Given a graph G and a nondecreasing sequence S = (s1, . . . , s k ) of positive integers, the mapping c : V (G) −→ {1, . . . , k} is called an Spacking coloring of G if for any two distinct vertices x and y in c −1 (i), the distance between x and y is greater than si. The smallest integer k such that there exists a (1, 2, . . . , k)-packing coloring of a graph G is called the packing chromatic number of G, denoted χρ(G). The question of boundedness of the packing chromatic number in the class of subcubic (planar) graphs was investigated in several earlier papers; recently it was established that the invariant is unbounded in the class of all subcubic graphs.In this paper, we prove that the packing chromatic number of any 2-connected bipartite subcubic outerplanar graph is bounded by 7. Furthermore, we prove that every subcubic triangle-free outerplanar graph has a (1, 2, 2, 2)-packing coloring, and that there exists a subcubic outerplanar graph with a triangle that does not admit a (1, 2, 2, 2)-packing coloring. In addition, there exists a subcubic triangle-free outerplanar graph that does not admit a (1, 2, 2, 3)-packing coloring. A similar dichotomy is shown for bipartite outerplanar graphs: every such graph admits an Spacking coloring for S = (1, 3, . . . , 3), where 3 appears ∆ times (∆ being the maximum degree of vertices), and if one of the integers 3 is replaced by 4 in the sequence S. Also, there exist outerplanar bipartite graphs that do not admit an S-packing coloring.