Spelling Bee Archive & Past Answers

Access every past NYT Spelling Bee puzzle in our comprehensive spelling bee archive. Find yesterday spelling bee answers, review past spelling bee answers, and master the spelling bee history.

Select Month:

May 2026 4 Puzzles

May 5, 2026
Tuesday
34
Words
180
Points
C
Center
Pangram: abundance
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May 4, 2026
Monday
27
Words
111
Points
L
Center
Pangram: flighty
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May 3, 2026
Sunday
69
Words
383
Points
C
Center
Pangram: turncoat
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May 2, 2026
Saturday
66
Words
326
Points
G
Center
Pangram: belonged
View Answers →

Finding Yesterday's Answers

The most frequent request we receive is for yesterday spelling bee answers. Many players work diligently through the day, reaching Genius rank but stopping just a few words short of perfection. Once the puzzle refreshes at 3:00 AM EST, the previous day's solutions are moved to this spelling bee archive. You can view yesterday's answers here to see what you missed.

By visiting the yesterday spelling bee answers page, you can see exactly which words eluded you. This immediate feedback loop is critical for learning what we call "Bee vocabulary" - the vacub that is group of specific words that the New York Times editors select repeatedly across different puzzles.

A Deep Dive into Spelling Bee History

Our spelling bee answers archive serves as a living record of the game's evolution. Since its digital debut, the Spelling Bee has changed in complexity and scoring. By exploring spelling bee history, players can see how the "Genius" threshold has shifted based on the total word count and letter difficulty.

In our spelling bee answers by date section, you can analyze years of data to find the highest-scoring puzzles in history or identify which center letters appear most frequently during certain months.

Identifying Winning Puzzle Patterns

Experienced players use the spelling bee archive to identify recurring patterns. Editors at NYT most of the time, go for specific suffixes like "-ING", "-TION", and "-ED", or prefixes like "UN-" and "RE-". By reviewing the archive of past spelling bee answers, you'll notice that many seven-letter sets are reused here and there with different center letters, creating entirely new challenges out of familiar foundations and familiar past puzzles.

Vocabulary Improvement & Study

Regularly studying the spelling bee archive is considered to be the single most effective way to improve your score by many players. Words like "acacia," "nonillion," and "phatic" might seem obscure in daily conversation, but they are staples of the NYT Spelling Bee.

Our spelling bee answers archive doesn't just show you the words; it helps you build a mental library of valid terms that will serve you in every future puzzle. When you see a familiar letter set, you'll immediately recall the obscure 4-letter words that often provide the final points needed for Genius rank.

Mastering the Queen Bee Quest

The ultimate goal for any player is the Queen Bee rank—finding every single valid word in the puzzle. If you consistently find yourself one or two words away, use our past spelling bee answers to see the "missed words." You'll often find they are simple compound words or variants you overlooked.

Combine your archive research with our Spelling Bee Rules and Spelling Bee Solver to build a comprehensive toolkit for daily success.

Quick Access Tools

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