How to Read Mahjong Tiles: A Visual Guide to the Three Suits
There are 108 suited tiles in mahjong. You do not need to memorize all of them at once. You need to recognize them quickly, at a table, while also tracking what other players are discarding. That is a different skill from memorization, and it is the one this guide trains.
The three suits are Characters, Bamboo, and Circles. Confusion between suits is rare once you have handled tiles a few times. They look completely different from each other. Confusion within a suit, ie mistaking a 6 for an 8, or a 2 for a 3 is where beginners actually struggle. That is what this guide addresses directly.
Characters (萬)
Characters tiles show a Chinese numeral stacked above the character 萬 (wan). There is no image, no pattern, only text. If you do not read Chinese, these are the hardest tiles to distinguish at speed. The lower numbers, however, have a visible logic based on stroke count.

Characters
| TIle | Character | What to look for | Image |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 — Characters | 一 | Single horizontal stroke | ![]() |
| 2 — Characters | 二 | Two horizontal strokes | ![]() |
| 3 — Characters | 三 | Three horizontal strokes | ![]() |
| 4 — Characters | 四 | A box shape with interior lines | ![]() |
| 5 — Characters | 五 | The most complicated one | ![]() |
| 6 — Characters | 六 | Stick figure S for Six | ![]() |
| 7 — Characters | 七 | Upside down 7 | ![]() |
| 8 — Characters | 八 | Urdu 8 or mustache | ![]() |
| 9 — Characters | 九 | n for nine | ![]() |
Tiles 1, 2, and 3 can be read by stroke count alone. The rest require familiarity, which comes from playing.
TIP
Ignore the bottom half of the character tile that is in red. It is the symbol for 10,000. When in doubt, count strokes deliberately rather than reading the whole character. The 5-character is the one that looks the most complicated and you can’t figure out how to remember.
IF YOU ARE COMPLETELY NEW
Handle the Characters suit alone before your first game. Go tile by tile until you can name each one without hesitation. One focused session is enough.
Bamboo (索)
Bamboo tiles show stacked green stalks with one exception. The 1-Bamboo does not show a bamboo stalk. It shows a sparrow or a bird. This catches every beginner exactly once. After that you never forget it.


Tiles 2 through 9 show bamboo stalks in arrangements that are visually distinct from each other. This makes Bamboo the most recognizable suit overall. The tiles look different enough that identification becomes almost automatic after limited exposure.

WATCH OUT FOR
TIles 7, 8, 9 sometimes become a blur when playing quickly. Count the stalks when unsure. Don’t guess by overall shape.
Circles or Dots (筒)
Circles tiles, also called Dots, show rings arranged in a grid. 1-Circle is one ring. 9-Circle is nine rings in a 3×3 arrangement. The concept is simple. Reading them quickly under time pressure is where it gets unreliable.


Circles
| TIle | Arrangement | Image |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — Circles | Single large circle, often with a colored center | ![]() |
| 2 — Circles | Two circles stacked vertically | ![]() |
| 3 — Circles | Three circles in a column or diagonal | ![]() |
| 4 — CIrcles | 2×2 grid | ![]() |
| 5 — Circles | Cross or plus arrangement | ![]() |
| 6 — Circles | 2×3 or 3×2 grid | ![]() |
| 7 — Circles | Arrangement looks like a 7; typically 3+2+2 | ![]() |
| 8 — Circles | 2×4 grid | ![]() |
| 9 — Circles | 3×3 grid | ![]() |

WATCH OUT FOR
TIles 8, 9 are both rectangular grids and structurally similar at a glance. For circles specifically, count the dots when uncertain. Do not rely on the shape alone.
How to Tell the Suits Apart at a Glance

You will not confuse a Characters tile with a Circles tile. The suits are visually unambiguous from each other. Your recognition work is almost entirely within each suit, not between them.
Next Up
Once you can read the suited tiles, we will look at the honors tiles ( winds and dragons), which follow entirely different rules.


















