Grab all six of my kids letter O tracing worksheets here.
Each individual printable worksheet is free and you can select from the variations below. These worksheets can help children learn the alphabet and build fine motor skills.
The variations below include upper case and lower case ‘Oo’ versions for a variety of practice as well as common O words for early learners including owl, onion, and orange.
All worksheets are designed to be printed on A4 paper. Make sure you select “shrink to fit” in order to ensure best quality output from your printer.
License and Terms of Use: All printables are provided for non-commercial personal and classroom use only, not for resale or distribution. All rights reserved.
Find Other Letter Tracing Worksheets Here: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Free Letter O Tracing Worksheets
Designed by Chris
The easiest and most introductory worksheet on the list, this version simply asks students to trace the letters inside of a bubble letter formation. The very large letters is good for initial fine motor skill development – plus, students can color the bubbles once they’re done!
This fun template introduces the our target letter slowly by having students trace the letters inside large bubbles, then has students try to trace the dots to make a picture of an owl that they can then color in! Finally, they can trace large letters o-w-l to spell the word owl.
Stepping up the difficulty a little, we’re moving onto practicing the uppercase and lowercase letters within bubble text, and then some simple o-letter words: octopus, orange, and owl.
This version is an introduction to sentence writing, helping children to understand that the letters are grouped together to form words. The sentence focuses on the letter o, with the sentence: “The owl will hoot at night.”
This version focuses on practicing the capital and lowercase versions. This one was designed with large letters and simple tracing for pre-K students. If your child finds this easy, use our version further down that has smaller letters (requiring better fine motor skills) and horizontal handwriting lines.
This dot tracing version focuses on developing fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination. Students trace the letters in the big bubbles, the smaller words below, and also an animal outline, all designed to help practice precision with a pen or pencil.
This version introduces horizontal handwriting lines, which will be a feature of the rest of the sheets on this page. In this version, students write uppercase and lowercase Oo forms in close proximity, with the intention that children will come to understand the two letter forms have the same semantic meaning.
This version has progression built into it. Students start with a lowercase o on its own and practice it on the first line. Then, they try the uppercase O, then on the third line they combine them both. Finally, students get a chance to practice a small and common word beginning with o – octopus!
This version is all about practicing uppercase and lowercase over and over again, with the idea that rote learning will help children to build muscle memory of writing the letters.
This version is all about writing our letter ‘o’ in context by placing it within short and common words starting with O. Students can practice the words owl, orange, and onion with both uppercase and lowercase forms of the letter.
This version provides the next level of difficulty, where students still have the horizontal handwriting lines to assist with maintaining uniform height, but students must now practice the letters without the assistance of the dotted letter lines.
This version is all about practicing one word over and over, with the idea that repetition helps reinforce fine motor skills for the child. The word we’re focusing on here is the word “owl”.