Anagram Solver

Enter any word or mix of letters and find every anagram and valid combination hiding inside — sorted by length, scored like a game tile, and one tap away from its definition.

Your anagrams will appear here.

Try a word like or .

What Is an Anagram Solver?

An anagram solver takes a word or set of letters and finds every valid word that can be spelled by rearranging some or all of them. Classic anagrams use every letter exactly once — "listen" becomes "silent", "earth" becomes "heart" — but this tool also surfaces shorter combinations, so you see the full picture of what your letters can make.

This tool checks your letters against a dictionary of more than 170,000 English words. That means results go well beyond the obvious choices, turning up obscure two- and three-letter words alongside the longer finds that are easy to miss when you're staring at a rack of tiles.

Use Anagrams to Win at Word Games

Anagram solving is one of the most powerful skills in Scrabble, Words With Friends, and similar games. When you can instantly see every word hiding in your letters, you stop guessing and start choosing — picking the highest-scoring play instead of settling for the first word you spot.

Enter your letters and tap Solve Anagram. Results appear sorted by Scrabble-style score, so the highest-value options sit at the top. Use the length chips to jump straight to words that use all your letters — those are your true anagrams, and in Scrabble, a 7-letter anagram earns a 50-point bingo bonus. Tap any result to copy it and check its definition before you commit to playing it.

One thing worth knowing: Scrabble uses official tournament dictionaries (NWL in North America, SOWPODS/Collins elsewhere) that differ slightly from the word lists used here. The Standard dictionary (ENABLE, 172,000+ words) covers the vast majority of common plays. If a word you're expecting doesn't show up, open Options and switch to the Extended dictionary — it adds roughly 77,000 more words for deeper coverage of rarer plays.

How to Use This Anagram Solver

  1. 1

    Type or paste your letters — or an existing word you want to anagram — into the box at the top. Spaces, numbers, and punctuation are ignored.

  2. 2

    Watch your letter tiles appear below the input. Each tile shows its Scrabble-style point value, with a running total alongside.

  3. 3

    Tap Solve Anagram. Every valid word that can be formed from your letters appears instantly, grouped by length with the highest-scoring words first.

  4. 4

    Use the length chips to filter to a specific word length. To find true anagrams using all your letters, tap the chip that matches your total letter count.

  5. 5

    Tap any word in the results to copy it to your clipboard and open its dictionary definition — useful for verifying an anagram before using it in a game or puzzle.

  6. 6

    Want deeper coverage? Tap Options and switch the Dictionary dropdown from Standard to Extended — it loads a larger ~249,000-word list on demand.

  7. 7

    Use the Must Include, Starts With, and Ends With filters to narrow results when you need an anagram that fits a specific pattern.

Tips for Finding Better Anagrams

If you're trying to anagram a specific word, type it in and use the length chip that matches the letter count — those results use every letter exactly once, which is the classic definition of an anagram.

Struggling to spot anything? Hit the shuffle button to rearrange your tiles into a new order. Sometimes a fresh visual arrangement is all it takes to see a word your eye kept skipping over.

Use the Starts With and Ends With filters to test common word patterns — prefixes like RE, UN, and OUT or suffixes like ING, ED, and ER — and let the solver surface anagrams you'd never find manually.

Don't overlook short anagrams. Two- and three-letter results are included in every search, and they're often the key to high-scoring parallel plays in Scrabble and Words With Friends.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an anagram?

An anagram is a word or phrase formed by rearranging all the letters of another word or phrase, using each letter exactly once. For example, "listen" is an anagram of "silent", and "earth" is an anagram of "heart". This solver finds every valid anagram from your letters, plus shorter combinations.

How do I find anagrams using all my letters?

After tapping Solve Anagram, use the length chip that matches the number of letters you entered. Words in that group use every letter exactly once — those are your true anagrams. Shorter groups are sub-anagrams made from a subset of your letters.

Can I use this as a Scrabble anagram solver?

Yes. Enter the letters from your rack and the tool finds every valid word sorted by Scrabble-style score. It uses the ENABLE word list which covers the vast majority of Scrabble plays. Switch to Extended in Options for deeper coverage of rarer words.

What's the difference between an anagram solver and a word unscrambler?

An anagram solver classically finds words that use all of your letters. A word unscrambler is broader — it finds every valid word using some or all of your letters. This tool does both: filter by length to see true anagrams, or browse all combinations. For a more general word finder, try our Word Unscrambler.

Can it help me find a Scrabble bingo?

Yes. Use the 7-letter chip to jump straight to words that use all 7 tiles — any word there is a potential bingo worth a 50-point bonus in standard Scrabble rules.

What dictionary does this tool use?

By default, results are checked against the ENABLE word list — a widely used reference of more than 170,000 English words built specifically for word games. If you need broader coverage, open Options and switch the Dictionary dropdown to Extended, which loads an additional word list of roughly 249,000 words on demand.

Why are some words hidden under "Naughty words"?

To keep the main results family-friendly by default, any words that are commonly considered offensive are grouped separately and stay hidden until you choose to show them.

Is this tool free, and does it work on mobile?

Yes to both. It's completely free with no sign-up required, and the layout adapts to phones and tablets so you can use it on the go.