37 Free Bees Coloring Pages (PDFs Printables)

Are you ready to create some serious buzz in your home or classroom? If you’ve been scouring the internet for the perfect activity to keep little hands busy (and sticky fingers away from the furniture), you’ve landed in the right hive. Whether you need a simple outline for a toddler or an intricate mandala for your own mindfulness break, finding high-quality bees coloring pages shouldn’t feel like searching for a needle in a haystack.

We know how frustrating it is to find a great image only to realize it’s low-resolution or hidden behind a paywall. That’s why we’ve curated a massive library of free, high-quality printables just for you. From fuzzy bumblebees buzzing around sunflowers to scientifically accurate honey bee diagrams, this collection covers it all.

So, grab your brightest yellow markers, sharpen those black pencils, and let’s get creative. These bees coloring pages are ready to print, color, and display!

Jump Straight to Your Bee Coloring Sheets

We know you might be in a rush to get the printer started. Below, you will find our complete gallery of printable sheets. We’ve organized them by difficulty and style so you can find exactly what you need in seconds.

Bees coloring pages showing a bee resting on a leaf
Bees coloring pages showing a bee inside a beehive entrance
Bees coloring pages showing a bee flying under a smiling sun
Bees coloring pages showing a bee buzzing near clouds
Bees coloring pages showing a baby bee sitting on a flower
Bees coloring pages illustrating a worker bee carrying pollen on its legs
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee surrounded by simple spring
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee surrounded by simple spring flowers
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee pollinating a garden flower
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee pollinating a garden flower in nature
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee next to a honey jar
Bees coloring pages illustrating a bee hovering over a honeycomb
Bees coloring pages featuring a tiny bee with big eyes
Bees coloring pages featuring a single bee facing forward
Bees coloring pages featuring a cute small bee flying with a smile
Bees coloring pages featuring a bee holding a heart, sweet simple pose,
Bees coloring pages featuring a bee flying with a dotted flight trail
Bees coloring pages depicting a queen bee with a small crown
Bees coloring pages featuring a bee flying diagonally across the page
Bees coloring pages depicting a bee sitting on a mushroom
Bees coloring pages depicting a bee sitting on a mushroom, fantasy cute style
Bees coloring pages depicting a bee family flying together
Bees coloring pages depicting a bee curled up sleeping inside a honeycomb cell
Bees coloring pages depicting a bee collecting nectar from a sunflower

Why These Coloring Pages Are the Bee’s Knees

You might be thinking, “It’s just a coloring page, right?” Well, not exactly. Coloring is one of the most beneficial activities for developing minds. When a child picks up a crayon to work on one of these bees coloring pages, they aren’t just filling in space—they are building crucial skills.

Fine Motor Skill Development

Every time your child tries to stay inside the lines of a honeycomb or trace the delicate wing of a worker bee, they are strengthening the tiny muscles in their hands. This “pincer grasp” is the exact same muscle memory required for learning to write.

A Gateway to Science

Let’s be honest: bugs can be a little scary to some kids. However, introducing insects through art changes the narrative. By coloring a “friendly” bee, children become curious rather than fearful. This serves as the perfect jumping-off point to discuss pollination, the environment, and why we need to protect our buzzing buddies.

Pro-Tips: How to Make Your Bees Pop

Do you want to take your artwork from “fridge-worthy” to “frame-worthy”? Coloring a bee seems simple—yellow and black, right?—but adding a few artistic techniques can make your illustrations leap off the page.

Here are a few pro-tips for coloring your bees coloring pages:

  • The Fuzzy Texture: Bumblebees aren’t smooth; they are covered in tiny hairs! Instead of coloring in solid blocks, use short, quick strokes with your colored pencil to mimic fur. This adds amazing texture to the bee’s thorax.
  • Wing Transparency: Bee wings are translucent, not solid white or blue. To achieve this look, lightly shade the wings with a very pale blue or grey, but leave plenty of white space. You can even draw faint veins over the top to make them look realistic.
  • The Metallic Shine: Did you know some bees have a metallic sheen? If you are using crayons or oil pastels, try blending a little bit of purple or dark green into the black stripes. It gives the insect a shimmering, iridescent quality found in nature.

Beyond the Crayons: 5 Creative Craft Ideas

Don’t let the fun stop once the coloring is done! One of the reasons bees coloring pages rank so highly as a resource is their versatility. You can upcycle these sheets into fantastic 3D projects.

Here are five ways to transform your printables:

  1. The Popsicle Puppet: Print out one of our “Cute Cartoon Bee” images on cardstock. After coloring, cut it out and glue it to a jumbo popsicle stick. Now you have a character for storytime!
  2. Honeycomb Classroom Decor: Have a group of students color the hexagonal honeycomb patterns. Once they are cut out, tape them together on the wall to create a massive, collaborative hive mural.
  3. 3D Wings: Color the body of the bee, but cut out separate wings from wax paper or tracing paper. Glue them onto the body for a mixed-media effect that actually flutters in the breeze.
  4. Pollination Station: Glue your cut-out colored bee onto a clothespin. Then, create “flowers” using tissue paper or paper cups. Kids can fly their clothespin bees from flower to flower, dropping “pollen” (yellow pom-poms) as they go.
  5. Greeting Cards: Use the intricate mandala bees to create stunning handmade cards. They make perfect “Thank You” notes or Mother’s Day cards for the “Queen Bee” in your life.

Buzz-Worthy Facts to Share While You Color

While your kids (or students) are busy with their bees coloring pages, why not sneak in a little education? Kids love random trivia, and these facts are sure to stick.

  • Speedy Flyers: A honey bee flies at about 15 miles per hour. That might seem slow to us, but for a tiny bug, that is incredibly fast!
  • The Waggle Dance: Bees talk to each other by dancing! When a scout finds good flowers, she comes back to the hive and performs a “waggle dance” to tell her sisters exactly where the food is.
  • Busy Workers: To make just one pound of honey, a colony of bees needs to fly about 55,000 miles. That is like flying around the world twice!
  • Girl Power: All the worker bees you see flying outside gathering nectar are females. The male bees (drones) stay in the hive and don’t have stingers.

Dive Into a World of Animal Coloring Pages

Looking for something new to color? Explore a rich collection of animal coloring pages featuring many animals, styles, and printable designs.

Which Bee Will You Color First?

We hope you enjoy this extensive collection. Whether you are using these bees coloring pages for a science lesson on pollinators, a rainy day activity, or just to unwind after a long day, there is something here for everyone.

Remember, the goal isn’t perfection—it’s creativity. So don’t be afraid to color a purple bee or a rainbow hive. Art is about expression!

Ready to start? Scroll back up to the gallery, pick your favorite design, and hit print!