s is basketball, you won’t need to start your search from scratch—the same style of resource usually has it all.

And within that, there’s a whole subgroup focused specifically on ball sports—soccer, basketball, volleyball, tennis, baseball, all grouped together. Handy if your kid plays multiple sports, or if you’re planning a multi-sport theme for a birthday party and want everything to feel cohesive without spending hours hunting separately for each one.

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Either way, the format stays familiar. Print, color, repeat. Simple as that.

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