Today’s Spelling Bee puzzle was a rewarding one because the letter set looked compact at first, but it opened into several excellent longer words once the patterns started to appear. The center letter was H, with I, C, A, T, E, and P around it, which immediately suggested a puzzle rich in ch, th, and ph combinations. That usually means the board can hide both familiar everyday words and a few satisfying longer finds.
How I Solved Today’s Puzzle
As always, I began with the most important rule of Spelling Bee: every word must contain the center letter. So I focused first on H and tried to build short starter words. The early discoveries were simple but useful: ache, each, heat, hate, heap, path, chip, chit, and itch. These are the kinds of words that help you settle into the puzzle and recognize the strongest letter pairings.
From there, I started spotting helpful word families. The ch pattern gave me words like chap, chat, cheat, cheap, patch, peach, and teach. The th pattern opened up that, theta, teeth, theca, and ethic. Once those combinations became clear, the hive felt much less restrictive.
The biggest breakthrough came when I started testing longer combinations with all seven letters. That is often the stage when a pangram appears. The standout discovery was HEPATIC, which uses every letter exactly once. That makes it the perfect pangram of the day, and it is a particularly elegant one because it feels precise, clean, and memorable.
After finding HEPATIC, the rest of the puzzle became much easier to read. I noticed that the same letter set could also build the emotional word family PATHETIC and APATHETIC, both of which use all seven letters and therefore qualify as pangrams as well. It is always satisfying when one pangram leads naturally to others.
Tap to view the pangram path
H + I, C, A, T, E, P → HEPATIC → PATHETIC → APATHETIC