Today’s NYT Spelling Bee puzzle for February 18, 2026, featured the following letters:
Center letter: N
Surrounding letters: R, C, D, V, A, O
As always, every valid word must include the center letter N, must be at least four letters long, and letters may be reused.
First Impressions
At first glance, today’s grid looked slightly tricky. The letter N is flexible, but the surrounding letters leaned toward strong consonants — particularly C, D, V, and R. That usually means fewer short vowel-heavy combinations and more structured word-building.
I started the way I usually do — by identifying small four-letter words to get momentum:
-
NARC
-
NOVA
-
DONA
-
ROAN
-
RAND
-
CARN
Spotting NOVA early told me that vowel positioning would be important today. The presence of both A and O helped create workable combinations.
Searching for Patterns
After collecting a few short words, I looked for common endings and clusters. Because we had -AN, -ON, and -OR possibilities, I experimented with rearrangements:
-
RADON
-
RONDA
-
CANON
-
CONDO
-
DONOR
The breakthrough came when I noticed the structure CORDO- forming naturally from the letters. Adding VAN to that stem created something interesting:
CORDOVAN
I immediately checked the letters carefully.
C
O
R
D
O
V
A
N
All seven letters were present, including the center letter N. That confirmed it.

Today’s Pangram
The pangram for February 18, 2026 is:
CORDOVAN
It uses every letter in the puzzle and satisfies all the rules. While it is not a perfect pangram (since some letters repeat), it is the only full pangram in today’s grid.
CORDOVAN refers to a type of leather, which makes it slightly less common in everyday vocabulary — likely why today’s puzzle felt moderately challenging.
Building the Word List
Once the pangram was identified, it became easier to build outward by rearranging its internal letter clusters.
Here are the valid words from today’s puzzle:
4-Letter Words
-
ANON
- CORN
- DARN
- NAAN
- NADA
- NANA
- NARC
- NOON
- NOVA
- RAND
- ROAN
5-Letter Words
- ACRON
- ADRON
- CANNA
- CANON
- CODON
- CONDO
- CONVO
- CROON
- DONOR
- NARCO
- RADON
- RANDO
- RONDO
6-Letter Words
- ARCANA
- CANARD
- CANCAN
- CANDOR
- CANNON
- COCOON
- CONDOR
- CORONA
- RANCOR
7-Letter Word
-
CARAVAN
- CONCORD
- RACCOON
8-Letter Pangram
- CORDOVAN (PANGRAM)
- ANACONDA
How the Solve Unfolded
The key to today’s puzzle was recognizing the CORD- cluster. Once that appeared, experimenting with endings like -ON, -OR, and -AN opened multiple paths.
The presence of V limited options slightly, which is why many players likely struggled before spotting CORDOVAN. Rare letters like V tend to reduce word count but increase puzzle satisfaction once solved.
Another helpful tactic was cycling vowels:
-
CONDO → DONOR
-
CANON → CANDOR
-
CORD → CORDON
Systematic rearrangement rather than guessing proved more effective today.

Difficulty Level
I would rate today’s puzzle as moderately difficult. The vocabulary leaned slightly toward less common words, especially the pangram. However, the letter balance was fair, and once CORDOVAN was found, the rest of the board became much easier.
If you focus on strong consonant clusters and test structured endings, puzzles like this become more manageable.
Puzzle Reflections
The February 18, 2026 NYT Spelling Bee delivered a satisfying solve with CORDOVAN as the pangram. It rewarded careful observation, pattern recognition, and patience.
If you found the pangram early, you likely experimented with the CORD- base quickly. If not, working through smaller words first remains the most reliable strategy.
Check back tomorrow for another Spelling Bee breakdown and full solution guide.