Sudoku for Seniors — Free to Print
Large print 9×9 grids in 1-per-page format. Same logic as classic sudoku, comfortably sized.
Puzzle Configuration
Prints the sheet. Mobile tap opens the browser’s save-as-PDF flow.
Puzzle preview
easy
Puzzle ID #29402
Paperless Mode?
Try our focused digital interface designed for eye comfort.
Start Playing Now arrow_forwardSudoku stays a favourite for a reason
Sudoku has been a quiet daily ritual for millions of people for decades — newspapers print one, libraries keep books of them on the shelf, and now generators online let you print as many as you like for free. It's the logic of a crossword without the trivia: anyone can pick up the rules in a minute, and a single puzzle is a focused, screens-off way to spend twenty minutes.
What this page offers is just the printable side, sized for comfortable reading. The grid fills the page, the digits are noticeably larger than what you'll find in a newspaper, and the dividing lines between the nine boxes are heavier so the structure stays clear without leaning in.
What "large print sudoku" actually means here
Standard printed sudokus use cells about the size of a small newspaper headline letter. Large print sudokus, including the ones generated here, use cells roughly twice that area — closer to the size of a paperback book's chapter title than its body text.
The puzzles themselves are identical to any other sudoku — same rules, same solving techniques, same difficulty progression from Easy to Evil. Only the rendering changes. Pick the difficulty you're comfortable with and the layout takes care of the rest.
Every printable here is generated fresh on each visit. You'll never run into the same grid twice unless you specifically re-load one, and there's no daily limit. Print one a day, ten in a sitting, or 60 for a binder — completely up to you.
A few practical notes
Print at 100% ("actual size") rather than "fit to page" — the layout is already sized to fill your sheet, and scaling fights it.
Standard 80 gsm office paper is fine. If you keep finished puzzles to come back to, 100 gsm or card stock feels nicer in the hand and travels well.
An HB pencil with a soft eraser is the most forgiving combination because sudoku rewards changing your mind. Pen works if you prefer the look — many people use a pen for the given numbers and a pencil for their own working.
If you want a small set for someone — a parent, a friend, a community room — print 10 or 20 puzzles, fold them in half and tuck them inside a card stock cover. No licence to worry about, no signup, no attribution required.
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about printing sudoku from Sudoku247Online.
- How is this different from the puzzles in a newspaper?
- Same logic and same difficulty ladder, just bigger on the page. Each cell is roughly twice the area of a typical newspaper sudoku, the digits are easier to read, and the box dividers stand out so you don't lose track of which 3×3 region you're working in.
- Do I need glasses to solve these?
- Less likely than with a standard newspaper sudoku, especially at the Easy and Medium difficulties. The whole point of large print is that the grid is comfortable to read without leaning in.
- Are these the same puzzles as the regular printable ones?
- The same engine generates them — what changes is the size of the rendered grid. You can take any difficulty level (Easy through Evil) and ask for it in large print using the toggle on the print hub.
- Can I print a stack of these as a gift?
- Yes — print as many as you like, fold them into a small booklet, write a cover on card stock. Reproduction is free for personal and community use; no licence, no attribution required.
- Are activity coordinators allowed to print these for residents?
- Absolutely. Libraries, community centres, retirement homes, and care home activity coordinators are explicitly welcome to print and distribute these. We use the same model as Krazydad's printable puzzles: free for non-commercial reproduction.
- Where do I find harder large print puzzles?
- Use the difficulty selector in the print hub. Master and Evil tier puzzles are the hardest the engine generates — and they print just as comfortably in large print as the Easy ones do.