Mazes
One-Way Maze
Arrows restrict movement to one direction only — adds extra complexity.
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What this tool does
A standard maze where each cell has an arrow showing the only legal exit direction. The arrows are computed from a BFS tree from start to finish, so a unique route always exists. Optional solution overlay highlights the route.
Free downloads
Ready-made One-Way Maze printables — free PDF downloads
No setup needed — download these print-ready one-way mazes as free PDFs. Each one was made with the generator above, so you can recreate or fully customize any of them.

One-Way Maze — Easy
Print-ready one-way maze (Easy) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — Medium
Print-ready one-way maze (Medium) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — Hard
Print-ready one-way maze (Hard) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — 10×10
Print-ready one-way maze (10×10) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — 14×14
Print-ready one-way maze (14×14) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — 20×20
Print-ready one-way maze (20×20) as a free PDF — made with the generator above so you can tweak and reprint.
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One-Way Maze — Easy, with answer key
Completed answer key for the Easy one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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One-Way Maze — Medium, with answer key
Completed answer key for the Medium one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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One-Way Maze — Hard, with answer key
Completed answer key for the Hard one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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One-Way Maze — 10×10, with answer key
Completed answer key for the 10×10 one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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One-Way Maze — 14×14, with answer key
Completed answer key for the 14×14 one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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One-Way Maze — 20×20, with answer key
Completed answer key for the 20×20 one-way maze — print-ready PDF for fast marking.
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Settings
Customize your one-way maze
14×14 one-way, medium on A4, plus solution.
Grid size
Difficulty
Paper size
Preview
Sample maze with arrows
Each open passage has an arrow restricting movement to one direction.
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Feedback
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Print a One-Way Maze with Arrow-Locked Cells
Print a one-way maze where every cell shows an arrow. The solver may only leave a cell through the direction its arrow points, so the usual "trial-and-backtrack" tactic stops working. Instead, the path is enforced by the arrows themselves and the route becomes a careful sequence of committed moves.
The generator produces a print-ready PDF in A4 or US Letter with a clean branded layout and an optional solution overlay. Adjust the grid size and difficulty, and a fresh one-way maze is ready to print in seconds.
This tool suits parents looking for a brain-teasing quiet-time puzzle, teachers planning logic starters, tutors working on directed-graph thinking, and puzzle-fans who enjoy mazes with an unusual twist.
Why use a one-way maze?
A one-way maze demands planning. Because you cannot walk back against an arrow, the solver has to look ahead a few moves and pick routes that do not dead-end into a locked direction. It is excellent logic practice and a refreshing change from the usual "follow the wall" tactic.
- logic starters in Year 5, Year 6, and secondary
- introduction to directed graphs and one-way streets
- quiet-time brain-teasing at home
- homework that rewards careful reading
- tutoring sessions on sequencing and planning
- after-school logic clubs
- homeschool enrichment puzzles
Because the arrows are computed from a breadth-first search tree from start to finish, a valid route always exists and the puzzle is guaranteed solvable.
What you can customise
Quick, focused settings keep the tool easy to use.
- Grid size: From small gentle grids up to a 22x22 full-page challenge
- Difficulty: Tunes the path length and the number of misleading arrows
- Include solution: Append a page with the route overlaid on the grid
- Seed: Reproduce a layout or leave blank for a fresh one
- Paper type: A4 or US Letter PDF output
Start at size 10 for a friendly first puzzle; push towards size 20 for a proper brain-teaser.
Notes and limitations
- Arrows are unique per cell — solvers cannot choose an alternate exit direction.
- Higher difficulty packs more misleading arrows near the true path.
- Print at 100% scale to keep the arrow glyphs crisp and readable.
- Very large grids may slow some older printers; stick to 18x18 if print speed matters.
Who this maze is for
Children
Older children who enjoy thinking ahead and planning a sequence of moves.
Parents
A lovely quiet-time puzzle that feels different from the usual maze booklets.
Teachers
Pair with lessons on sequencing, directed graphs, or algorithmic thinking.
Puzzle-fans
Solvers who like unusual twists on the classic maze will appreciate the arrow constraint.
How to use the tool
- Pick a grid size to suit the solver.
- Set a difficulty level.
- Turn Include solution on if you want an answer overlay.
- Optionally set a seed.
- Choose A4 or US Letter paper.
- Click Generate and preview the page.
- Download the PDF.
Worked example
Suppose a Year 7 teacher wants an intro-to-graphs starter. Pick Size: 14, Difficulty: medium, Include solution: on, Paper: A4. The generator lays out a 14x14 grid where every cell shows an up, down, left, or right arrow. The solver starts at the top-left, reads the arrow, steps into the next cell, and repeats. Dead-end sequences in the arrow graph mean some paths lead to a trap cell that points back into a cycle. The correct route — about 45 steps — reaches the finish in the bottom-right, and the solution overlay highlights it step by step.
Methodology
The generator first carves a perfect maze with a recursive backtracker, then runs a breadth-first search from start to every reachable cell. For each cell, the arrow is set to the direction of its BFS parent — the neighbour one step closer to the start. Reversing this gives the solver a unique forward route from start to finish. Extra misleading arrows sit off the true path in cells that are not required to solve.
Helpful preset ideas
- Size 10 for a gentle first one-way maze
- Size 14 for a standard Year 5–6 starter
- Size 18 for a logic-club challenge
- Size 22 for a proper brain-teasing workout
Tips for solving a one-way maze
- Read a few arrows ahead before committing to a move.
- Tick each cell as you leave it so you can spot loops quickly.
- Use a highlighter to record the final route once you are confident.
- If you get stuck in a cycle, trace back to where you first felt unsure.
- Short, quiet sessions reward this kind of puzzle better than a loud sprint.
Because every cell is locked to one exit, the solver's planning is the whole game — take it slow.
Designed for A4 and US Letter Printing
The one-way maze fills the printable area on both A4 and US Letter. Pick whichever matches your printer. Print at 100% scale to keep the arrow glyphs sharp and the grid cells true to square.
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FAQs
Quick answers
How do the arrows work?
Each cell's arrow points to the next cell along the BFS tree from start. Solvers must follow the arrows in sequence — they cannot move against an arrow.
Is there always a solution?
Yes — the arrow graph is built from a BFS tree, so start always reaches finish.
Can I print the solution?
Yes — toggle the solution option to add a second page with the route overlaid.
How big can it go?
Up to 22×22. Larger grids mean a longer enforced path.
Related tools
Multiple Solution Maze
Maze with several valid routes. Find the shortest path from start to finish.
Rooms and Doors Maze
Navigate through rooms connected by single doors. Floor-plan style layout.
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