Letter Boxed Answers — June 15, 2026

    The optimal word combination for the NYT Letter Boxed puzzle from June 15, 2026.

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    How Letter Boxed Works

    Letter Boxed challenges you to create words using letters arranged around a square. The goal is to use all 12 letters in as few words as possible.

    Rules:

    • Each side of the box contains 3 letters
    • Words must alternate between different sides (you can't use two letters from the same side in a row)
    • Each new word must start with the last letter of the previous word
    • All words must be valid English dictionary words
    • The goal is to use all 12 letters in as few words as possible
    • A 2-word solution is considered optimal

    Strategy Tips:

    • Start by looking for long words that use many unique letters
    • Pay attention to which side each letter is on to plan valid sequences
    • Look for words that end with uncommon letters that start other words
    • If stuck, try working backwards from words that start with rare letters

    Letter Boxed strategy & tips

    The one rule that shapes everything

    Letter Boxed gives you 12 letters arranged three per side of a square. You build words by hopping between letters, and the only hard rule is that consecutive letters must come from different sides — you can never use two letters from the same side in a row. The next word must start with the letter your last word ended on, and your goal is to use all 12 letters in as few words as possible.

    Once you internalize the “different side” constraint, most of the game is pattern recognition: which letters can legally follow which.

    Aim for the two-word solution

    The NYT’s own target is usually a two-word solution, and it almost always works the same way: one long word that uses ~7–9 of the letters, then a second word that starts with the first word’s last letter and mops up the rest. Finding the long word is the whole game.

    Look for a long word that hits the hardest letters — the unusual consonants (J, V, Z, K, Q) — because those are the ones a second word will struggle to include.

    Anchor on vowels and rare letters

    • Spot where the vowels sit. With only three or four vowels spread across the sides, your words must bounce through them — map which vowels are reachable from which consonants first.
    • Build around the rare letters early. If there’s a Q, it almost certainly needs U next, and U’s side placement dictates the rest of the word.
    • End long words on a versatile letter (a common consonant like R, S, T, N) so your second word has many possible starts.

    Fewer words, not fewer letters

    The scoreboard rewards using fewer words, not shorter ones — so a single 10-letter word that legally chains is better than three tidy short words. Resist breaking the puzzle into many easy words; push for length.

    If you can’t find a two-word answer, a three-word solution is still a win. Get all 12 letters used legally first, then try to compress.

    Getting unstuck

    Stuck on the second word? Write down which letters you still need and the letter you must start from — the remaining word is usually short and constrained enough to brute-force in your head. If no word fits, your first word probably ended on the wrong letter; try a different long opener.

    A new Letter Boxed puzzle is published daily and resets at midnight Eastern.