Carcassonne
Track every game with this free online Carcassonne score card and digital score sheet. Carcassonne scorecard: one row per scoring moment—enter points gained that time (not your running total); highest grand total wins.

Game setup
Min 2, Max 6
Key Features of Carcassonne scorecard
- Supports two to six players (typical base game is two to five).
- Scoring rows grow as you play (up to 80): a new blank row appears after you enter the latest score.
- Running totals and winner highlight update as you enter each score.
- Room for end-game rows: unfinished features and farmers when you use them.
- Real-time leaderboard with current leader highlighting.
- Mobile-optimized interface for on-the-go scoring.
- No registration required - start playing immediately.
- Carcassonne scoring app that works offline and syncs when back online.
How to Play Carcassonne
- Carcassonne is a tile-placement game: players build a shared landscape of roads, cities, monasteries, and fields, placing followers to score when features complete.
- During play you score when you complete a road, city, or monastery (cloister) you are involved in—use the usual tile and follower majority rules from your rulebook.
- After the last tile is placed, score unfinished features and farmers (fields) per your edition’s end-game rules, then add those points in new rows on the scorecard.
- The player with the highest total points after all scoring wins.
Tips & Strategy for playing Carcassonne
- Use one row per scoring event so the sheet stays clear when several players score at once—each player fills only their own column in that row.
- Reserve the last few rows for end-game scoring so you do not run out of space when farmers and incomplete features pay out.
- Farmers and field scoring vary by edition—agree which rulebook you follow before you start tallying.
Frequently asked questions about Carcassonne
Do I enter my running total or just new points?
Enter only the points you earned in that scoring moment—for example when a feature you share completes—not your full score so far. Leave the cell blank or 0 when you did not score in that row.
When should we add another row?
Add a new row whenever anyone scores (or group several small scores in one row if your table prefers). Use extra rows at the end for unfinished features and farmers so the sheet matches your edition’s end-game rules.
Who wins?
The scorecard highlights the player with the largest sum across every scoring row—the usual way to pick a Carcassonne winner after final scoring.
How does this Carcassonne scorecard work?
Enter scores in the rows for each hand, hole, or round — the scorecard updates running totals and highlights the leader automatically. You can add players, rename them, and keep the sheet open for the whole session.
Can I use ScorecardGO to score Carcassonne on mobile?
Yes. ScorecardGO is built for phones and tablets: large tap targets, readable tables, and layouts that fit narrow screens so you can score Carcassonne wherever you're playing.
Does this Carcassonne scorecard work offline?
Yes. Your scorecard works offline when the page is loaded, and changes sync when you are back online so you do not lose progress mid-game.
Is this Carcassonne scorecard free?
ScorecardGO is free to use in the browser with no account required — open the Carcassonne scorecard and start tracking points right away.