Pulsating aurora (PsA) is characterized by quasi-periodic intensity modulations with a period of a few to a few tens of seconds. It is caused by precipitation of energetic electrons of a few to several tens of kilo electronvolts produced by chorus waves in the magnetosphere. Precipitating electron energies of PsA have been identified in the past by sounding rocket and satellite observations, but the spatial distributions of precipitating electron energies of PsA have never been estimated. In this study, using the data from ground-based all-sky cameras at two wavelengths of 427.8 nm and 844.6 nm, we estimated the temporal and spatial variations in the precipitating electron energy of PsA. The results showed that the spatial distribution of precipitating electron energies was not uniform in the PsA patch, suggesting that the coherent spatial scale of the wave-particle interactions is smaller than each PsA patch size.