Free printable blue bingo cards, ready to play. Pick how many pages you want, click Generate, and every card in the PDF will have a fresh set of random numbers. No two players get the same card. Classic 75-ball US bingo: B 1–15, I 16–30, N 31–45 (with free centre), G 46–60, O 61–75.
Want a different shade? Click the color swatches at the top of the generator to switch to any of the other nine colors without leaving this page.
When to use blue bingo cards.
Blue is the most-searched bingo color on the site. Equally at home in a school classroom, a corporate offsite, or a Friday-night family game. The royal-blue header reads cleanly on any printer and pairs well with most table linens, so it stays useful long after the event it was printed for is over.
Best matches. Royal blue is the default spirit color for hundreds of US schools, so blue cards drop into back-to-school nights, graduations, and PTA meetings without anyone needing to ask why. They also land cleanly at corporate events where the brand book is navy-and-white — which describes most banks, law firms, and consulting practices — and at boy-themed baby showers where a pastel-blue palette is already in place.
Color matching tips. Pair blue cards with white cardstock for a crisp school-spirit print. For a more muted palette, switch the markers to navy or kraft brown so the blue ink isn’t doing all the work. If you need to match a specific brand blue, the royal we ship is on the warmer side of cobalt; print one test page first if exact Pantone match matters. For dark or formal events, run the cards on cream stock and the blue reads more like ink-on-vellum than like a school flyer.
Looking for a themed kit? Try our full bingo template hub for printables covering every major holiday and event. You might also like our main classic generator (switch colors without leaving the page), icebreaker bingo for office events, or baby shower bingo for a baby-blue themed shower.
These cards use the standard 75-ball US bingo format described on Wikipedia’s American Bingo entry — the same B 1–15 / I 16–30 / N 31–45 + FREE / G 46–60 / O 61–75 layout used in church halls and school fundraisers nationwide.
Frequently asked.
When should I pick the blue bingo card?
Pick blue when your event needs a calm, neutral color that reads cleanly across most printers. School-spirit nights at a blue-and-white school, corporate offsites where the brand is navy, baby showers with a pastel-blue palette, and Friday-night family bingo all work. Royal blue is also the most-searched bingo color on this site, so when in doubt, blue is the safe default.
Are these blue cards classroom-friendly?
Yes. Royal blue prints cleanly on any classroom inkjet or laser printer, the cards are illustrated only by the BINGO header band so they don’t distract from the activity, and there is no per-day cap on regenerating fresh cards. Most teachers print four-per-page on copy paper, hand out spare cards as substitutes, and skip the cardstock entirely.
Does the blue match school colors?
It will line up exactly with most royal-blue schools and read close enough on navy schools that nobody complains. If you need an exact Pantone match, print a single test page first — the royal we ship sits on the warmer side of cobalt. For navy-only events you can also print on a cream or off-white sheet to soften the contrast.
Can I print the blue version on white paper or do I need colored cardstock?
Plain white US Letter copy paper is fine and the standard choice. Colored cardstock isn’t needed; the blue band on the cards carries the color. If you want a sturdier feel for a sit-down dinner or a fundraiser, run the same blue cards through a laminator or print on 65lb white cardstock.
