Free Printable Swapped Coloring Pages

Ollie the Pookoo has one job: hide. His entire species built their survival around it — "Hide today, alive tomorrow" is basically Pookoo law. But Ollie can't stop himself from looking, exploring, and ending up exactly where a Pookoo is never supposed to be. If your child just finished watching Swapped on Netflix and immediately wanted to color Ollie, Ivy, and that suspiciously cheerful fish named Boogle, you're in the right place. This page has 24 free printable Swapped coloring pages — individual characters, friendship scenes, and the body swap moment itself — all ready to download and print, no sign-up needed. Scroll down and pick the one your child is already pointing at.

Swapped Coloring Pages

Inspired by peaceful moments from , this coloring page shows Ollie sitting with a curious expression and wide eyes in a clean easy-to-color design.

This printable coloring page from features Ivy with a serious and determined expression during one of her brave adventure moments alongside Ollie.

Enjoy coloring Boogle from in this simple underwater scene featuring the cheerful floating creature surrounded by bubbles and minimal details.

This printable coloring page features an adult Dzo from “Swapped,” a peaceful tree-like elephant with a flowering crown and leafy beard. Intricate details and relaxing design make it perfect for kids who love detailed animal characters!

A unique coloring page from “Swapped” showing Ollie magically transformed into a tall, elegant Javan with a distinctive leafy crown and feathered wings. Captures the magical body-swap moment from the Netflix film!

This printable coloring page inspired by features Ollie and Ivy standing beside the mysterious magical plant responsible for the body swap adventure. The memorable discovery scene captures the beginning of their journey together in a clean easy-to-color style for kids.

This special coloring page from Netflix’s “Swapped” features Ollie as a tall Javan with a leafy crown and Ivy as a small furry Pookoo. Captures the heart of the film’s friendship and body-swap adventure!

A charming coloring page featuring baby Ivy, the young Javan character from Netflix’s “Swapped.” She has a distinctive large leafy headdress, feathered wings, and expressive eyes. Perfect for kids who love the film!

A printable coloring page of a young Treewolf from Netflix’s “Swapped,” featuring the creature’s unique plant-animal hybrid design with branches and leaves sprouting from its back. Detailed textures make it engaging for kids!

This fun printable coloring page inspired by features Ollie dressed like a little explorer during one of his adventurous discovery moments in the magical world of Swapped.

A detailed coloring page of the Firewolf, the main antagonist of Netflix’s “Swapped.” This powerful wolf-like creature features dramatic branch-and-leaf plumage and a fierce expression. Perfect for fans of the movie!

An exciting action coloring page from Netflix’s “Swapped” showing a threatening Treewolf chasing Ivy, the bird-like Javan character. Great for kids who enjoy dramatic movie moments!

This dynamic coloring page captures an intense chase moment from “Swapped” — a fierce Treewolf pursuing the tiny Pookoo named Ollie. Perfect for kids who love action-packed adventure scenes from animated movies!

This printable coloring page from features Ollie smiling happily in his classic Pookoo form with bold outlines and a simple background perfect for kids.

This printable coloring page inspired by features Ollie the lovable Pookoo carrying a giant jungle leaf like an umbrella. The playful forest moment captures Ollie’s curious and adventurous personality in a simple kid-friendly design with bold outlines.

A noble Dzo guardian from Netflix’s “Swapped” with a stern, dignified expression. Features an elaborate flowering crown, cascading leafy beard, and wood-grain textures. Complex details make it ideal for older kids and movie fans!

This kid-friendly coloring page inspired by features Ivy standing proudly with layered feather details and a cheerful smile in an easy-to-color printable style.

This printable coloring page from captures Ollie reacting with a shocked expression during one of the magical discoveries in the story.

This coloring page from shows Ollie and Ivy happily standing together during one of their peaceful friendship moments. The clean composition and simple background make it easy and fun for children to color.

Inspired by exciting travel scenes from , this printable coloring page features Ivy soaring through the sky while carrying Ollie during their magical adventure together.

A heartwarming coloring page featuring a parent Dzo and baby from Netflix’s “Swapped.” These gentle giants are tree-like elephant creatures with flowering crowns and leafy beards. Perfect for kids who love the film’s magical creatures!

This coloring page inspired by shows Ivy walking gracefully with her layered leaf-like feathers and long legs in a clean coloring book style.

This printable coloring page from features Ivy beside Boogle, the mysterious fish-like creature from the valley. Their simple and cheerful expressions make this coloring sheet perfect for young children.

This kid-friendly coloring page inspired by features Boogle with a playful mischievous grin and flowing fins. The bold line art makes it easy for children to color.

What Is Swapped About?

Swapped is a 2026 Netflix animated film directed by Nathan Greno (Tangled). It follows Ollie, a small woodland creature called a Pookoo, and Ivy, a bird-like creature called a Javan. When a magical pod accidentally swaps their bodies, the two end up forced to cooperate — and discover that understanding someone else starts with living in their fur, or feathers.

The film spent over six years in development under two different names — first Powerless, then Pookoo — before landing at Netflix after originally being developed for Apple TV+. It’s produced by John Lasseter, whose credits include Toy Story and Finding Nemo, and it carries that Pixar-era sensibility: a big emotional idea wrapped in a genuinely funny premise.

The body swap itself isn’t treated as a temporary curse or a comic device that gets resolved quickly. Earlier drafts apparently went that direction, but the final film treats the swap as something that permanently shifts how both characters see each other — and themselves. That shift is the real subject of the movie, and it’s why the film works as well as it does for kids who are just starting to develop the capacity for real perspective-taking.

What Swapped Actually Teaches — and How to Use These Pages Beyond Coloring

The film’s central premise maps almost exactly onto what elementary school teachers call Social-Emotional Learning, or SEL. Ollie literally cannot understand what Ivy’s life feels like until he’s living in her body — and vice versa. That’s perspective-taking made physical and unavoidable, which is what makes it work dramatically and why it resonates with kids aged 6–10 who are right in the developmental window for practicing empathy. Print the Ollie and Ivy Body Swap coloring page and ask your child: “If you woke up as someone else tomorrow, what’s the first thing you’d want to understand about their life?” The conversation that follows tends to surprise parents.

Ivy’s design opens a completely different educational thread. The Javan species is directly modeled on the Kākāpō — a real, critically endangered, mossy-green flightless parrot native to New Zealand. Most parents have never heard of the Kākāpō. After your child colors the Ivy Javan Standing page, spend five minutes looking up real Kākāpō photos together; the resemblance is genuinely striking, and the conservation story (there are fewer than 250 left in the wild) is age-appropriate and meaningful. A coloring page becomes a starting point for a conversation about what it means for a species to almost disappear.

The film’s creature design also offers informal biology lessons for younger kids. Every creature in the Valley is an animal-plant hybrid — Boogle has algae fins, the hedgehog characters have pinecone shells, the Dzo are covered in living foliage. Point to one of the multi-character pages and ask: “Which part is the animal? Which part is the plant?” For kids aged 5–8, this is informal classification work — sorting things by shared features — done through a story they already love.

Teachers looking for a Friday activity or empathy lesson tie-in will find the scene pages most useful. The Magical Pod Trio page in particular anchors a discussion about the Dzo — the ancient beings who kept the Valley in harmony before fear drove everyone apart — which translates cleanly into any conversation about community, cooperation, and what happens when a group stops trusting each other. More animal coloring pages are available if you want to extend the nature connection beyond Swapped specifically.

5 Ways to Use These Swapped Coloring Pages That Go Beyond Just Coloring

The Swap Challenge

After coloring both the Ollie and Ivy individual pages, ask your child to describe a whole day from the perspective of whichever character they didn't color. What does Ollie eat? Where does Ivy sleep? What's the hardest part about being a Pookoo versus a Javan? This directly mirrors the film's emotional premise and takes about ten minutes — longer if your child gets into it, which they usually do.

Build the Valley

Print three or four pages — Ollie, Ivy, Boogle, and one scene page — and let your child cut out the characters (older kids) or just arrange them (younger kids) to create their own version of the Valley. What do the different creatures' territories look like? What's between Pookoo territory and Javan territory? This becomes a mapmaking and storytelling exercise that can run for a full afternoon.

Color Ivy, Then Find the Real Bird

After finishing any Ivy coloring page, pull up photos of a real Kākāpō. The mossy green coloring, the round face, the ground-level posture — your child will spot the connection immediately. The New Zealand Department of Conservation runs a Kākāpō recovery program and has a website with tracking updates on individual birds. Some kids who do this activity end up wanting to "adopt" a Kākāpō through one of the conservation programs. That's a significant outcome for an afternoon that started with a coloring page.

The Pookoo Motto Debate

Print the Thinking Ollie page and, while your child colors, introduce the Pookoo motto: "Hide today, alive tomorrow." Ask: is Ollie right to break the rule, or is the motto right? There's no clean answer — the film doesn't give one either — and that ambiguity is the point. Kids aged 7 and up tend to have very strong opinions and will argue both sides with real conviction.

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Family Character Match

Each family member picks the Swapped character they think they're most like — or the character another family member is most like. Then everyone colors that character's page simultaneously. This works particularly well with the Ivy Lily and Violet sisters page if you have multiple kids; siblings often have unexpectedly candid things to say about which sister they'd be.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is Swapped on Netflix about?

Swapped is a 2026 Netflix animated film directed by Nathan Greno, who previously co-directed Tangled. It follows Ollie, a small woodland creature called a Pookoo, and Ivy, a bird-like creature called a Javan, who accidentally swap bodies after encountering a magical pod left behind by ancient creatures called the Dzo. Forced into each other’s lives, they have to work together to reverse the swap — and end up understanding each other in ways that wouldn’t have been possible otherwise. It debuted at #2 globally on Netflix its opening weekend, with 15.5 million views in three days.

A Pookoo is a small, sea-otter-like woodland creature whose entire species survives by hiding — their motto is literally “Hide today, alive tomorrow.” Their noses are biologically adapted to detect threats and steer clear of them. Ollie is a Pookoo who cannot stop himself from being curious anyway, which is what makes him the right character to build a body-swap adventure around. The Pookoo design is original to the film, not based on a specific real animal.

The film is rated PG and works best for kids roughly ages 6–10. Several reviewers noted that preschoolers and kindergarteners found the Firewolf sequences overwhelming; the scarier elements in the film’s third act are genuinely intense for very young children. Elementary-age kids, on the other hand, tend to engage well with both the comedy and the emotional depth. The coloring pages on this page are appropriate for all ages — the images are character-focused and don’t include any of the more intense visual moments from the film.

The film is built around empathy through perspective-taking — its central premise is that you can’t fully understand someone else until you’ve experienced their life from the inside. This maps directly onto Social-Emotional Learning curricula used in elementary schools, making it one of the more teachable animated films in recent years. Beyond that core theme, the creature designs quietly introduce conservation (Ivy’s Javan species is based on the real, critically endangered Kākāpō parrot), and the Valley’s ecosystem opens up conversations about community and trust.

Ivy’s Javan design is directly inspired by the Kākāpō, a critically endangered flightless parrot native to New Zealand. The Kākāpō is known for its mossy green coloring, round face, and ground-dwelling behavior — all of which show up in Ivy’s design, layered with plant-like plumage to fit the film’s animal-plant hybrid concept. Fewer than 250 Kākāpō exist in the wild today, which makes Ivy an unexpected entry point into real wildlife conservation for kids who want to know more about the bird their favorite character is based on.

If your child has already claimed a favorite — and it’s probably Boogle, or possibly the body swap page, or possibly both — print that one first and let the rest follow. The Grandma and Young Ollie page tends to be a slow-burn favorite with parents, for what it’s worth. There are 20+ pages here, which is enough to keep things going well past opening weekend.