Best Free Yukon Solitaire
Almost all cards face-up, no stock — move any card with the whole pile on top of it.
Level 1
press P to pause
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How to play
- Grab a card and its pile. Tap any face-up card to select it together with every card stacked on top of it — they move as one group, in whatever order they sit.
- Drop it on the tableau. Tap a column to drop the group onto a card of the opposite colour and one rank higher (a red six on a black seven). Only Kings go to an empty column.
- Build the foundations. Send Aces up first, then build each foundation up by suit to the King. Double-tap a card to send it automatically. Clear all 52 to win.
About Yukon Solitaire
Yukon Solitaire is a bold, open relative of Klondike: there is no stock pile to draw from, and almost every card is dealt face-up from the start, so the whole puzzle is in front of you. The twist that makes Yukon special is how you move cards — you can pick up any face-up card together with every card sitting on top of it, no matter what order those cards are in, and drop the group onto a tableau card of the opposite colour and one rank higher. The goal is the familiar one: build the four foundations up from Ace to King, one suit each, until all 52 cards are home. No signup.
Frequently asked questions
Yukon has no stock or waste pile — almost every card is dealt face-up at the start, so you see nearly the whole layout. And unlike Klondike, you can move any face-up card along with all the cards on top of it, even if that group is not a tidy sequence. The foundation goal (Ace up to King by suit) is the same.
Pick up a face-up card and everything resting on it as a single group, then place it so its bottom card lands on a tableau card of the opposite colour and exactly one rank higher — a red 6 onto a black 7, for example. The cards above the one you grabbed do not need to be in order.
Because you can move groups of cards regardless of their order, you free up plays by relocating buried piles to expose the face-down cards beneath them. Turning every face-down card up is the key to opening the game.
Only a King (with any cards on top of it) can be moved into an empty column, just as in Klondike. Use empty columns as staging space to reorganise the tableau.
No. Some deals cannot be solved no matter how you play, though because almost everything is visible from the start Yukon tends to be more solvable than draw-three Klondike. If you get stuck, start a new game.
Completely free, with no signup, no download and no paywall — it loads and runs entirely in your browser, and nothing is uploaded.
Yes. It runs in your browser, so Yukon Solitaire works on phones and tablets as well as desktop — there is no app to install.
No. Yukon Solitaire works with no signup at all; an optional free account only exists to unlock higher usage limits.
Usually just a few seconds for a typical file — Yukon Solitaire starts working the moment you give it your input.
Your input is processed in memory and never stored, so nothing is left behind once you have your result.