Sudoku exercises working memory, focus and logical reasoning. A 2019 British study of around 19,000 adults aged 50 and over linked regular number-puzzle practice to cognitive performance comparable to people several years younger. But beware: that is a correlation, not proof that sudoku protects the brain. Here is the honest picture.
What the studies show
The most cited reference is a 2019 study published in the International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, covering around 19,000 British participants aged 50 and over. The finding: the more regularly participants did number puzzles like sudoku, the better they performed on tests of attention, reasoning and memory. On some tests, regular players scored on par with people 8 to 10 years younger.
Separately, brain imaging work (near-infrared spectroscopy) has shown that solving sudoku notably activates the prefrontal cortex, the region involved in planning and working memory. Sudoku is a genuine cognitive workout, not passive entertainment.
What the studies do not show
Honesty requires three caveats, which the apps promising to "rejuvenate your brain" happily skip:
- Correlation is not causation. People with strong cognitive abilities may simply be more inclined to do sudoku, not the other way around.
- Training is specific. Doing sudoku mostly makes you better... at sudoku. Transfer to other everyday abilities is still debated in the scientific literature.
- No proof of prevention. To date, nothing demonstrates that sudoku prevents cognitive decline or neurodegenerative disease.
The benefits you get today
You do not need medical promises to justify one grid a day. The immediate benefits are real:
- Deep focus. Ten minutes with your attention on a single problem, a rare thing these days.
- A break that actually rests you. Unlike scrolling, sudoku has an end, a goal and a clear reward.
- A calm ritual. Many players use their grid as a decompression chamber, in the morning or before sleep.
- Measurable progress. Average times dropping, Expert grids becoming reachable: a skill you can watch yourself build.
Playing regularly without burning out
The real cognitive challenge is consistency. A few levers that help, and that we built into SudoKoum:
- Progressive difficulty: five levels, from Easy to Extreme, to stay in the zone where it is stimulating without being discouraging. Our technique guides help you clear each step.
- The daily quest: a small daily goal that nudges the ritual along.
- Progress statistics: watching your time curve drop over three months is motivation in itself.
- Friend challenges: nothing sustains a habit like an opponent with a grudge.
Sources: Brooker et al., "The relationship between the frequency of number puzzle use and baseline cognitive function", International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2019. fNIRS studies on prefrontal activation during sudoku solving (available on PubMed Central). This article is published by Kaizen Suru, maker of SudoKoum, and is not medical advice.