How to Start Solving Crossword Puzzles: A Beginner's Guide
New to crosswords? Here is how to start solving, a complete beginner's guide to clues, grids, and the strategies that build real speed.

Crossword puzzles can feel intimidating if you've never solved one. A grid full of empty squares, clues that seem impossibly cryptic, and no obvious place to start. But here's the secret: crossword solving is a learnable skill, and most puzzles follow predictable patterns.
This guide breaks down everything a beginner needs to know — from reading clues to building speed — so you can go from staring at a blank grid to filling it in with confidence.
If you have not picked an app yet, our best crossword puzzle apps comparison covers which ones are most beginner-friendly.
How Crossword Puzzles Work
A crossword is a grid of white and black squares. White squares are where letters go. Black squares separate words.
Across clues are for words that read left to right. Down clues are for words that read top to bottom. Each clue has a number that corresponds to a numbered square in the grid — that's where the answer starts.
The magic of crosswords is that Across and Down answers share letters where they intersect. Solving one word gives you letters that help solve crossing words. This is why crosswords get easier as you go — every answer you fill in makes the next one more solvable.
Start Here: 5 Steps for Your First Puzzle
1. Start with the easiest clues
Scan all the clues and answer the ones you know immediately. Don't go in order — jump around. Fill-in-the-blank clues (like "___ of the Wild" → CALL) are usually the easiest. Short answers (3–4 letters) are also good starting points.
2. Use crossing letters
Once you've filled in a few answers, look at the crossing words. If you have _ A _ E R for a 5-letter word, that's a strong starting point. The more letters you have, the fewer possibilities remain.
3. Check the word length
Count the squares for each answer. A clue for a 3-letter word has far fewer possibilities than one for a 9-letter word. Use the length to narrow down your options.
4. Read the clue carefully
Crossword clues are precise. Every word matters. A clue ending in "?" usually signals wordplay or a pun. A clue ending in "(abbr.)" means the answer is an abbreviation. A clue in a foreign language ("Amigo's greeting") means the answer is also in that language.
5. Don't be afraid to guess
If you're 80% sure of an answer, write it in (lightly, in pencil — or digitally where you can easily change it). Even a wrong guess gives you crossing letters that might confirm or rule out the answer.
Common Clue Types Every Beginner Should Know
Fill-in-the-Blank
The most beginner-friendly clue type. The answer literally completes the phrase.
- "___ and cheese" → MAC
- "To ___ or not to ___" → BE
- "The ___ of March" → IDES
Definitions
Straightforward synonym clues. The answer is a word that means the same thing as the clue.
- "Joyful" → HAPPY or GLAD
- "Ocean vessel" → SHIP
- "Nocturnal bird" → OWL
Abbreviations
When the clue contains an abbreviation or says "(abbr.)," the answer is also abbreviated.
- "Doc's org." → AMA (American Medical Association)
- "D.C. bigwig (abbr.)" → SEN (Senator)
- "Not applicable (abbr.)" → NA
Wordplay and Puns
Clues ending with "?" are often puns or misdirections. The answer involves a play on words.
- "Plant in a music store?" → ORGAN (both a plant organ and a musical instrument)
- "Current event?" → SWIM (current as in water)
Partial Phrases
Answers that are part of a common expression.
- "Up and ___" → AT EM (as in "up and at 'em")
- "Ready, ___, go!" → SET
Cross-referenced Clues
Some clues refer to other clues in the same puzzle: "See 15-Across" means this answer relates to the answer at 15-Across.
12 Words That Appear in Almost Every Crossword
Experienced solvers call these "crosswordese" — short words with useful letter combinations that constructors rely on to make grids work:
- ERA — A period of time
- ORE — Mineral-bearing rock
- ALE — Type of beer
- IRE — Anger
- ARIA — Opera solo
- ALOE — Succulent plant (or skin care ingredient)
- EPEE — Fencing sword
- OREO — Sandwich cookie brand
- OLEO — Margarine (old-fashioned term)
- ANTE — Poker stake
- ERNE — Sea eagle
- EDDA — Norse literary work
Memorizing these gives you a head start on almost any puzzle.
Strategies for Getting Unstuck
Work the crosses
If you can't solve a clue directly, solve the words that cross it. Even 2–3 confirmed letters can unlock an answer you were stuck on.
Think about the theme
Many crosswords have a theme — the longest answers share a connection. If you can figure out the theme, it helps predict answers for the themed clues.
Consider multiple meanings
English words have multiple definitions. If "bat" doesn't work as "baseball equipment," think "flying mammal." If "run" doesn't work as "jog," think "operate" or "manage."
Watch for tense and number
If the clue is in past tense, the answer is too. "Walked" → the answer probably ends in -ED. Plural clues ("Dogs") mean plural answers.
Use the smart hint system
Grid Genius has a unique hint system designed to help you learn, not just give away answers:
- AI Hint — The standout feature. Instead of revealing the answer, AI generates a contextual clue that rephrases the original hint or gives you a related fact. It makes you think deeper rather than just handing you the answer. You can request multiple AI hints per clue, each progressively more helpful. No other crossword app has this.
- Reveal Letter — Shows one letter in the selected cell. Good for confirming a guess or getting unstuck at a key crossing.
- Reveal Word — Fills in the entire word. Use as a last resort when AI hints and letter reveals aren't enough.
- Check Puzzle — Highlights any incorrect letters you've entered. Always free.
Building Your Skills Over Time
Start with easy and small
Begin with Easy difficulty and Mini (7×7) grids. These use common vocabulary, straightforward clues, and have fewer words to fill. Work your way up as you build confidence.
Solve daily
The single best way to improve is consistency. A daily crossword habit — even a quick 5-minute mini puzzle — builds your vocabulary and pattern recognition over time. Grid Genius's daily challenge is designed for exactly this.
Learn from mistakes
When you check a puzzle and find wrong answers, look at the correct answer and understand why. "Oh, ARIA means an opera solo — I'll remember that." Each correction adds to your crossword vocabulary.
Read broadly
Crossword clues draw from everything: geography, history, pop culture, science, sports, literature. The wider your general knowledge, the better you'll solve. But don't stress — this builds naturally over time.
Pay attention to the constructor
Different constructors have different styles. Some favor wordplay, others prefer trivia, and others love misdirection. As you solve more puzzles, you'll develop a feel for different clue-writing styles.
How to Solve Crosswords Faster
Once you can finish a puzzle, the next goal is finishing it more efficiently. Speed is not about reading faster, it is about choosing a smarter order and getting maximum mileage out of every letter. These tactics compound with practice, so expect steady gains rather than overnight jumps.
Knock out the easy clues first
Sweep the grid for fill-in-the-blank clues and short answers (3-4 letters) before anything else. These have the fewest possibilities and give you the most confirmed letters for the least effort, which seeds the rest of the grid.
Never read clues in numerical order
Going 1-Across, 2-Down, 3-Down in sequence wastes time on clues you cannot solve yet. Scan for what you already know, fill those in, then let the crossing letters lead you to the next answer. Momentum comes from following the letters, not the numbers.
Learn the common crosswordese
A handful of short, vowel-heavy words show up again and again, and recognizing them on sight saves real seconds. The 12 words that appear in almost every crossword above are the place to start, then add your own as you spot repeat offenders.
Use crossing letters aggressively
When a clue stumps you, do not stall. Solve the words that cross it instead. Two or three confirmed letters often collapse a hard clue to a single obvious answer, so treat every crossing as a free hint toward the one you skipped.
Time yourself on the daily
You cannot improve what you do not measure. Solve the same format (a daily mini, say) and watch your time trend down week over week. The daily challenge is built for exactly this kind of repeatable benchmark, and a consistent puzzle is the fairest way to track real progress.
Time Yourself on Today's DailyCrossword Puzzles and Brain Health
Beyond the enjoyment factor, crossword puzzles have documented cognitive benefits. A study from Columbia University and Duke University found that crossword puzzles outperformed computerized brain training games at improving memory in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.
Regular crossword solving engages multiple brain regions simultaneously — language processing, memory retrieval, and pattern recognition. It's mental exercise that feels like entertainment.
Ready to Start Solving?
The best way to learn is to do. Here are three ways to jump in:
Daily Challenge — A new puzzle every day, designed to be completable by solvers of all levels. Free to play, no account needed.
Play Today's Daily ChallengeEasy Puzzles — Browse AI-generated puzzles at Easy difficulty. Common vocabulary, direct clues, perfect for building confidence.
Browse Easy PuzzlesPick a Topic You Know — Choose a topic you're already knowledgeable about. Solving a crossword about a familiar subject is the best way to learn the mechanics without struggling with unknown vocabulary.
Frequently Asked Questions
Start with Grid Genius on Easy difficulty with a Mini (7×7) grid. The smaller grid means fewer words, and Easy clues use common vocabulary with direct definitions. You can also pick a topic you're familiar with to make it even more accessible.
It varies widely. A Mini (7×7) Easy puzzle takes most beginners 5–10 minutes. A Standard (11×11) Medium puzzle takes 15–30 minutes. Speed comes with practice — regular solvers often cut their times in half within a few weeks.
Start with fill-in-the-blank and short 3-4 letter clues, skip around instead of reading clues in order, and lean on crossing letters to crack the answers you are stuck on. Learning common crosswordese and timing yourself on the daily challenge builds real speed over time.
No. Hints are a learning tool, not cheating. Using Reveal Letter to get unstuck teaches you new vocabulary. Over time, you'll need fewer hints as your crossword vocabulary grows. Every experienced solver started with training wheels.
Research from Duke University and Columbia University shows crossword puzzles improve memory and cognitive function, particularly in older adults. They engage language processing, memory retrieval, and pattern recognition simultaneously. While they won't raise your IQ, regular solving strengthens the neural pathways involved in these skills.
American-style crosswords (used by Grid Genius and the NYT) use a grid where every letter is part of both an Across and a Down answer — called "fully checked." British-style (cryptic) crosswords have a mix of checked and unchecked letters, and clues follow a specific formula combining a definition with wordplay. Grid Genius uses American-style.
A real crossword on any topic.
AI-generated puzzles with smart hints that help you think, not just give away answers. Free to play, no sign-up required.