Wordle Yesterday NZ: Where to Find Past Wordle Answers

Updated: 25 May 2026 · Reading time: 4 minutes

You missed yesterday’s Wordle® entirely, or you saw the answer fly past your eye on social media. Either way, you’d like to look back at what the answer was — maybe to redeem your honour, maybe just curiosity.

The straightforward answer

  1. Check our 7-day archive at the top of the Wordle® Hint Solver homepage. Past 7 days, refreshed every morning at 6am NZT.
  2. NYT Wordle® Archive (paid). NYT Games subscription, ~NZD 12/month.
  3. News sites like Tom’s Guide or Try Hard Guides have archives.

For NZ players, our 7-day archive is the simplest free option.

How NZ’s timezone affects “yesterday’s Wordle®”

“Yesterday’s Wordle®” depends on when you look:

  • At 10am NZT Tuesday, yesterday’s Wordle® is Monday’s puzzle.
  • At 11pm NZT Tuesday, yesterday’s Wordle® is STILL Monday’s (Tuesday’s reset at 12:00 NZT this morning).
  • At 12:30am NZT Wednesday, yesterday’s becomes Tuesday’s (Wednesday just dropped).

This trips up Kiwi players looking at US-based archives:

  • US sites publish “today’s Wordle®” by US Eastern time.
  • Their “yesterday” is what NZ players experienced 36+ hours ago, not 24.

One reason NZ-first hint sites exist. We use NZ dating throughout.

Puzzles older than 7 days?

Wordle® Archive sites (unofficial)

Several third-party sites archive every puzzle ever. Search for “Wordle® Archive”. We won’t link to specific ones — their legal status is occasionally murky.

NYT Games subscription

Official archive behind the paywall. Around NZD 12/month. Also unlocks Connections archive, Spelling Bee Queen Bee, full daily crossword.

Wayback Machine

Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine has snapshots of the NYT Wordle® page for many past dates. Free, legal, works for nearly every Wordle® ever.

Why our 7-day archive instead of “every day ever”?

Practical: 7 days covers realistic use cases.

  • “Missed yesterday” — 1 day ago
  • “On holiday this week” — up to 7 days
  • “Researching from 200 days ago” — niche, easier via NYT subscription

30-day or full archive would clutter the page. Seven days strikes the right balance.

How to use yesterday’s Wordle®

1. Redeem yesterday’s loss

Play the puzzle offline. Doesn’t affect your streak but good practice.

2. Train pattern recognition

Reverse-engineer how a great player would have solved it. Which starting word gives the most useful information?

3. Settle a friendly bet

You and your work mate disagree. Archive has it. Argument over.

4. Catch up on a sequence

Missed Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday — see them all in one go.

A note on spoilers

If you’re going to play yesterday’s puzzle offline using our archive, scroll carefully — the answer is right there. We label days clearly.

For today’s Wordle®, our homepage gives three reveal-when-ready hints BEFORE the answer.

FAQ

Q: NYT publish past answers? Officially only behind their Games subscription.

Q: Are old answers different from new? Slightly. Early Wordle® (pre-NYT) had unusual entries. NYT curated the list after 2022.

Q: Can I play the very first Wordle®? Yes — Wordle® #1 was 19 June 2021. Answer was CIGAR. Via NYT archive or Wayback Machine.

Q: Why not extend your archive past 7 days? Have found 7 days serves 95% of users. Contact us if you’d like longer.

The takeaway

Yesterday’s Wordle® for NZ players is one click away on our homepage — 7-day archive, dated in NZ time. For older puzzles, NYT subscription or Wayback Machine.

Still stuck on today? Scroll up to the daily hint section — three NZ-friendly clues, no spoilers above the fold.

Wordle® is a registered trademark of The New York Times Company. This site is an independent fan companion not affiliated with The New York Times Company.

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Disclaimer: This site is an independent, unofficial fan companion for the daily word puzzle. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or connected to The New York Times Company in any way. Wordle® is a registered trademark of The New York Times Company. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Made with care in New Zealand.