

Free Ocean Printable
Mermaid Dot-to-Dot Printable
Connect the dots to reveal a beautiful mermaid gliding through the ocean. This easy 54-dot puzzle is perfect for young learners practising number sequencing while enjoying a touch of underwater magic.
Difficulty
Free for home and classroom use.
No sign-up needed. Opens as a PDF. Print on any US Letter (8.5 x 11 inch) paper. Free for home and classroom use.
Back to all ocean puzzlesMermaid Dot-to-Dot Puzzle Guide
Mermaids have captured children's imaginations for thousands of years — from the ancient seas of Assyria to the fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen. This beautiful 54-dot puzzle traces the graceful outline of a mermaid gliding through the deep. It is a wonderful puzzle for quiet, focused time — perfect for a rainy afternoon or a calm classroom activity. Find dot 1 and let the magic begin!
1–9 — The Face and Hair
Start at dot 1 and connect through to dot 9 to trace the mermaid's face and the flowing lines of her hair. Faces involve gentle, rounded curves — a lovely warm-up that builds pencil confidence before the bigger shapes ahead. Encourage children to lift their wrist slightly and let the pencil glide.
Mermaid legends have appeared independently in cultures all around the world — from West African water spirits to the Japanese Ningyo and the ancient Greek sea-nymph Nereids. The idea of half-human, half-fish beings seems to be something the human imagination keeps arriving at, no matter the ocean.
10–22 — The Arms and Upper Body
Continue from dot 10 to dot 22 to draw the arms and torso. Children practise symmetry and the natural curve of a human figure here — a section that works especially well for discussing body proportions in a fun, low-pressure way. A light, flowing touch gives the most elegant result.
The most famous mermaid story in English-speaking culture — The Little Mermaid — was written by Hans Christian Andersen in 1837. The original tale is quite different from the animated film: far more bittersweet, and intended to reflect on sacrifice, longing, and what it means to have a soul.
23–36 — The Waist and Scales
Trace dots 23 through 36 for the midsection where the human form transitions into the fish tail — the most distinctively mermaid part of the whole drawing. Children learn to follow a shape that narrows and then sweeps outward again. This middle section rewards patience and careful dot-finding.
Scientists believe the mermaid myth may have partly originated from sailors spotting manatees or dugongs at sea. At a distance, a manatee surfacing to breathe — with its rounded body and paddle-like tail — can look surprisingly humanoid. It is a generous interpretation, but loneliness and distance do remarkable things to the imagination.
37–46 — The Fish Tail
Connect dots 37 to 46 to sweep the long, graceful fish tail downward. This is the most satisfying section of the puzzle — children feel the mermaid taking her final, recognisable shape. Long, flowing strokes work beautifully here. Encourage children to draw from the shoulder rather than just the wrist.
In most mermaid folklore, the tail is described as iridescent — shimmering with multiple colours like a soap bubble or a fish scale in sunlight. When it comes to colouring this puzzle, there is no wrong answer: silver, ocean blue, emerald green, or all three at once are all equally valid!
47–54 — The Tail Fins
Finish by connecting dots 47 through 54 to add the broad, sweeping tail fins that complete the mermaid's silhouette. Just eight dots to the finish line — encourage children to make each one count and end with a confident, graceful flourish. The tail fin is the mermaid's full stop!
Fish tails move side-to-side, but whale and dolphin tails — called flukes — move up and down. If a mermaid existed in real life, scientists debate which style of tail would make more sense for a human-shaped upper body. The answer, based on the way human hips move, would likely be the up-and-down dolphin style.
Wonderful — your mermaid is ready to dive! Now give her tail the most spectacular colour combination you can imagine. Display it proudly or give it as a gift — either way, you have created something genuinely lovely.
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