word unscrambler

Word Scramble Solver

Enter your letters and find words that match your length, pattern, and letter filters. Use the controls below and get usable answers without leaving the page.

Use ? for wildcards Not sure what to enter? Use the Sample button to load a realistic puzzle.

Enter letters or a pattern, or click Sample to see how this tool narrows a real puzzle.

You’re looking at a scrambled word - maybe from a puzzle book, a mobile game, or a classroom worksheet - and you need the correct spelling. This solver takes your jumbled letters and returns every valid word, but it also lets you add patterns and known letters to narrow down the answer. It’s built for when you have partial information and want to solve faster.

Solving with known letter positions

If you know that the first letter is C and the last is T, enter C???T as your pattern. The solver fills in the blanks with your available letters and shows only words that match that shape. This is a huge time-saver for crosswords and word games where you have a few letters already placed.

Using the solver for word games like Wordle

Wordle gives you feedback on correct letters in the right or wrong positions. Enter your known letters into the pattern field, and use the exclude box for letters that aren’t in the word at all. The solver then shows only words that fit the current game state. It’s an unofficial helper - use it for hints or to check your guesses.

Handling multiple scrambled words at once

Some puzzles give you several scrambled words to solve in sequence. The solver works one set at a time, but you can quickly clear the input and enter the next scramble. No need to reload the page. This keeps your workflow fast when you’re working through a list.

Sorting results by word score

If you’re playing Scrabble or Words With Friends, you care about points. After entering your letters, switch the sort to “score” to see the highest-scoring words first. The tool uses standard tile values (Scrabble scoring) to rank results. This helps you pick the word that gives you the most points.

Saving time with the “starts with” and “ends with” filters

When you know the word begins with a certain letter or ends with a certain suffix, use the starts/ends filters. For example, if the word starts with “RE,” enter that in the starts field. The solver only shows words that begin with those letters. Combine this with length filters for even faster results.

Try it with word scramble solver

Enter tca?rs, leave the length blank, and solve once. Start by scanning the longest results, then add a length filter if the puzzle slot is fixed. If you are using a blank tile, keep the wildcard in the input until you know which letter gives the strongest result.

Choose the right word tool

Use this page when you have letters or constraints and need to narrow possible words quickly. If the constraint changes, switch tools: pattern pages for fixed blanks, Wordle pages for colored clues, crossword pages for crossings, and anagram pages when every letter must be used.

Common Questions

What words can I make with these letters?

Type your scrambled letters into the input box. The solver returns all dictionary words that can be formed. Use filters to narrow by length, pattern, or excluded letters.

Do I have to use every letter?

No. By default, the solver shows words using any subset. Check “use all letters” if you want only words that consume every letter you entered.

Can I use wildcards or blank tiles?

Yes. Use a question mark (?) or a period (.) for each unknown letter. The solver will try every letter in that position.

Can I filter by word length?

Yes. Use the length field to set an exact length. Results update instantly.

Can I exclude letters from results?

Yes. Type letters to exclude in the exclude field. Any word containing those letters is removed.

Before you use the word list

Before you use a result, check the constraint that matters most for your puzzle: exact length, required letters, excluded letters, or whether every tile must be used. Tighten only one filter at a time so you can see which rule removed the right candidates.