Naked Single in Sudoku – Last free Cell

In a 9×9 Classic Sudoku game, every row, column, and 3×3 grid must contain a number from 1-9, and the numbers cannot be repeated. The “Naked Single” trick is the most basic trick for beginners. Here are three classic scenarios:

classic Sudoku

Sudoku Row Completion

When there is only one cell left empty in a row (as shown below), just find the missing number from 1-9.

Example: If a row contains [1, 9, 5,__ , 4, 6, 2, 7, 3], the missing number must be 8.

classic row sudoku

Sudoku Column Completion

Apply the same logic to the incomplete column.

Example: In a column showing [8, 7, 2, __, 4, 3, 5, 9, 6], the empty cell obviously needs 1.

classic column sudoku

Sudoku 3×3 Box Completion

Each 3×3 subgrid follows the same rules.
For example: the box containing [1, 7, 9 | 4, 2, 8 | 3, 6, __] can only be filled with 5.

classic gird sudoku

This basic strategy forms the basis of Sudoku solving. By systematically checking for cells in rows, columns, and boxes that have only one possible solution, beginners can confidently fill in the blanks while still following the core rules of Sudoku.

Of course, this is an obvious, single-spaced space that can be seen at a glance.

Let’s look at a slightly more complex single-spaced technique using the three mixed rules of rows, columns, and 3×3 squares.

As shown below, our “Single Tips” button also provides a space for finding single-spaced spaces.

The row, column, and 3×3 square where the current space is located already has non-repeating [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, _], so the current single-spaced space can only be filled with 9

sudoku naked single

OK, now that you have mastered the naked order technique, you can go play a free Easy Sudoku game

February 19, 2025