Wordle #1760 is live for April 14, 2026, and today’s answer has a nice mechanical ring to it — especially if you’re someone who enjoys cycling. Before we give it away, here are the hints you need to work it out on your own.
Quick Hints for Wordle #1760
If you’d rather not jump straight to the answer, these clues should point you in the right direction:
Starting letter: The word begins with the letter C.
Word type: It’s a noun — but it can also be used as a verb.
Double letter: Yes, today’s answer contains a repeated letter. The letter C appears twice.
Subtle hint: Think about a repeating pattern, or something that goes around and comes back to where it started. This word also connects to bikes, seasons, and washing machines.
What Is the Answer for April 14, 2026?
Ready for the reveal? The answer to Wordle #1760 is:
CYCLE
A cycle is a series of events or actions that repeat in a regular sequence — like the water cycle, a life cycle, or the spin cycle on your laundry machine. It can also refer to a bicycle or act as a verb meaning to ride a bike. The word fits neatly into everyday language, which is exactly why it can trip players up — sometimes the most familiar words are the last ones we think of.
The double C catches many players off guard. One C opens the word, and the other sits in the third position: C-Y-C-L-E. If you locked in an early guess with common letters like STARE or CRANE, the C hits might have given you a strong foothold.
Tips for Solving Wordle Faster
1. Front-load your vowels strategically. CYCLE contains only one vowel — the letter Y, which can function as a vowel here. Starting with a word like AUDIO or RAISE helps you map the vowel landscape quickly, but don’t forget that Y can sneak in as a vowel substitute, as it does in today’s answer.
2. Watch for double letters. Today’s answer uses C twice. Double letters are more common in Wordle than most players expect, and many solvers waste guesses assuming each letter appears only once. If a letter gets a yellow or green hit early, don’t be afraid to guess it again in another position.
3. Think in categories. Today’s answer belongs to a group of words that describe repeating patterns or circular motion. When a hint points toward “a pattern” or something cyclical, words like CYCLE, ORBIT, ROUND, or LOOP become strong candidates. Broad thematic thinking can unlock answers that pure letter frequency misses.
About Wordle
Wordle began as a personal project built by software engineer Josh Wardle as a gift for his partner, who loved word games. What started as a small private puzzle quickly spread across social media, and by early 2022 millions of people around the world were playing it daily. The shareable colored-tile results became one of the most recognizable formats on the internet almost overnight.
The game’s popularity grew so large that the New York Times acquired it in early 2022, and it has lived on the NYT Games platform ever since. Despite changing hands, the core rules have stayed the same: guess a five-letter word in six tries, with color-coded feedback guiding each guess. Green means the right letter in the right spot, yellow means the right letter in the wrong spot, and gray means the letter isn’t in the word.
Players who want an extra challenge can enable Hard Mode, which forces you to use confirmed letters in every subsequent guess. There’s also an archive of past puzzles available to NYT Games subscribers if you want to work through older entries. After more than 1,700 puzzles, Wordle remains one of the most popular daily word games in the world.
More Daily Puzzle Answers
Looking for help with today’s other puzzles? Here are the latest answers from dotwordle.com:
- April 13, 2026 Wordle #1759 Hint and Answer
- April 12, 2026 Wordle #1758 Hint and Answer
- April 11, 2026 Wordle #1757 Hint and Answer
- April 13, 2026 NYT Connections Puzzle #1037 Hints and Answers
- April 13, 2026 Hurdle Hints and Answers
- “While Not in Use” April 13, 2026 NYT Strands Hints and Answers
- April 13, 2026 NYT Pips Puzzle Hints and Answers
Shahid Maqsood is a digital entrepreneur and SEO specialist focused on building engaging web experiences. He is the creator of DotWordle, combining creativity with smart, user-friendly design.

