Word Unscrambler Club
Turn mixed-up letters into real words.
Free online help for anagrams, word games, and spelling practice. Paste a group of letters, generate the matches, and scan every real English word your letters can make.
Matches
Ready when you are.
0 words
Enter a few letters to discover the words hiding in the jumble.
How It Works
Find words from any set of letters.
This word unscrambler checks a large English word list and returns the words that can be built from the letters you enter. Use it for anagrams, crosswords, word games, classroom activities, or quick spelling ideas.
The best way to start is to enter every tile or letter you have, including repeated letters. If your letters are garden, the tool can show longer words like danger and shorter options like range, grade, read, and ear. Sorting by length helps you scan big plays first, while the score beside each result gives you a quick sense of tile value.
Tips
- Paste your full rack of letters for the widest set of matches.
- Use exact match when you want full anagrams only.
- Raise the minimum length to focus on stronger scoring words.
- Add starts-with, ends-with, and must-include filters when the board already limits your move.
Word Strategy
How to unscramble letters more effectively.
A word solver is fastest when you use it with a plan. Start broad, then narrow the results around the position you actually need to play. For word games, that usually means checking the longest playable words first, then looking for compact high-value words that use letters such as J, Q, X, and Z. For puzzles and classroom work, it often means trying full anagrams before shorter partial words.
Filters are most useful after your first search. If you already know a word must begin with st, end in er, or include a letter from the board, add that constraint instead of scrolling through every possible match. This keeps the result list practical without hiding valid words too early.
Example search
- Letters
- splate
- Full anagrams
- palest, pastel, petals, plates, pleats, staple
- Shorter plays
- plate, pleat, slate, stale, steal, tales
- Board filter
- Starts with "pl" to focus on plate, plates, pleat, and pleats.
Guides
Learn the patterns behind better word plays.
These short guides explain common word-game situations in plain English: rack balance, anagram practice, jumble solving, and the difference between finding any word and finding the best playable word.
Quick Answers
Word unscrambler FAQ.
What does "use all letters" do?
It limits results to words that use every letter you entered. Turn it on for full anagrams, and leave it off when you want any playable word from a larger rack.
Why do repeated letters matter?
Each letter can only be used as many times as it appears in your input. Entering letter allows two Ts and two Es; entering letr does not.
Is this only for Scrabble?
No. The same search helps with anagrams, spelling practice, word jumbles, classroom vocabulary activities, and many letter-based games.
What should I try first?
Search all your letters, scan the longest groups, then add filters based on the board or puzzle clue. If the list is too large, raise the minimum length.