Free Statue of Liberty Coloring Pages (Printable PDFs, No Sign-Up)
The Statue of Liberty is one of the most beloved symbols of freedom in the world, and these free printable coloring pages bring her story to life for learners of every age. This collection includes 30 Statue of Liberty coloring pages in both simple and detailed versions — from the full statue and her seven-ray crown to the torch held high over New York Harbor.
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Best For
- Flag Day and Fourth of July packets
- American symbols lessons
- Civics and immigration units
How To Use
Use these Statue of Liberty coloring pages when teaching Fourth of July, Flag Day, American symbols, New York Harbor, immigration history, liberty, or patriotic holidays.
What You Get
30 free printable PDFs with 15 simple, 15 detailed designs. Students connect a familiar national monument with the ideas of liberty, welcome, citizenship, and American heritage. Each page has a direct download and a layout ready for US Letter or A4 paper.
Make These Printables Work Harder
Talk About
Ask what the Statue of Liberty holds, why the torch matters, and how the monument can help children talk about freedom, welcome, and civic responsibility.
Easy Activity Idea
Pair a Statue of Liberty page with a short map activity, a facts notebook page, or a patriotic packet for Flag Day, Independence Day, or a U.S. symbols unit.
Print Tip
Use full-view simple pages for younger children and skyline, fireworks, or detailed monument pages for older students who can handle smaller line work.
Fourth of July and Patriotic Coloring Pages
Building a quick July 4th packet? These connected pages keep Fourth of July printables, American flag activities, patriotic symbols, veteran gratitude, and Memorial Day remembrance easy to find from one place.
Start With These Printable Pages
Free for churches, Sunday Schools, homeschools, and Christian schools. Print as many copies as you need. No sign-up required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are these Statue of Liberty coloring pages free?
Yes. All 30 Statue of Liberty coloring pages are free to download and print. No sign-up, payment, or email address is required.
What Statue of Liberty designs are included?
The collection includes the full statue, a portrait, the seven-ray crown, the torch, the New York skyline, Liberty Island, a vintage illustration, immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, the 1886 dedication, a sunrise scene, the statue with the American flag, with fireworks, with a bald eagle, and paired with the Liberty Bell.
Do you have faith-based or Christian Statue of Liberty pages?
Yes. Several pages carry a faith-and-freedom theme: the Statue paired with the Liberty Bell, which bears Leviticus 25:10 (“proclaim liberty throughout all the land”); “Liberty Enlightening the World,” the statue’s torch as a light to the nations (Matthew 5:14); and the welcome of immigrants at Ellis Island (Matthew 25:35). They are popular for Sunday school and homeschool Bible and civics lessons.
Are these Statue of Liberty pages good for school?
Yes. Teachers use them for American-history and civics units, national-symbol lessons, immigration studies, and patriotic holidays such as Independence Day and Flag Day.
What ages are these printables for?
Simple Statue of Liberty pages work best for younger children and beginners. Detailed pages are better for older students, teens, and adults who enjoy intricate line work.
What paper size are the Statue of Liberty coloring pages, and how should I print them?
Every page is US Letter (8.5 by 11 inches) at 300 DPI, so it prints crisp on any home, library, or classroom printer. For the best result choose “Actual size” or 100% scale (not “Fit to page”) and use bright white paper or cardstock.
Are these Statue of Liberty pages suitable for adults as well as kids?
Yes. The simple tier uses bold, friendly outlines for young children, while the detailed tier features intricate line art in the style of premium adult coloring books — relaxing stress-relief coloring for teens and adults.
Inside the set you will find the iconic views — the full statue, a dignified portrait, the crown and torch, the New York skyline, and Liberty Island — alongside story-rich historical scenes: immigrant families arriving past her at Ellis Island, and the great dedication day of October 1886 when she was unveiled as France’s gift to the United States. Each page is a print-ready PDF for standard 8.5 x 11 inch paper.
For Christian families and Sunday school teachers, the Statue of Liberty also opens a beautiful conversation about freedom. Her formal name is “Liberty Enlightening the World,” and her torch makes a natural picture of light shining to the nations (Matthew 5:14; Isaiah 60:1). Paired with the Liberty Bell — which carries the words of Leviticus 25:10, “proclaim liberty throughout all the land” — and the welcome she has long offered the stranger (Matthew 25:35), these pages let children color American liberty while reflecting on the deeper freedom found in Christ (John 8:36; 2 Corinthians 3:17).
These printables work well for Independence Day, Flag Day, civics and American-history units, immigration lessons, homeschool studies, Sunday school, and quiet creative time at home. Simple designs use large bold regions for young children, while detailed designs offer intricate line work for older students and adults.
Creative Ways to Use Statue of Liberty Coloring Pages
These pages do more than fill a quiet afternoon — they are a doorway into American history, civics, and faith. In the classroom, pair the full-statue or crown page with a short lesson on national symbols, then have students write one sentence on what liberty means to them.
For homeschool and Sunday school, use the Ellis Island page to talk about welcoming the stranger (Matthew 25:35) and the Liberty Bell page to read Leviticus 25:10 together — “proclaim liberty throughout all the land.” The torch and “light to the nations” page pair naturally with Matthew 5:14 for a lesson on being a light.
Finished pages make a strong Fourth of July or Flag Day bulletin board, a homeschool history-notebook insert, or a take-home packet for a church or community event. Print on bright white cardstock for the cleanest result.
For older students and adults, the detailed crown, torch, and full-statue pages double as calming stress-relief coloring — reach for fine-tip markers or colored pencils and hand-letter a favorite verse or a family's naturalization date in the open margin. Laminate a finished favorite as a placemat for an Independence Day table, string several together as patriotic bunting, or bind a full set into a simple take-along history coloring book for road trips, waiting rooms, and quiet church mornings.


































