
Wordle New York Times Today: Hints, Answer & Best Starts
If you’ve found yourself staring at a row of yellow tiles more than once this week, you’re in good company. Wordle has become a daily ritual for millions, and the challenge only sharpens when the answer hides repeating letters. Today’s puzzle carries exactly that twist — and a closer look at the data reveals why some starter words work better than others.
Puzzle Number: 1769 · Release Date: April 23, 2026 · Average Guesses: 4.3 out of 6 · Max Guesses: 6 · Word Length: 5 letters
Quick snapshot
- The answer is TWEET, confirmed by Analytics Insight
- TWEET has double letters — E and T each appear twice (Analytics Insight)
- WordleBot recommends SLATE as the best starter with a 99/100 score (Analytics Insight)
- Regional variation in puzzle difficulty has not been quantified
- Whether NYT adjusts puzzle difficulty based on player performance remains unconfirmed
- New puzzle releases at midnight in your local timezone
- WordleBot continues to update recommendations based on solver data
The table below lists the core attributes that define the daily Wordle experience.
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Developer | New York Times |
| Game Type | Daily 5-letter word guess |
| Chances per Puzzle | 6 |
| Official Site | nytimes.com/games/wordle |
What is today’s Wordle?
Today’s Wordle answer is TWEET (puzzle #1769). The solution fits the pattern that tends to trip up experienced players: a word that starts and ends with the same letter, and two sets of repeating letters in the middle. Analytics Insight notes that TWEET carries one vowel and two sets of double letters — a structural rarity that explains why many players needed extra guesses to crack it.
“TWEET is a great win because it forces you to think about how letters can repeat in a single word.”
— Analytics Insight editorial team
Hints for today’s puzzle
- Starts with T, ends with T
- Contains the vowel E — and it appears twice
- The other repeating consonant is another T in the second position
Players who remembered to account for double letters from the start saved at least one guess compared to those who assumed each position held a unique letter.
Full answer spoiler
The full solution is TWEET. An expert walkthrough from Analytics Insight recommends starting with TRAIT to confirm the T bookends, then UNMET to lock in the double E, and SWEET to test the middle positions — a three-guess path that works well for this puzzle structure.
Forgetting to check for repeating letters early. Words like TREAT or SWEPT waste turns because they assume each position holds a unique consonant — a habit that works on most puzzles but costs extra guesses on today’s.
What is the best word to start with in Wordle?
WordleBot’s top recommendation is SLATE, scoring 99 out of 100. TechRadar confirms that CRANE, TRACE, CRATE, and CARTE all tie at the same score — meaning any of these five words gives you the same statistical edge on the first move.
“The words players love most are not the ones WordleBot ranks highest.”
Data-backed starting words
WordleBot’s ratings reveal a clear hierarchy. SLATE, CRANE, TRACE, CRATE, and CARTE sit at 99/100. One step down, words like SLANT, PLATE, CARET, STARE, and CRONE score 98. Another tier at 97 includes STALE, SAINT, LEAST, TRADE, and LANCE, while PLANE drops to 96.
- 99/100: SLATE, CRANE, TRACE, CRATE, CARTE
- 98/100: SLANT, PLATE, CARET, STARE, CRONE
- 97/100: STALE, SAINT, LEAST, TRADE, LANCE
For hard mode, WordleBot shifts strategy entirely — preferring CLASP as the best opener, with SCALD and PLACE tying at 99/99. TechRadar notes this is because hard mode locks you into using every confirmed letter, which changes the optimization calculus.
Why certain words perform best
Research from Science Foundation Ireland found that using TALES as a starting word leads to success in over 95% of games, with an average solve length of just 3.66 rounds. That’s a concrete benchmark — not just theory.
Meanwhile, AUDIO and ADIEU remain the most popular choices among actual players, chosen by roughly 12% of all Wordlers. TechRadar notes this creates a strange irony: the words players love most are not the ones WordleBot ranks highest.
Vowel-heavy openers like AUDIO or ADIEU give you information fast, but they also narrow your options faster. If the puzzle answer has three consonants, you may find yourself guessing from a smaller pool earlier — which either accelerates your solve or leaves you stuck.
What time is Wordle today?
Wordle resets daily at midnight in your local timezone. That means the puzzle you see at 12:01 AM Wednesday is different from the one visible to someone on the other side of the world who is still in Tuesday. The New York Times controls the schedule and does not offer early access or timezone-adjusted windows.
Daily reset time
The daily word drops precisely at midnight local time wherever you are. No announcements, no alerts — just a new puzzle waiting when the date changes on your device. Players in Sydney get their puzzle first each day, followed by the rest of the world as time zones roll forward.
Timezone details
Because the reset follows your device’s clock rather than a centralized server time, there is no single “global release moment” — just a chain of midnights. If you want to be among the first to play, set your location or device time accordingly. Otherwise, the puzzle has already been live for hours by the time most people open the game.
What is the best 2nd word in Wordle?
After your opening guess, the ideal second word depends on what your first move revealed. Data from Tom’s Guide shows that different starters leave you in vastly different positions — CRANE leaves 38 possible answers still in play, while TRAIL leaves just five.
“Starting with TRAIL narrows your options faster than nearly any other opener — five remaining possibilities is exceptionally tight.”
Optimal follow-up guesses
Starting with TRAIL narrows your options faster than nearly any other opener — five remaining possibilities is exceptionally tight. By contrast, CRANE leaves 38 possibilities open, meaning your second guess has to work harder to eliminate enough wrong paths.
- TRAIL: 5 possible answers remaining
- CLEAT: 22 possible answers remaining
- PLEAT: 20 possible answers remaining
- CRANE: 38 possible answers remaining
Stats on first two guesses
The gap between the best and worst starters is stark. Using a word that eliminates 20+ possible answers in two moves versus one that leaves 38 still viable can mean the difference between a fourth-guess solve and running out of turns. Word Tips reports that 62% of players stick with the same starting word every day rather than adapting their strategy.
Players who choose TRAIL as their opener have already won half the battle before the second guess. But TRAIL is rarely a Wordle answer itself — meaning you sacrifice the chance to score that satisfying one-guess win for the practical benefit of narrowing faster.
Has Wordle ever repeated a word?
Wordle has never repeated a word since its debut in 2021. Word Tips confirms that every puzzle since launch has used a unique five-letter answer — no duplicates, no second appearances.
Repeat history
In over 1,700 puzzles, no answer has ever appeared twice. The system relies on a curated list of words, and each one gets used exactly once. This makes the daily puzzle genuinely unique — no matter how much you play, you will never see the same word twice.
Uniqueness rules
The New York Times maintains the word list and has stated that words chosen as daily puzzles are never recycled. This matters for players who track patterns: you can rule out any word that has already appeared as a daily answer, which reduces your effective pool of possibilities.
The pattern shows that players who memorize past answers gain a lasting edge — but only until the pool of unused words runs out.
The pool of valid five-letter words is finite. With Wordle adding a new puzzle every day, eventually the curated list will need to expand or re-use words. When that happens, the “no repeats” guarantee disappears — and players who have memorized past answers will lose that edge.
Wordle starting word patterns
A pattern emerges when you compare WordleBot rankings against actual player behavior. TechRadar reports that AUDIO and ADIEU dominate real player choices despite scoring lower on WordleBot’s efficiency scale. The gap between optimal strategy and popular behavior reveals something human: players prioritize vowels for the “aha” feeling, even when consonants would be statistically better.
- AUDIO and ADIEU: chosen by 12% of all players
- Random approach: preferred by 3.7% of players
- Real life inspiration for starting word choice: 2.4% of players
- Consistent daily starting word: 62% of Reddit users on /r/coolguide
The letter E compounds this pattern. Since debut, E has appeared in 522 Wordle answers — roughly one in three puzzles. Word Tips notes that starting words with E give players a better baseline hit rate, which is why popular openers tend to feature the letter heavily.
The data suggests that vowel-heavy openers appeal to intuition but cost players roughly half a guess on average compared to statistically optimized starters.
Summary
Today’s TWEET puzzle illustrates why repeating letters trip up even experienced players — and why the best starter words are the ones that narrow possibilities fastest, not the ones that feel intuitive. For players who have been using AUDIO or ADIEU every day, the data says SLATE or CRANE would save roughly half a guess on average. But for those who enjoy the ritual of a consistent opener, sticking with what works for you has its own value. The new puzzle arrives at midnight — whatever approach you choose, the board awaits.
Related reading: GTA Online Weekly Update: Times, Bonuses & Latest News · What Day Is It – Current Date and Time Zone Guide
ibtimes.com.au, youtube.com, wordfinder.yourdictionary.com, boredpanda.com
Many players enhance their strategy for puzzle 1769 by exploring NYT Wordle hints todayNYT Wordle hints today alongside the best starting words.
Frequently asked questions
What is Wordle?
Wordle is a daily word puzzle game owned by the New York Times. Players get six chances to guess a five-letter word, with color-coded feedback (green for correct position, yellow for wrong position, gray for not in the word) guiding each subsequent guess.
How do I play Wordle from New York Times?
Visit nytimes.com/games/wordle or use the NYT Games app on iOS and Android. A new puzzle drops at midnight in your local timezone. No account required, though signing in lets you track your streak.
Where can I play Wordle today?
The official platform is the NYT Games website. You can also play through the mobile app or by searching “Wordle” in the App Store and Google Play Store.
Does Wordle have a mobile app?
Yes — the New York Times Games app includes Wordle alongside other puzzles like Connections and Spelling Bee. The app is available on iOS and Android devices.
What are Connections and Quordle?
Connections is a daily word puzzle from NYT where you group 16 words into four hidden categories. Quordle is a separate game where you solve four Wordle puzzles simultaneously — not owned by NYT but often played by the same community.
How often does Wordle update?
Once per day. The new puzzle appears at midnight in your local timezone, replacing the previous day’s challenge. Past puzzles are not available to play again, but you can view your guess history if you are signed in.
Is there a Wordle archive?
The New York Times does not offer an official archive of past daily puzzles. However, third-party sites have recreated previous puzzles. The official NYT games app does save your personal solve history if you have an account.