Boggle Solver

Solucionador Boggle

Type the letters from your Boggle board — left to right, top to bottom. Find every hidden word instantly.

Try example:

How Boggle Works

Adjacent Paths

Words in Boggle are formed by connecting adjacent letters — horizontally, vertically, or diagonally. Each letter can only be used once per word.

Longer = More Points

3-letter words: 1 pt. 4 letters: 1 pt. 5 letters: 2 pts. 6 letters: 3 pts. 7 letters: 5 pts. 8+ letters: 11 pts.

Enter Top-to-Bottom

Type your board letters left-to-right, row by row from the top. The solver traces all valid adjacent paths automatically.

Boggle FAQ

How does the Boggle solver trace paths?
The solver uses depth-first search starting from each cell, exploring all adjacent cells (up to 8 neighbors per cell). It traces every possible path through the grid, checking each sequence of letters against the dictionary. Letters cannot be reused within a single word path.
What are the best Boggle strategies?
Focus on high-value positions — center cells connect to the most neighbors (8), giving them more path options. Look for common suffixes (-ING, -ED, -ER, -EST, -TION) and prefixes (UN-, RE-, IN-). Words using uncommon letters like Q, Z, X, J tend to appear less frequently but score well if found.
Does "QU" count as one letter in Boggle?
In the official Boggle game, the "QU" die shows both letters on one face — it counts as one tile. Our solver treats Q and U as separate letters, so words like QUIZ or SQUAD require Q and U to be adjacent on the board.