Letter Boxed rewards a different kind of word skill than most NYT games. You are not just hunting for valid words. You are hunting for words that hand the next starting letter to you cleanly and help cover the whole square in as few moves as possible.
That makes answer pages especially useful here, because a solver often needs either a small structural check or the exact two-word chain that finishes the board.
Today’s Letter Boxed Sides
Use the board details below if you only want to confirm the current layout before you keep experimenting with your own chains.
- Date: April 5, 2026
- Side letters: RLC | MYP | HXO | AED
Today’s NYT Letter Boxed Answer
Open the solution only when you want the New York Times published route through the board.
Reveal Answer
Official solution for April 5, 2026
- DRACHMA
- APOPLEXY
The chain works because the final letter of the first word becomes the opening letter of the second.
How Letter Boxed Works
Letter Boxed gives you 12 letters placed around a square. You can connect letters to form words, but you cannot use two consecutive letters from the same side.
When one word ends, the next one must begin with that final letter. The goal is to use all 12 letters while finishing in as few words as possible.
How to Play NYT Letter Boxed
Letter Boxed becomes much easier once you stop looking for one perfect word and start looking for useful transitions. The puzzle rewards words that hand you a strong ending letter and help clear awkward corners of the square.
- You cannot use two consecutive letters from the same side of the box.
- Each new word must begin with the final letter of the previous word.
- The goal is to use all 12 letters in as few words as possible.
- Efficient solves usually come from planning the handoff between words, not just spotting long vocabulary.
Why Letter Boxed Can Feel Tricky
This puzzle gets harder when you stop thinking about single words and start thinking about handoffs. A good first word is not always the prettiest word. It is the word that leaves the board in a better state for the move that comes after it.
That is part of why Letter Boxed has developed such a loyal audience. It rewards vocabulary, but it also rewards route planning in a way that feels closer to a logic game than a standard word game.
You can also keep other daily runs going with our Sudoku, Pips, Wordle, Connections, and Strands coverage.












