Ditch the spreadsheet for tracking your jigsaw puzzles. A dedicated app acts as a digital diary for your hobby, letting you log your collection, track your progress, and build a history of every masterpiece you conquer.
You don't just do a puzzle. You conquer it. You live with it on your dining room table for a week, a corner of your brain completely occupied by its shapes and colors. And when it’s done, you deserve more than a blurry photo before sweeping the pieces back into the box.
For a long time, serious puzzlers used spreadsheets or notebooks to keep track of their work. It was clunky, but it was something. You'd list the brand, the piece count, maybe a note about how maddening that solid blue sky section was. But it’s not 2003 anymore. Your obsession deserves an app.
A good jigsaw puzzle tracker is a digital diary for your hobby. It’s for tracking everything you do with a puzzle, from the moment you want it to the moment you finish it. You log the brand, artist, piece count, and dimensions.
Most apps let you sort your collection into lists: "Completed," "Wishlist," and the ever-present "In Progress." You'll never accidentally buy the same puzzle twice or forget about the one you stashed in the closet. Some apps even have a barcode scanner that makes adding new puzzles ridiculously fast.
The best apps get that puzzling is an experience. Many have a built-in timer (with a pause button, thankfully) if you like to challenge yourself. You can also track your work with photos over a few days or weeks, which creates a cool time-lapse of your progress.
I remember working on a 2000-piece monstrosity of a European castle. It was a brutal, month-long slog. Every evening at 8:17 PM, after my kid was asleep, I’d put on a podcast and work for an hour. Logging that small progress each night felt like a tiny victory. It kept me going when all I saw was a sea of identical grey stone pieces. That visual record of slow, steady progress is something a checklist just can't give you.
After you place that final piece, the app lets you rate the puzzle's difficulty and how much you liked it. Over time, you build a personal history of your own experiences that helps you pick the next one.
Sometimes puzzling is part of a bigger goal, like finishing one a month or using it to meditate. For that, a general habit tracker can work well.
Apps like Streaks or Habitify let you set a goal—"Puzzle for 15 minutes"—and keep the chain going. Seeing an unbroken streak is often all the motivation you need. Some of these apps also have focus timers, like the Pomodoro technique. You set a timer, put your phone away, and just focus on the puzzle.
There are a few main apps in this space. Puzzle Tracker (iOS and Android) is a favorite among puzzlers and covers the basics: galleries, timers, progress photos, and sharing. My Puzzle Cabinet is a good choice if you prefer to keep all your data on your device, and it lets you export your collection. For people with huge collections, iCollect Everything syncs between your phone and computer.
The right app depends on what you need. Do you want to share your finished work with a community? Or do you just need a personal database to make sure you don't buy a fifth Thomas Kinkade painting?
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