8x8 Sudoku Online: Eight Digits, Endless Challenge

8x8 Sudoku is a mid-large number puzzle played on a grid of 8 rows and 8 columns, divided into eight 4×2 rectangular boxes. Solvers place the digits 1 through 8 so that each digit appears exactly once in every row, every column, and every 4×2 box. With 64 cells and an eight-digit number pool, the 8×8 format is substantially more complex than the 6×6 grid — yet it remains more approachable than the classic 9×9, making it an ideal stepping stone for players building toward full-size Sudoku mastery. All difficulty levels are free to play at SudokuPro.

Characteristics of 8x8 Sudoku

The 8×8 grid introduces structural properties that do not exist in smaller formats, most notably a grid large enough to support column-spanning and row-spanning elimination patterns such as X-Wing.

  • Grid size: 8 rows × 8 columns = 64 cells total
  • Boxes: Eight 4×2 sub-grids (4 columns wide, 2 rows tall), each requiring digits 1–8
  • Number pool: Digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8
  • Starting clues: Ranges from ~38–42 (Easy) down to ~15–18 (Extreme)
  • Unique solution: Every valid 8x8 puzzle has exactly one correct answer, derivable through logic alone

The 4×2 box structure creates a particularly dense set of row-aligned candidate patterns, making locked-candidate and box-line reduction techniques especially effective — and especially necessary — at higher difficulty levels.

Difficulty Levels Available

SudokuPro offers five calibrated difficulty tiers for 8×8 Sudoku:

  • Easy 8x8 Sudoku — ~38–42 clues; solvable with naked singles and direct box scanning
  • Medium 8x8 Sudoku — ~32–36 clues; requires hidden singles and cross-hatching across eight digits
  • Hard 8x8 Sudoku — ~26–30 clues; demands naked and hidden pairs plus locked candidates
  • Expert 8x8 Sudoku — ~20–24 clues; introduces X-Wing, naked triples, and forced chains
  • Extreme 8x8 Sudoku — ~15–18 clues; requires Swordfish, XY-Wing, and deep bifurcation

What Makes 8x8 Sudoku Unique

The 8×8 grid is the smallest Sudoku format where fish patterns — specifically X-Wing — can meaningfully emerge. An X-Wing requires a digit's candidates to align across exactly two rows and two columns forming a rectangle; with eight rows and eight columns available, this configuration appears regularly at Expert difficulty and above. Players who master 8×8 Expert are effectively learning the same techniques used to solve the hardest published 9×9 Sudoku puzzles.

Next Steps

Choose your difficulty below, study the relevant techniques in the SudokuPro How-to-Play guide, and play for free on the SudokuPro homepage. Already comfortable with 6×6? The 6x6 Sudoku hub is one step back if you need a refresher.