NYT Spelling Bee Answers Today: April 16, 2026

NYT Spelling Bee Answers Today: April 16, 2026

Edited by Sam Ezersky • Solved by WordFinder Tips

NYT Spelling Bee Answers April 16, 2026

🐝 Today's Pangram

CLICK TO REVEAL PANGRAM
A G I F L N T

Full Solution List

4 Letters

FAILFALLFANGFIATFILLFLAGFLANFLATFLITGAFFGIFTLIFTNAIFTIFF

5 Letters

FAINTFATALFINALFLAILFLINGFLINT

6 Letters

ANTIFAFATINGFIFINGFILIALFILINGFINIALFININGINFANTINFILL

7 Letters

AFFIANTALFALFAFAILINGFALLINGFANNINGFANTAILFILLINGFITTINGGIFTINGLIFTING

8 Letters

FAINTINGFLAGGINGFLAILINGFLANGINGFLINGINGFLITTING

9 Letters

FINAGLINGINFILLINGINFLATING

10 Letters

FLATLINING

11 Letters

AFFILIATING

💡 2-Letter Hint Grid

Use this grid to see how many words start with each 2-letter combination.

AF2
AL1
AN1
FA11
FI11
FL13
GA1
GI2
IN4
LI2
NA1
TI1

Table of Contents

Today’s Puzzle Overview

The Thursday, April 16, 2026 edition drops a seven‑letter set that challenges even seasoned players. The center letter is F. All valid words must contain this letter at least once. The outer letters are A, G, I, L, N, and T. Together they form a pool of 7 unique characters.

Why the Center Letter Rules Matter

Every solution must include F. This constraint narrows the search space dramatically. It also forces you to think about suffixes and prefixes that naturally attach to F, such as “‑ing” or “‑al”. Recognizing this pattern early saves time.

Pangrams – The Crown Jewels

Three pangrams use all seven letters: affiliating, flatlining, and inflating. Each hits the maximum point value because they contain every letter at least once and are longer than six letters. Spotting any of these guarantees a top rank.

🧠 Deep Mechanic Analysis & Optimal Paths

Understanding the puzzle’s inner workings helps you climb the leaderboard faster. Below we break down letter frequency, common morphemes, and scoring tricks.

Letter Frequency & Word Formation Logic

The pool contains two high‑frequency consonants (F, L, N, T) and three vowels (A, I). The presence of both A and I opens a wide range of diphthongs and vowel‑consonant blends. Notice how many answers end with “‑ing”. The suffix adds three points per word and satisfies the length requirement.

  • F + ING = “fing” (not a word) but “failing”, “flinging”, “fining” all work.
  • F + AL = “fal” (rare) but “fatal”, “flail”, “flank” (invalid) illustrate the pattern.

By focusing on these building blocks you can generate dozens of words before checking the list.

Strategic Path to the Queen Bee

Start with the shortest mandatory words: “fa”, “fi”, “fl”, “fn” are illegal because they lack a vowel or are under three letters. The first legal three‑letter word is FAN (not in today’s list) but FAT appears as “fating”. Use “fating” to confirm the F‑A‑T pattern.

Next, hunt for “‑ing” forms. The pool yields “failing”, “flinging”, “fining”, “flating” (invalid), “inflating” (pangram). Each adds a solid chunk of points.

Finally, chase the pangrams. They often hide behind common roots: “affiliating” stems from “affiliate”, “flatlining” from “flatline”, “inflating” from “inflate”. Recognize these roots in other answers to boost confidence.

✅ Today’s Winning Solutions

Word Length
affiliating 11
flatlining 10
inflating 9
affiant 7
alfalfa 7
antifa 6
fail 4
failing 7
faint 5
fainting 8
fall 4
falling 7
fang 4
fanning 7
fantail 7
fatal 5
fating 6
fiat 4
fifing 6
filial 6
filing 6
fill 4
filling 7
finagling 9
final 5
finial 6
fining 6
fitting 7
flag 4
flagging 8
flail 5
flailing 8
flan 4
flanging 8
flat 4
fling 5
flinging 8
flint 5
flit 4
flitting 8
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