Play Jigsaw Sudoku Online Free
Jigsaw Sudoku is a Sudoku variation where the usual 3×3 boxes are replaced by irregular jigsaw-shaped regions. Fill the grid with digits 1–9 so every row, column, and outlined region contains each number exactly once. Play free, no sign-up required.
How to Play Jigsaw Sudoku (60-second guide)
Jigsaw Sudoku uses the same core logic as classic Sudoku, but the regions have irregular shapes instead of square boxes. Your goal is to complete the grid without repeating digits in any row, column, or region.
- Each row must contain digits 1–9 once
- Each column must contain digits 1–9 once
- Each outlined jigsaw region must contain digits 1–9 once
- Region shapes may bend, stretch, or wrap around nearby cells
- Start with rows, columns, or regions that already contain many numbers
Keep Playing
- Your Progress — track solved Jigsaw Sudoku puzzles and improve your completion time
- Save & Continue Later — your progress is saved automatically in your browser, no account needed
- Choose Your Difficulty — play Easy, Medium, Hard, or Expert Jigsaw Sudoku puzzles
- Use Hints When Stuck — get a useful nudge without restarting the puzzle
Choose Your Difficulty
- Easy Jigsaw Sudoku — best for learning irregular regions and simple placements
- Medium Jigsaw Sudoku — balanced puzzles with more region-based deduction
- Hard Jigsaw Sudoku — fewer obvious moves and stronger interaction between regions
- Expert Jigsaw Sudoku — advanced irregular Sudoku puzzles for experienced solvers
What Is Jigsaw Sudoku?
Jigsaw Sudoku, also called Irregular Sudoku or Nonomino Sudoku, is a variant of the classic 9×9 Sudoku puzzle. The familiar row and column rules stay the same, but the standard 3×3 boxes are replaced by nine irregularly shaped regions. Each region still contains exactly nine cells and must include every digit from 1 to 9 once.
This small rule change makes the puzzle feel fresh. In classic Sudoku, box boundaries are predictable. In Jigsaw Sudoku, the region shapes create new solving patterns, unexpected restrictions, and different ways for rows, columns, and regions to interact.
Characteristics of Jigsaw Sudoku
- Grid layout: standard 9×9 grid with irregular jigsaw-shaped regions
- Number pool: digits 1–9
- Main rule: every row, column, and region must contain each digit once
- Region style: nine outlined regions with non-square shapes
- Unique solution: every valid puzzle has exactly one solution
- Typical solve time: 3–7 min on Easy, 20+ min on Expert
- Best for: Sudoku players who want familiar rules with a more flexible region layout
Solving Strategies for Jigsaw Sudoku
Strategy 1: Treat Regions Like Boxes
Every jigsaw region works like a Sudoku box: it must contain digits 1–9 once. Even if the shape is unusual, scan each region for missing numbers and check where they can legally fit.
Strategy 2: Watch Region Borders Carefully
The hardest part of Jigsaw Sudoku is remembering where each region begins and ends. Follow the outlined borders before placing a number, especially when a region bends around another group of cells.
Strategy 3: Combine Row, Column, and Region Logic
A number may look possible in a row, but the jigsaw region can block it. Check all three constraints together: row, column, and region. The correct placement is often the only cell that satisfies all three.
Related Logic Puzzles
If you enjoy Jigsaw Sudoku's irregular region logic, these puzzles use similar deduction skills with their own twist:
- Sudoku — the classic 9×9 puzzle with rows, columns, and regular 3×3 boxes.
- Futoshiki — uses row and column uniqueness with greater-than and less-than clues.
- Calcudoku — combines Sudoku-style uniqueness with arithmetic cages.
- Killer Sudoku — adds cage sums while keeping Sudoku logic.
- Skyscrapers — uses row and column uniqueness with visibility clues from the grid edges.