Letter A Coloring Pages (Free Printables)
Letter A coloring pages are a fun and easy way for kids to learn the alphabet while practicing fine motor skills. This printable set includes 12 Letter A coloring pages designed for preschool, kindergarten, and early learners.
These free printable Letter A coloring pages are part of our growing alphabet letters coloring pages series. Each page focuses on uppercase A in a simple, bold design that’s perfect for coloring, tracing support, and early letter recognition.
These pages are great for:
- Preschool alphabet activities
- Kindergarten letter practice
- Homeschool literacy lessons
- Classroom morning work or centers
Just enter your email below to download your free Letter A coloring pages printable set.
Of course, these free printable coloring pages for kids are more than just fun—they also support early learning skills like pencil grip, fine motor development, and visual-motor coordination through hands-on coloring practice.
This page focuses specifically on uppercase Letter A coloring sheets, designed to help children recognize and practice the letter A in a simple, engaging way.
What’s Included in This Letter A Coloring Page
This printable Letter A coloring page set includes multiple engaging worksheets designed to help children learn and recognize the letter A in a fun, hands-on way. Inside this pack, you’ll find a variety of simple and child-friendly coloring pages featuring the uppercase letter A in bold outlines that are easy for little hands to color.
Each page is designed to support early literacy development while giving kids a creative way to practice letter recognition. These printables are perfect for preschool, kindergarten, and early elementary learners who are just beginning to explore the alphabet.
This set is easy to download, print, and use right away at home or in the classroom.
If you’re learning the alphabet, you may also like our Letter A crafts for kids, our Letter B coloring pages, Letter C coloring pages and our full alphabet coloring pages (A–Z printable collection).

How to Use This Letter A Coloring Page
This Letter A coloring page can be used in many simple and effective ways to help children learn and recognize the letter A.
At home, parents can use this printable as a quick and engaging alphabet activity during quiet time, homeschool lessons, or as part of a daily letter-of-the-week routine. Children can color the letter A while practicing saying its sound out loud, helping reinforce early phonics skills.
In the classroom, teachers can use this worksheet for morning work, literacy centers, or small group instruction. It also works well as a take-home activity to encourage extra practice beyond school.
For added learning value, try pairing this coloring page with a related object or word that starts with A, such as “apple” or “alligator,” so children can make stronger connections between letters and sounds.
This simple activity supports early literacy development while also building fine motor skills, hand strength, and pencil control through coloring.
Letter A Crafts and Activities for Kids
For other words that start with the letter ‘A’, check out this article from Play Osmo.
Whether you use these coloring pages with your kids at home, in the library, at school, or really…anywhere, I know that your child is going to love exploring their creative side with these free activities.
You might also want to pair these letter A coloring pages with some other fun alphabet and learning activities, like these name crafts, this alphabet craft, or these name puzzles.

Amp Up the Fun with these Ideas for Using Free Coloring Pages
Coloring with crayons or markers is a fun and simple activity that is portable and good on so many levels. But there’s nothing that says you need to stick with just crayons when playing with these free printable coloring pages.
Start with coloring these letter A coloring pages and then add things from your craft bag (we stick to the same 27 items for every craft on this site so that once you fill your bag, you are all set to make anything you find here…yay!
Get the master list to fill your bag so that you can craft along too.) Put pieces of tissue paper on areas that you want to texture. Or add washi tape for some interesting patterns. Maybe you want to put some clouds in the sky or make the water frothy…just puff up some cotton balls and glue them in place. There are so many possibilities!
Keep reading to the bottom to download these Letter A Coloring Pages for FREE 🙂
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Enjoy this Video of Alphabet Adventure on ‘A’ Island
How to Improve Core Strength with Coloring
This next little tip will not only help improve your child’s core strength, but it will also improve should and wrist stability. It’s super simple. Just tape the color page onto the wall and color on the vertical surface. Another position you can try is to have your child lay on their back under a table with the coloring page taped to the bottom of the table. Then they will just reach up to color the page.
One last position to try is to sit at a table but turn your child’s seat sideways so that their back is not supported. This will force them to engage those core muscles in order to sit up straight.
Tips for Improving Fine Motor Skills
I know that when coloring with little ones, there are all kinds of special crayons out there that you can buy, but don’t bother. Instead, just break your regular crayons in half. Trust me. I know that it’s nice to have beautiful new crayons, but they are better tools for promoting fine motor skills when broken. Take it from an occupational therapist with years of experience. This makes it almost impossible for children to grasp the crayon with a fisted grasp and instead to use fingertips, moving toward a mature grasp for better writing when the time comes.
Gently encourage your child to use fingertips to hold the crayon, but then let them use their own creativity to color the picture, even going outside of the lines if they haven’t yet mastered staying inside the lines.
Printable Coloring Pages
More Tips for Using Coloring Pages for Kids
We’re always telling kids that they need to stay inside the lines when coloring, but the truth is that little ones aren’t necessarily developmentally ready for that. Generally speaking, kids should begin coloring inside the lines by about ages 5 to 6. If your child is in that age range and still scribbling like crazy, try this…
Before having your child color on the page, go around some of the main borders of the picture with a bead of Elmer’s glue (let it dry overnight) or hot glue. This way there is a tactile border in addition to the visual border to follow.
For even more ways to maximize the experience of coloring with your kids and using this resource as a developmental tool, check out this article from Ready Hands for Kindergarten.
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