Most solitaire deals are winnable, but most players don't win them. The gap is mostly strategic — not luck. This guide covers the universal principles that improve win rates across every major variant, then applies them to Klondike, Spider, FreeCell, TriPeaks and Golf with concrete targets you can measure against.
Solver research on Klondike Draw-3 (Yan, Diaconis, Rusmevichientong, & Van Roy, 2005, NeurIPS) puts the upper bound at roughly 82% of deals being mathematically solvable. Skilled human play sits well below that — typically 30-38% — which is exactly where strategy lives.
Before diving into game-specific strategies, master these universal principles that apply to ALL solitaire games:
The #1 mistake beginners make: Making the obvious move without thinking ahead.
Expert approach: Before every move, ask "What happens after this?" Consider the next 2-5 moves as a sequence.
Impact: This single habit can double your win rate.
Why it matters: More information = more options = better decisions = more wins.
Expert tip: When choosing between two moves of equal value, always pick the one that reveals a hidden card.
Exception: Unless you're about to win the game, revealing cards takes priority over nearly everything.
The power of empty spaces: Empty columns are like "wild cards" in solitaire—they provide maximum flexibility.
Expert rule: Only fill empty columns when you have a strong strategic reason, not just because you can.
Best use: Save empty columns for moving long sequences or critical card manipulations.
Reframe your thinking: Undo isn't cheating—it's how experts test hypotheses.
Expert technique: Try risky moves, undo if they fail, and learn what works without penalty.
Progressive strategy: Start using undo frequently, gradually reducing as you internalize patterns.
Surprising truth: Many "obviously lost" games are still winnable with creative play.
Expert mindset: Play every game until you're 100% certain there's no possible move sequence.
Learning value: Difficult endgames teach the most valuable lessons.
Target win rate: Beginners 10-15%, Intermediate 25-35%, Expert 30-38%
#1 Klondike Strategy: Don't Move to Foundations Too Early
Beginners move cards to foundations immediately. This is often wrong!
Why: Cards in foundations can't be used to build sequences in tableau. Keep cards playable until you need to move them.
Rule of thumb: Only move to foundations when:
Target win rates with skilled play: 1-Suit (80-90%), 2-Suit (30-50%), 4-Suit (5-15%). Even strong players win fewer than 1 in 6 four-suit deals; the variant rewards process, not outcome.
#1 Spider Strategy: Build In-Suit Sequences
Mixed-suit sequences = death in Spider. You can only move complete same-suit runs.
Priority hierarchy:
Target win rate: Beginners 40-50%, Intermediate 60-75%, Expert 80-95%
#1 FreeCell Strategy: Empty Columns > Free Cells
Empty columns are exponentially more valuable than free cells.
Math: With 1 empty column, you can move 4 cards. With 2 empties, you can move 12 cards!
Strategy: Prioritize creating and maintaining empty columns over filling them.
Target win rate: Beginners 30-40%, Intermediate 50-65%, Expert 65-80%
Target win rate: Beginners 60-70%, Intermediate 75-85%, Expert 85-92%
You don't need to memorize every card. Focus on:
How experts get fast: They recognize patterns instantly instead of calculating each move.
Development: Play 50-100 games to internalize common patterns
Key patterns to learn:
Think in objectives, not moves:
The trap: Clicking obvious moves without thinking
The fix: Force yourself to pause 2 seconds before EVERY move
Impact: This alone improves win rates by 10-20%
The trap: Ignoring visible patterns and card positions
The fix: Before each move, scan the entire board
The trap: Assuming "stuck" means "lost"
The fix: Explore every possible move combination before quitting
The trap: Random decision-making without principles
The fix: Develop personal rules and follow them consistently
The trap: Playing without measuring improvement
The fix: Track win rates over 20-game windows
1. Embrace the Grind: Improvement takes 50-100 games minimum. Accept this.
2. Learn from Every Loss: After each loss, identify ONE mistake. Don't repeat it.
3. Celebrate Small Wins: "I revealed three cards before getting stuck" is progress.
4. Stay Calm Under Pressure: Emotional decisions = bad decisions
5. Patience is Skill: Slow, thoughtful play beats fast, careless play
Week 1: Foundation Building
Week 2: Pattern Recognition
Week 3: Advanced Techniques
Week 4: Mastery Refinement
What to expect: Roughly 100 deals of focused play is enough to internalize the patterns above and close most of the gap to skilled-play targets for your chosen variant. Improvement plateaus past that — expert play differs from intermediate play mostly in pattern recognition speed, not new techniques.
You can't. Many solitaire deals are mathematically unwinnable (15-30% depending on variant). Even experts with perfect play can't win every game. Focus on maximizing your win rate, not achieving 100%.
It varies by game: Klondike Draw-3 (20-30% is good), Klondike Draw-1 (35-45%), FreeCell (70-85%), Spider 2-Suit (40-60%), Golf (80-90%).
Basic competency: 20-50 games (1-2 weeks). Intermediate skill: 100-200 games (1-2 months). Expert level: 500+ games (3-6 months) depending on complexity.
Depends on the variant. FreeCell is 95% skill. Klondike is 50/50. Pyramid is 60% luck. Generally, harder games reward skill more.
No! In Klondike, keeping cards playable is often better. In FreeCell, you can move more aggressively. It depends on the situation.
TrySolitaire's built-in solver answers this instantly — it checks your Klondike game in real time and shows a green checkmark (winnable) or red X (unsolvable). Without a solver, look for warning signs: key cards buried with no access, deadlocked sequences with no empty columns, or stock exhausted with no moves. You can also use "Deal Winnable" to only play solvable games. Learn more about winnability →
No! Undo is a learning tool. Expert players use undo to test hypotheses. As you improve, you'll naturally use it less.
1) Play consistently (20+ games/week), 2) Focus on one strategy at a time, 3) Analyze losses, 4) Track statistics, 5) Watch expert players.
Every variant covered above runs in your browser here, with the tools that make deliberate practice possible: unlimited undo for testing hypotheses, a built-in Klondike solver that flags unwinnable deals so you stop spending time on them, statistics tracking across sessions, and a "Deal Winnable" mode for when you want to focus purely on technique.
If you enjoy solitaire's calm pace and pure-skill character, two related single-player games carry over the same habits:
Last Updated: May 8, 2026 | TrySolitaire.com – Master solitaire strategy