The Rules of Sudoku
Sudoku has only three core constraints. Once you know them, every puzzle is about calm deduction, not guessing.
Step-by-step visual walkthrough
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Step 1: Know the grid
A Sudoku board is a 9×9 grid split into nine 3×3 boxes. Some cells are already filled; these givens are fixed.
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Step 2: Apply the three constraints
Every row, column, and 3×3 box must contain 1–9 exactly once. No duplicates in any group.
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Step 3: Use candidates (pencil marks)
When a cell has multiple possible values, note candidates lightly and eliminate them as new numbers appear.
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Step 4: Solve with logic, not guesses
Start where there are fewer empty cells. Place certainties first, then revisit tougher areas.
Helpful links
Sudoku rules FAQ
What are the basic rules of Sudoku?
Each row, column, and 3×3 box must contain 1 to 9 exactly once.
Is Sudoku a math puzzle?
No. It uses numbers as symbols, but solving is pure logic.
How do you solve Sudoku step by step?
Scan the grid, write candidates, eliminate options, and place values when only one remains.
Can you guess in Sudoku?
Good Sudoku puzzles are designed to be solved without guessing.
What is a pencil mark?
A pencil mark is a small candidate note in an unsolved cell.
How long does one puzzle take?
Beginners may take 20–30 minutes on easy grids; experts can finish much faster.
What is a naked single?
It is a cell with only one possible value after elimination.
Can Sudoku have multiple solutions?
Proper published Sudoku should have one unique solution.