Four difficulty levels
Start with easy forced pairs and triples, then move into harder boards once intersections and candidate pruning feel natural.
Start easy mode →Play online
If you want free Kakuro puzzles you can open instantly in the browser, you are in the right place. Free Kakuro gives you fresh boards, clear clue cells, candidate notes, hints, and multiple difficulty levels without a download or sign-up wall.
New to the puzzle? Start with easy Kakuro. Already know the basics? Jump into the main game and use the Kakuro helper or the combination reference when a run gets sticky.
Start with easy forced pairs and triples, then move into harder boards once intersections and candidate pruning feel natural.
Start easy mode →Use the built-in hint system and candidate grid to keep progress logical instead of guess-driven.
Learn solving techniques →Rules, combinations, and step-by-step articles sit next to the game so you can learn while you play.
Read the rules →Online Kakuro makes the learning loop faster. You can start a fresh puzzle immediately, switch difficulties in a click, and keep candidate notes visible instead of juggling everything mentally.
It also makes practice more deliberate. You can solve a few easy boards to build confidence, then move into medium and hard grids once you are ready for bigger run interactions. If you want a slower tutorial path, the rules guide and Kakuro tips page walk through the logic in plain language.
First puzzle: Go to Easy Kakuro for beginner-first patterns like 3-in-2 and 6-in-3 runs.
Know the basics: Move into the medium Kakuro guide and keep the combination reference open so you can convert clue sums into candidate sets faster.
Want to improve: Read the technique library for cross-sums, locked sets, and residual-sum logic.
Need a break: Try sibling logic games like Free Nonograms or RueDoku for a different deduction rhythm.