Play Baker's Dozen Solitaire — Thirteen Columns, No Stock, Single-Card Moves
Baker's Dozen is a single-deck patience with all 52 cards face-up from the start. Thirteen tableau columns of four cards each — that's where the name comes from — and no stock or reserve to draw from. You build the tableau down regardless of suit, but only one card at a time. Kings sink to the bottom of their columns at the start, which keeps them out of the way. The all-face-up open information makes Baker's Dozen a pure planning puzzle. Free in your browser, no sign-up. Works offline once the page has loaded.
How Do You Play Baker's Dozen?
Goal: build all four foundations from Ace to King by suit.
Setup
- Tableau: 13 columns of four cards each (52 cards), all face-up.
- Kings: at start, all Kings are moved to the bottom of their columns to keep them from blocking.
- Foundations: four empty piles. Build up by suit, Ace to King.
- No stock, no waste, no reserves.
Rules
- Build tableau columns down regardless of suit. A 7 of any suit goes on an 8 of any suit.
- Move one card at a time. No group moves.
- Foundations build up by suit, Ace to King.
- Empty columns cannot be filled. Once a column empties, the slot is gone.
What's the Best Baker's Dozen Strategy?
- Send Aces and 2s up immediately. They start the foundations and free the cards above them. There's never a reason to keep them in the tableau.
- Don't empty columns gratuitously. Empty columns are permanent — the space is gone forever. Only empty a column when you have a clear plan that benefits from the open structure of the move.
- Plan five moves ahead. Every card is visible. The puzzle is figuring out the order, not finding the cards. Trace consequences before committing.
- Mind which cards block which. A 4 buried under three high cards is a 4 you may never reach. If both other 3s and the matching 4s are blocked, you've lost.
- Use the build-anywhere rule. Build-down regardless of suit gives you more placement options than same-suit games. Use that mobility to expose the right buried cards.
- Send middle ranks up cautiously. 5s, 6s, 7s and 8s are the most useful tableau cards. Sending one up early can leave a higher card stranded with no resting place.
A Short History
Baker's Dozen is a 19th-century single-deck patience that appears in many anthologies. The name refers to the 13 tableau columns — a baker's dozen — not to a person. The variant has stayed in print since at least the early 20th century and is included in many modern multi-game digital collections. Its fixed structure (no stock, no reserves, single-card moves) makes it one of the purest open-information solitaires.
About This Version
This Baker's Dozen runs in your browser — free, no download, no sign-up. Install as an app on your phone or computer; once installed it works offline. Unlimited undo, statistics, and a daily challenge that gives every player the same deal that day.
Other Solitaire Games to Try
- FreeCell — every card visible with four free cells, almost every deal winnable
- Beleaguered Castle — eight columns, all face-up, foundations down the middle
- Spider — two decks, ten columns, suit-based sequences
- Klondike — the seven-column classic with a stock pile