Data & Analytics

Wordle Analyzer Statistics

Deep dive into the data behind all 2,309 Wordle answers. Explore letter popularity, word patterns, and solving insights.

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Total Answers
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Double Letters
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% With Repeats

First Most Common First Letters

Vowel Most Common Vowels

VowelUse in strategy
EMost useful overall and especially important in final position.
AStrong central vowel, common in positions two and three.
OImportant second-tier vowel that many A/E openers miss.
IUseful for separating non-E answer families.
ULess common, but valuable once the board suggests it.

Rare Rare Letter Statistics

Q, Z, J, X, and V appear rarely enough that they are usually poor first-guess priorities. They become valuable after common letters have been ruled out or when a candidate family clearly points toward them.

Ends Most Common Last Letters

Cons Most Common Consonants

Guess Estimated Solve Distribution

Advanced Wordle Statistics

Use these patterns to choose better openers, avoid traps, and review finished games with more context.

StatisticWhat it means for Wordle strategy
Double Letter StatisticsRoughly one in five answers can contain a repeated letter. Repeats are easiest to miss when the duplicate is a vowel or an endgame consonant.
Letter Position StatisticsLetters are not equally useful in every slot. S is powerful in position one, E is powerful at the end, and A is often more useful near the middle.
Starting Word StatisticsStrong openers such as SLATE, CRANE, TRACE, STARE, RAISE, ROATE, and SOARE combine frequent letters with useful positions and no repeats.
Hard Mode StatisticsHard mode increases risk when the answer belongs to a trap family, contains repeated letters, or forces you to reuse yellow letters before enough consonants are known.
Rare Letter StatisticsRare letters are low-value early, but they become decisive once common-letter candidates have been eliminated.

Letter Position Statistics

Good guesses test not only the right letters, but also useful positions.

Position 1

S, C, B, T, and P are especially useful opening-position tests because they start many answer families.

Position 2

R, A, O, L, and H often define the core shape of the word and make yellow feedback easier to interpret.

Position 3

A, I, O, and R are strong middle-position checks, especially after a balanced opener.

Position 4

E, T, N, and L often separate common endings and help identify trap groups.

Position 5

E, Y, T, R, and L are important final-position tests. Final E is one reason many strong openers include E.

Zor Mod

Position stats matter more in hard mode because every confirmed green becomes a permanent constraint.

Key Wordle Insights

How to Use This Data

These statistics directly inform your Wordle strategy. Prioritize high-frequency letters in your early guesses, then shift toward the actual candidate pool once you have tile feedback. Use Wordle Analizörü after a finished game to see how much each guess reduced the answer list, or check the Best Starting Words page for openers that maximize letter coverage.

For opener-specific data, compare words in the Starting Word Analyzer. To evaluate a single guess, try the Guess Efficiency Calculator. If you are still solving today's puzzle, use Today's Wordle Hints for clue-focused help.