Here’s a kid-friendly, step‑by‑step guide on how to draw a bunny easy for kids , plus some fun extras parents or teachers can use as a mini lesson.

Quick Scoop

  • Simple steps built from circles and ovals.
  • Great for ages 4–10 with pencil, eraser, and crayons.
  • Can be turned into an Easter bunny, winter bunny, or story character at the end.

Step‑by‑step bunny face (super easy)

You can read these aloud and pause after each step.

  1. Draw the head
    • Start with a big circle in the middle of the page.
    • This will be the bunny’s head.
  2. Add cheeks
    • On the bottom left of the circle, draw a small bump (like half a cloud).
    • Do the same on the bottom right.
    • Now the head looks a bit like a round shape with puffy cheeks.
  3. Add the ears
    • On top of the circle, draw two long “U” shapes standing up.
    • Make them as tall or short as you like.
    • Inside each ear, draw a smaller “U” to show the soft inner ear.
  4. Draw the nose
    • In the middle of the face, right above the cheeks, draw a tiny upside‑down triangle or tiny oval.
    • Keep it small and cute.
  5. Draw the mouth
    • From the bottom of the nose, draw a short straight line down.
    • Then draw a “J” curling to the left and another “J” curling to the right.
    • It should look like a number “3” lying on its side.
  6. Add eyes
    • Draw two circles above the nose, one on the left, one on the right.
    • Put a smaller circle inside each and color the big circle around it in.
    • Leave the small circle white so the bunny looks shiny and happy.
  7. Add whiskers
    • From each cheek, draw 2–3 short straight lines going sideways.
    • Not too long, just a little past the face.
  8. Add shoulders (optional but cute)
    • From the left cheek, draw a short curve down and out.
    • Do the same on the right cheek.
    • Connect them with a gentle curve so it looks like the bunny is wearing a little shirt.
  9. Outline and color
    • Trace your lines with a darker marker if you like.
    • Color the inner ears light pink, nose pink, and the fur light gray, brown, or keep it white with a light blue outline.

Full bunny body (simple sitting bunny)

Once kids can draw the face, you can add a body in a few more steps.

  1. Draw the body
    • Under the head, draw a big oval lying on its side.
    • This is the bunny’s fluffy body.
  2. Draw the front paws
    • At the front of the oval (under the cheeks), draw two long “U” shapes next to each other, touching the ground.
    • Add a little line near the bottom of each paw to show the toes.
  3. Draw the back feet
    • On the left side of the body, draw a big rainbow‑shaped curve attached to the oval, then flatten the bottom.
    • Do the same on the right side.
    • Add two or three short lines for toes.
  4. Add the tail
    • On one side of the body, draw a small cloud‑like circle for the fluffy tail.
  5. Final touches
    • Add a carrot between the front paws (long skinny triangle with leafy top).
    • Add grass lines under the feet so the bunny is sitting in a field.

Little story prompt to make it fun

You can turn drawing time into a tiny story so kids stay engaged:

“This bunny just woke up on a spring morning and is looking for its favorite snack.
Is your bunny shy or super playful?
Draw its face to show how it feels, then add something it loves—maybe a carrot, a flower, or a big cozy scarf.”

Ideas kids can choose from:

  • Spring bunny: flowers, butterflies, sunny sky.
  • Winter bunny: hat, scarf, snowflakes.
  • Birthday bunny: party hat, balloons, cupcake.

Mini tips for parents and teachers

  • Keep shapes simple: circles, ovals, and “U” shapes.
  • Draw big: small drawings are harder for young kids to control.
  • Use steps: show one step at a time, then let kids copy.
  • Encourage creativity: okay if it doesn’t “look right”—every bunny is unique.

SEO bits (for your post)

  • Focus keyword to repeat naturally: “how to draw a bunny easy for kids”.
  • Possible meta description (rewrite as you like):
    “Learn how to draw a bunny easy for kids with this step‑by‑step guide. Simple shapes, cute expressions, and fun story prompts make drawing time relaxing and creative for young artists.”

Bottom note:
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.