🧮 Killer Sudoku Calculator

Stuck on a tricky cage? Enter the target sum and the number of cells below to instantly reveal all possible unique number combinations.

Possible Combinations 0 Found

Pro Tip 💡

Combinations with only 1 possible answer are the key to cracking Killer Sudoku. Look for extreme highs or extreme lows!

Example: A 2-cell cage totaling 17 can ONLY be [8, 9].

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Instant Combinations Calculator

Never get stuck on a tricky mathematical cage again. Instantly find every possible unique number combination for any given sum and cell size.

🧮 The Ultimate Killer Sudoku Calculator

Killer Sudoku is arguably the most demanding variant of the classic game. Not only do you have to use spatial logic to ensure no numbers repeat in a row or column, but you also have to constantly perform mental math to ensure the digits inside a dotted “cage” add up perfectly to the target sum.

Doing this math in your head can be exhausting, especially for large cages. That is exactly why we built this interactive killer sudoku calculator. Whether you are playing on paper or tackling a tough digital grid, our sudoku killer calculator acts as your ultimate sidekick, instantly displaying all the possible mathematical permutations so you can focus on the logic!

🗾 Where Killer Sudoku Cage Math Comes From

Killer Sudoku is younger than classic Sudoku. The variant gained prominence in Japan in the late 1990s under names like “Sum Number Place” (数独足し算, sudoku tashizan), and reached international audiences a few years later through The Times of London, the same paper that popularized standard Sudoku in 2004.

The core insight that makes Killer puzzles work is borrowed from a much older Japanese puzzle tradition called Kakuro (also known as “Cross Sums”), which had been published in Japan since the 1960s. Kakuro asks players to fill a crossword-like grid with digits that sum to clue numbers. Killer Sudoku applies the same sum logic to Sudoku-style regions, then adds the row, column, and box constraints from standard Sudoku on top.

What makes Killer distinctive is the “cage” itself: a group of cells outlined with dashed borders, with a target sum printed in the corner. Cages can span any arrangement of adjacent cells. The constraint is that the digits inside the cage must sum to the target AND no digit can repeat inside the cage. The mathematical layer plus the standard Sudoku rules makes Killer the most computationally demanding variant in the Sudoku family.

⚙️ How to use the Cage Math Engine

Our killer sudoku combination calculator is designed to be incredibly fast and easy to read. Here is how you can use it to crack your puzzles:

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Input

Target Sums

Every dotted cage has a small number printed in the top-left corner. Use the “+” and “-” buttons on the killer sudoku sum calculator to match that target number.

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Variables

Cell Counts

Input the total number of blocks inside the specific cage. The killer sudoku cage calculator will instantly filter the math to only show combinations that use exactly that many digits.

🧠 Master Strategy: Hunting for “Magic Cages”

If you want to solve extreme puzzles, you need to learn how to identify what the community calls “Magic Cages.” These are specific cage sizes and sums that only have one possible mathematical answer.

  1. The Extremes: Magic cages always exist at the extreme highs and extreme lows of the mathematical spectrum. For example, a 2-cell cage totaling 3 can ONLY be [1, 2]. A 2-cell cage totaling 17 can ONLY be [8, 9].
  2. Visual Highlighting: If you use our calculator to find a specific sum, and only one unique combination exists, the tool will highlight the answer in bright green and trigger a celebratory animation. You should always hunt for these green answers first!
  3. Pencil Drafting: Once you find a magic cage, you instantly know which digits belong inside it. Even if you don’t know the exact order yet, you can write them in as pencil notes and immediately begin using the “Naked Pair” strategy to solve the rest of the board.

💻 Ready to test your math?

If you are tired of playing on paper, put the calculator to the test in our interactive Killer Sudoku Online interface! If you prefer physical paper but want fresh grids, generate endless PDFs with our Printable Generator.

📊 The Most Useful Cage Combinations to Memorize

You can finish Killer Sudoku puzzles without memorizing any cage math. The calculator above will do it for you. However, certain combinations come up so often that memorizing them speeds up every solve by skipping the lookup entirely.

These are the single-solution cages, also known as Magic Cages. They have exactly one possible combination of digits, so the moment you spot them on the board, you know which digits live inside.

2-Cell Cages (one solution each):

  • Sum 3 = {1, 2}
  • Sum 4 = {1, 3}
  • Sum 16 = {7, 9}
  • Sum 17 = {8, 9}

3-Cell Cages (one solution each):

  • Sum 6 = {1, 2, 3}
  • Sum 7 = {1, 2, 4}
  • Sum 23 = {6, 8, 9}
  • Sum 24 = {7, 8, 9}

4-Cell Cages (one solution each):

  • Sum 10 = {1, 2, 3, 4}
  • Sum 11 = {1, 2, 3, 5}
  • Sum 29 = {5, 7, 8, 9}
  • Sum 30 = {6, 7, 8, 9}

5-Cell Cages (one solution each):

  • Sum 15 = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}
  • Sum 16 = {1, 2, 3, 4, 6}
  • Sum 34 = {4, 6, 7, 8, 9}
  • Sum 35 = {5, 6, 7, 8, 9}

8-Cell Cages (always one solution):

Every 8-cell cage has exactly one solution. Subtract the cage sum from 45 to find the single digit that is missing from the cage. For example, an 8-cell cage with sum 37 must contain every digit except 8, because 45 minus 37 equals 8. This makes 8-cell cages some of the most informative shapes on the board, even though they are visually less obvious than 2-cell pairs.

9-Cell Cages:

A 9-cell cage always contains every digit from 1 to 9, so the sum is always exactly 45. These cages function as the entire row, column, or box rule expressed as a single cage.

When you scan a new Killer puzzle, mark these magic cages first. Each one fixes a small set of digits in place and instantly tightens the constraints on every cell those digits share a row, column, or 3×3 box with.

🧠 When to Reach for the Calculator vs. Solve It in Your Head

The calculator’s biggest value comes from cages where the math is genuinely difficult. For other situations, the lookup costs you more time than the deduction would. Three scenarios where you should always use the calculator, and three where you almost certainly should not.

Use the calculator when:

  • You hit a cage with 5 or more cells and a non-extreme sum (anywhere between 15 and 35). The number of possible combinations gets large fast, and listing them mentally is error-prone.
  • You suspect a naked subset deduction (three cells must contain the digits 1, 2, and 4, for example) and you want to verify the complete set of combinations before placing notes.
  • You are solving a hard or expert puzzle where every locked-in digit unlocks the next step. The calculator’s certainty is worth more than the few seconds it costs.

Solve it in your head when:

  • The cage has only 2 or 3 cells. Two-cell sums and three-cell sums are short enough that mental math is faster than typing into the calculator.
  • The cage sits at an extreme (a sum of 3, 4, 16, or 17 for a 2-cell cage, for example). These are the magic cages from the section above. If you recognize the pattern, the calculator is just confirmation.
  • You are still learning Killer Sudoku. The mental discipline of computing 2-cell and 3-cell cages by hand teaches you the arithmetic patterns Killer rewards. Skipping that habit by always reaching for the calculator slows your long-term progress.

The calculator is here for the messy middle: 4-cell and larger cages with sums that have many valid combinations. That is where it earns its keep.

❓ Calculator FAQs

🤔 Can a number repeat inside a cage?
No. The fundamental rule of Killer Sudoku is that a number cannot repeat within a single dotted cage. This is why our calculator will never show a combination like [2, 2] for a 2-cell cage totaling 4. It will only show mathematically unique permutations.
🚫 Why is the calculator saying “Mathematically impossible”?
If you enter extreme values, it is possible that no combination exists. For example, because you cannot repeat numbers, it is mathematically impossible to have a 3-cell cage that adds up to 5. The absolute lowest unique combination for 3 cells is [1, 2, 3], which adds up to 6.
📈 What is the “Rule of 45”?
The Rule of 45 is a famous Killer strategy. Because every row, column, and 3×3 block must contain the numbers 1 through 9 exactly once, the sum of any complete row, column, or block will always equal exactly 45. Advanced players use this rule to deduce numbers in cages that bleed out of a 3×3 block.
📏 What is the smallest possible sum for a Killer cage?
It depends on the cage size, because every digit inside a cage must be unique. A 2-cell cage minimum is 1 + 2 = 3. A 3-cell minimum is 1 + 2 + 3 = 6. A 4-cell minimum is 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10. The general rule is that the smallest valid sum for an N-cell cage is the sum of digits 1 through N. The maximum follows the same logic from the top: a 2-cell cage maxes out at 8 + 9 = 17, a 3-cell at 7 + 8 + 9 = 24, and so on.
📄 Can I use this calculator with paper Killer Sudoku puzzles?
Yes. The calculator is designed to work as a sidekick for paper play. Set the cage sum from your printed puzzle, set the cell count, and the tool returns every valid combination. Many players keep this page open on a phone or laptop next to a paper Killer puzzle for exactly that reason. If you need fresh paper puzzles, our Killer Sudoku Printable Generator produces PDFs in three difficulty levels.
🔍 What is the “innie / outie” technique in Killer Sudoku?
It is an advanced strategy built on the Rule of 45. An “innie” is a single cell inside a 3×3 box where every other cell in that box belongs to cages that extend outside the box; you can compute the innie’s value by subtracting the sum of the in-box portions of those cages from 45. An “outie” works the reverse direction, for a single cell that sticks out of a 3×3 box. Both techniques can crack stuck positions where direct cage logic has stalled, and both are easier with the calculator open as a sidekick.
📐 Are there Killer Sudoku puzzles in sizes other than 9×9?
Almost all published Killer Sudoku puzzles use the standard 9×9 board with 3×3 boxes, because cage math becomes either too restrictive on smaller grids (4×4 or 6×6) or computationally explosive on larger grids (16×16 and 25×25). A few specialty puzzle books include 6×6 Killer variants for beginners, but they are uncommon. Our Killer Sudoku page hosts the standard 9×9 format.
🎮 Where can I play Killer Sudoku online?
Sudoku Leader’s Killer Sudoku page hosts unlimited free Killer puzzles in Easy and Hard difficulty, with a live timer, cage validator, and global leaderboard. You can keep this calculator open in a separate tab while you play. If you prefer paper, the Killer Sudoku Printable Generator produces fresh printable PDFs with solution keys included.