More Daily Puzzles
Challenge yourself with a different sudoku variant every day. Each puzzle uses the same daily system — one new puzzle, same for everyone, with streaks and sharing.
Daily Easy Sudoku: One Fresh Beginner-Friendly Puzzle Every Day
Daily Easy Sudoku is designed for solvers who want a calm, reliable, beginner-friendly puzzle every day. Instead of wondering whether today's grid will suddenly demand advanced techniques, you get a fresh easy sudoku with more starting numbers, clear logical steps, and a steady level of difficulty. It is ideal for a morning warm-up, a short lunch break, a wind-down before bed, or a simple daily habit that keeps your pattern recognition sharp without turning the puzzle into a marathon.
The goal of this page is not just to give you another random easy puzzle. The daily format makes the puzzle feel shared: everyone gets the same challenge for the day, so you can compare times, mistakes, streaks, and solving approaches without revealing the answer. The grid changes each day, the difficulty stays gentle, and the page keeps the useful tools close to the board so you can focus on solving rather than fiddling with settings.
If you searched for daily easy sudoku, you probably want a puzzle that is free, quick to start, and pleasant enough to come back to tomorrow. That is exactly what this page is for. You can play directly in the browser, use notes when you want them, ask for a hint if you get stuck, undo a move, share your result, and return through the calendar to practise older easy puzzles.
What Makes This a Daily Easy Sudoku Puzzle?
A sudoku puzzle is usually called easy when it offers enough given digits to create many obvious entry points. A hard puzzle may leave you staring at a sparse grid, trying to build long chains of possibility. An easy puzzle should feel more welcoming. There are still blank cells to solve, but the rows, columns, and 3x3 boxes contain enough information for you to make progress with scanning, elimination, and singles.
On a daily easy sudoku, the consistency matters as much as the label. You can open the page expecting a puzzle that uses straightforward logic rather than hidden traps. That makes it useful for beginners learning the rules, casual players who prefer a relaxing pace, and experienced solvers who want a quick confidence-building solve before trying medium, hard, or expert puzzles.
Every completed easy grid still gives the same small satisfaction as a tougher puzzle: each digit has to fit the row, column, and box; every placement narrows the remaining choices; and the final solved grid only works when all 81 cells agree. The difference is that the route is shorter and clearer, which makes the daily habit easier to maintain.
How to Solve the Daily Easy Puzzle
Start with a slow scan of the board before entering anything. Look for rows, columns, or boxes that already contain many numbers. These areas usually give you the first easy placements. If a row has seven filled cells, the two missing digits are often simple to test against their columns and boxes. If a 3x3 box is almost complete, check which digits are missing and where each one can legally go.
The most useful technique for easy sudoku is the naked single. A naked single appears when one empty cell has only one possible digit left. You find it by ruling out the digits that already appear in the same row, column, and box. Because easy puzzles have more clues, naked singles appear often and can create a chain of new placements.
The second technique is the hidden single. A hidden single happens when a digit has only one possible position within a row, column, or box, even if that cell appears to have several candidates at first glance. For example, if the digit 6 can only fit in one square of a box, that square must be 6. Hidden singles are common in easy puzzles and are a great way to build real sudoku skill without jumping into advanced patterns.
Use notes if you are not sure. Pencil marks are not a sign that the puzzle is hard; they are a way to make the logic visible. On an easy grid, you may only need two or three candidates in a few cells. Once a digit is placed nearby, those notes shrink, and the next single often appears naturally.
- Scan the fullest areas first: rows, columns, and boxes with many givens usually contain the quickest wins.
- Check one digit at a time: choose a number such as 1, then look across all boxes to see where it can still go.
- Use elimination: every placed number removes options from its row, column, and box.
- Avoid guessing: if you cannot explain why a digit belongs, keep scanning until a logical placement appears.
A Good Daily Easy Sudoku Routine
A consistent routine helps you solve faster without rushing. First, fill the obvious singles. Second, move through the digits from 1 to 9 and check whether any number has only one possible place in a box. Third, revisit the rows and columns that changed, because each new digit may unlock another cell. This loop is simple, but it is powerful enough for easy puzzles.
Many players like to solve the daily easy puzzle at the same time each day. That turns the puzzle into a small ritual rather than a one-off distraction. Because the grid is designed to be approachable, you can finish it even when you only have a few minutes. Over a week or two, you will probably notice that your scanning gets smoother and your hesitation drops.
If you are learning sudoku, do not worry about speed at first. A clean solve with no guessing is more valuable than a fast solve full of mistakes. Once the basic patterns feel automatic, your time will improve by itself. The daily streak gives you a reason to return, but the real progress is in the way you start seeing the grid more clearly.
Why the Same Puzzle for Everyone Is Useful
Random easy sudoku puzzles are useful for practice, but a shared daily puzzle adds a social layer. If a friend, family member, classmate, or colleague plays the same grid, you can compare the result without arguing about whether one puzzle was easier than another. The puzzle is identical, so the comparison is fair.
The share button is designed for that exact purpose. It lets you copy a spoiler-free result showing your time, mistakes, and streak without posting the solution. You can celebrate a personal best, invite someone else to try the same grid, or simply keep a record of your daily habit.
The archive is useful too. If you miss a day, want more practice, or want to replay a puzzle from a specific date, the calendar lets you go back. Archive solves are best treated as practice, while today's puzzle remains the main daily challenge.
Features Built for Easier Solving
The board includes notes, undo, redo, erase, hints, timing, mistake tracking, streaks, sharing, and a puzzle archive. These tools are meant to support the solving process without taking over. Notes help you organise candidates. Undo and redo let you correct slips. Erase keeps the board tidy. Hints give a nudge when you are stuck, especially if you are still learning how to spot singles.
Because this is an easy sudoku page, the tools should feel optional. You can solve the whole puzzle with pure logic, or you can use the interface to learn more comfortably. Beginners often benefit from hints and notes, while experienced players may use the timer and streaks to make the puzzle more motivating.
Daily Easy Sudoku Versus Regular Easy Sudoku
The regular easy sudoku page is best when you want unlimited practice. You can solve one grid, start another, and keep playing as long as you like. Daily Easy Sudoku has a different purpose: it gives you one highlighted puzzle for the day, with shared results and a streak. The daily version is about habit, comparison, and a small sense of occasion.
It also differs from the main daily sudoku page, where the difficulty may change across the week. If you enjoy a mixed challenge, the main daily puzzle is a good next step. If you specifically want an easy puzzle every day, this page keeps the experience predictable.
Who Should Play Daily Easy Sudoku?
New solvers can use it to practise the rules without being overwhelmed. Returning players can use it to rebuild confidence after a break. Teachers and parents can use a shared daily puzzle as a quick logic exercise, because everyone starts from the same grid. Experienced players can treat it as a warm-up before harder sudoku variants such as killer sudoku, jigsaw sudoku, X-sudoku, samurai sudoku, or wordoku.
Easy does not mean pointless. A well-made easy puzzle trains observation, patience, and accuracy. It rewards clean thinking rather than guesswork. For many people, that is the best version of sudoku: enough challenge to feel satisfying, but not so much difficulty that the puzzle stops being relaxing.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
The most common mistake is placing a digit because it "looks right" rather than because it is forced. Sudoku is a logic puzzle, so every correct move has a reason. Before entering a number, ask which row, column, and box prove that placement. If you cannot answer, pause and look for a stronger clue.
Another mistake is scanning the whole board too quickly. Easy puzzles often hide progress in plain sight. Slow down near almost-complete boxes, rows with many givens, and digits that already appear several times. A careful scan of one small area is often more productive than a fast glance at the entire grid.
Finally, do not ignore mistakes. If the page marks a wrong entry, treat it as useful feedback. Remove the digit, check the affected row, column, and box, and rebuild the logic. The correction process helps you learn faster than guessing again.
After You Finish Today's Puzzle
When the grid is complete, check your time, mistakes, and streak. If you are happy with the result, share it. If you found the puzzle comfortable, try the Daily Medium Sudoku for a slightly deeper challenge, or use the regular Easy Sudoku page for more beginner-friendly practice. If you want variety, the daily puzzle collection includes classic, killer, jigsaw, X-sudoku, samurai, sandwich, and wordoku options.
Most importantly, come back tomorrow. A single easy sudoku is enjoyable; a daily easy sudoku habit is where the benefits build. The more often you solve, the faster you recognise patterns, the less you rely on guessing, and the more natural the logic feels.
Frequently Asked Questions
A new beginner-friendly sudoku puzzle every day. Always easy difficulty, same puzzle for everyone, with its own streak tracking.
The regular Daily Sudoku changes difficulty through the week. Daily Easy is always easy — a different puzzle with its own streak.
Yes! Every visitor sees the same daily easy puzzle. Compare your time with friends.
More given digits (38–45 out of 81 cells), simpler logic required — just basic scanning and naked singles. No advanced techniques needed.
Absolutely. Use the calendar below the puzzle. Archive puzzles don't affect your streak.
Yes, 100% free with no sign-up or paywall. Open the page and start solving immediately.