Unscramble letters
Every valid word you can make, grouped by length.
5-letter words
44-letter words
153-letter words
152-letter words
7What is an unscrambler?
An unscrambler takes a jumble of letters and finds every valid word you can make from them. Whether you're stuck on a Words With Friends rack, working through a Scrabble tile puzzle, or trying to crack the daily Jumble in your newspaper, an unscrambler does in a second what would take you ten minutes by hand.
Our Unscrambler checks against two of the largest word lists in the world: 168,000 English words (TWL + SOWPODS dictionaries combined) and 328,000 French words (ODS + Le Robert). That covers tournament Scrabble, casual word games, and everyday writing.
How to use it
1. Type your letters
Enter up to 12 letters in the input box. No spaces, no punctuation. Lowercase or uppercase — it doesn't matter.
2. Hit Solve
The Unscrambler returns every valid word that can be made from those letters, sorted by length (longest first) and Scrabble score.
3. Pick your word
Each result shows the word, its length, and its Scrabble point value. Click any word to copy it.
That's it. No login, no signup, no ads in the way.
Examples
Example 1 — TRIANGLE (8 letters)
Example 2 — RSTLNE (consonant-heavy)
Example 3 — A Words With Friends rack
FAQ
Does it work with French?
Yes. Use the EN · FR toggle in the header. We check against ODS (the official French Scrabble dictionary) and Le Robert.
Can I use blank tiles or wildcards?
Not in v1. Coming soon — use ? to represent any letter.
Are proper nouns included?
No. Only common nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs from standard dictionaries. No names, places, or brands.
What's the longest word you can find?
The longest word our Unscrambler returns depends on the letters you enter. With 12 letters you can sometimes get 12-letter results. With 7 letters, max 7. With 4 letters, max 4. We don't pad with letters you didn't enter.
Is this cheating?
For tournament Scrabble: yes. For casual play with friends: depends on house rules. For solo learning and vocabulary building: no — it's the fastest way to expand your word repertoire.