Wordle Guide

Last reviewed: February 16, 2026

Wordle Streak Tracker: How to Track and Protect Your Streak

Complete guide to tracking your Wordle streak. Covers official NYT tracking, third-party apps, streak recovery, and strategies to maintain a 1,000+ day streak.

wordle streak trackerToday's Hints

To track your Wordle streak, sign into your free NYT account so your stats sync across devices via the cloud. Your streak counts consecutive days solved and resets if you miss a day or fail to solve in six guesses. Third-party tools like Scoredle and WordleStats provide backup tracking and deeper analytics.

Definition

What is Wordle Streak?

A Wordle streak is the consecutive number of days a player has successfully solved the daily Wordle puzzle without missing a day or failing to guess the word within six attempts. The streak counter resets to zero upon any break. Streaks are tracked by the NYT Games app and website and have become a core motivational mechanic of the game.

Overview

Your Wordle streak tracker is more than a vanity metric. For millions of daily players, that unbroken chain of green squares represents discipline, skill, and a morning ritual that anchors the day. But streaks are fragile. A single missed day, a browser cache clear, or a six-guess loss can reset months of progress in an instant. This guide covers everything you need to know about tracking, maintaining, and recovering your Wordle streak, from the official NYT tracking system to third-party apps, data backup strategies, and the tactical adjustments that separate 100-day streakers from 1,000-day streakers. Whether you just started your streak yesterday or you are protecting a record that stretches back to the original Wordle launch in 2021, the tools and techniques here will help you keep it alive.

Key Strategies

  • Official NYT streak tracking stores data locally unless you sign in for cloud sync
  • Third-party apps like Scoredle and WordleStats offer backup tracking and analytics
  • Common streak-breakers include midnight timezone confusion, cache clears, and device switches

Quick Tips

  • Sign into your NYT account on every device to enable cloud streak sync
  • Set a 10 PM daily alarm as a failsafe reminder to play before midnight
  • Take a weekly screenshot of your stats page as a manual backup
  • Use a consistent opening word (CRANE, SALET, TRACE) to build pattern recognition
  • If traveling across time zones, play before departure to avoid any gap

Wordle streak statistics

Quick Facts

~8%

Players with 100+ streaks

12 days

Average streak length

Missed day

Most common streak-breaker

NYT Games community data and WordleStats aggregates, 2024-2025

How the official Wordle streak tracker works

The NYT Wordle streak tracker records two numbers: your current streak and your maximum streak. Your current streak increments by one each day you solve the puzzle within six guesses and resets to zero if you miss a day or fail to solve. The maximum streak preserves your all-time best run regardless of resets. Originally, Wordle stored all statistics in your browser's local storage under the key nyt-wordle-statistics. This meant clearing your browser cache, switching browsers, or using incognito mode would wipe your streak entirely. Since the NYT acquisition in early 2022, signing into a free NYT account enables cloud sync, which stores your stats on NYT servers and lets you access them from any device. However, the sync is not instantaneous. If you solve on your phone and immediately check your laptop, there may be a lag of several minutes before the streak updates. The daily reset occurs at midnight in your local time zone, which differs from other NYT games that reset at midnight Eastern. This means a player in Los Angeles has until midnight Pacific to solve, giving them three extra hours compared to a New York player. Understanding this reset mechanic is critical for streak preservation, especially when traveling across time zones.

Best third-party streak tracking tools

Relying solely on the official NYT tracker is risky because local storage can be lost and cloud sync occasionally fails. Several third-party tools provide independent backup tracking and additional analytics. Scoredle is the most popular post-game analysis tool. After solving, you enter your guesses and Scoredle tells you how many possible words remained after each guess, rates your performance, and logs your result in a personal history. It does not directly track your streak number, but the historical log lets you verify any disputed days. WordleStats is a community-driven leaderboard where players manually submit daily results. It tracks streaks, guess distributions, and rankings against other users. The Wordle Tracker Chrome extension automatically detects when you complete a Wordle and logs the result, including the date, number of guesses, and streak status. For maximum safety, we recommend a three-layer approach: keep your NYT account signed in for cloud sync, use Scoredle for post-game logging, and take a weekly screenshot of your stats page as a manual backup. This redundancy ensures that even if one system fails, you have proof of your streak history for personal records or community verification.

Common streak-breaking mistakes and how to avoid them

The most common streak-breaker is simply forgetting to play before midnight. Life gets busy, and a single missed day erases everything. Set a recurring daily alarm for 10 PM in your local time zone as a failsafe reminder. If you travel frequently, adjust the alarm to your destination time zone the day you arrive. The second most common streak killer is a cache clear. If you use a privacy-focused browser, an ad blocker that clears storage, or if someone borrows your phone and clears browsing data, your local Wordle stats vanish. The solution is straightforward: sign into your NYT account and confirm that cloud sync is active by checking your stats on a second device. The third common mistake is playing on multiple devices without being signed in. If you solve on your laptop but your phone still shows the puzzle unsolved, you might accidentally open it and submit a random guess, or worse, assume you already played and skip the day. Always use the same signed-in account everywhere. A less obvious streak-breaker is Hard Mode toggling. Some players switch Hard Mode on and off between days, which does not break your streak but can lead to a failed solve if you forget the mode is active and your usual strategy fails under Hard Mode constraints. Pick a mode and stay with it.

Strategies for maintaining a long Wordle streak

Maintaining a Wordle streak beyond 100 days requires both skill and discipline. On the skill side, start with a consistent opening word that covers high-frequency letters. Data from WordleBot shows that CRANE, SALET, and TRACE leave fewer than 70 remaining candidates on average, giving you a strong information base for guess two. By your third guess, you should have enough green and yellow letters to narrow the field to under 10 words. If you are stuck between two or three possible answers on guess five, choose the word that eliminates the most alternatives even if it might not be the answer itself. This diagnostic approach is especially valuable on Hard Mode. On the discipline side, make Wordle the first thing you do when you pick up your phone in the morning. Habit stacking, pairing the puzzle with an existing routine like morning coffee, increases adherence dramatically. If you are traveling internationally and crossing the International Date Line, play the puzzle in the airport before departure and again after arrival to avoid any timezone gap. Some long-streak players keep a simple text file or spreadsheet where they log each day's word, number of guesses, and any notes. This log becomes invaluable if your official stats ever glitch, and it helps you identify patterns in the words that give you trouble.

Can you recover a lost Wordle streak

Officially, the NYT does not offer a streak recovery feature. Once your streak resets, the counter returns to zero and your maximum streak is preserved as a historical record. However, there are several scenarios where partial recovery is possible. If your streak was lost due to a browser cache clear but you were signed into your NYT account, your cloud-synced stats should restore automatically the next time you load Wordle while signed in. If the cloud sync failed, contact NYT Games support via the help center and explain the situation. Multiple users have reported successful streak restorations after contacting support, particularly when the loss was caused by a technical glitch rather than a missed day. If you were not signed in and lost local storage, there is no official recovery path. Some technically inclined players have manually edited their browser's local storage to restore the nyt-wordle-statistics JSON object, but this requires knowing your exact streak number and guess history, and it does not work if you have since signed into an NYT account because cloud data takes precedence. The lesson is clear: prevention is far easier than recovery. Sign into your NYT account today, verify sync is working, and take a screenshot of your current stats as a baseline backup.

Community records and streak culture

Wordle streak culture has become a phenomenon in its own right. On the Wordle subreddit, users regularly post milestone screenshots for 500-day, 750-day, and 1,000-day streaks. As of early 2026, the longest verified community streaks stretch back to the original Josh Wardle era in late 2021, putting them above 1,500 consecutive days. These ultra-long streaks are impressive not just for the puzzle-solving skill involved but for the daily discipline of never missing a single day across more than four years. The social sharing mechanic that Wordle pioneered, the spoiler-free colored grid, has become a daily ritual for friend groups, families, and coworkers. Many players report that their streak is maintained partly through social accountability: if your spouse or colleague knows you play every morning, the gentle peer pressure helps prevent missed days. Some workplaces and school groups run streak leaderboards on shared spreadsheets. The competitive element adds motivation without stress since everyone is solving the same puzzle independently. If you want to join the streak community, start by sharing your daily grid with at least one person and commit to a 30-day streak as your first milestone. Once you hit 30, the psychological momentum makes it significantly easier to continue to 100 and beyond.

Key Takeaway

The official NYT Wordle streak tracker stores data locally in your browser or app, making it vulnerable to cache clears and device switches. The safest approach is to sign into your NYT account for cloud sync, supplement with a third-party tracker like Scoredle or WordleStats, and always play before midnight in your local time zone to avoid accidental resets.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my Wordle streak reset if I miss one day?

Yes. Your current streak resets to zero if you fail to solve the puzzle on any given day, either by not playing at all or by using all six guesses without finding the answer. Your maximum streak is preserved separately so you always have a record of your best run.

How do I sync my Wordle streak across devices?

Sign into a free NYT account on every device where you play Wordle. Your streak and full statistics will sync via the cloud. After signing in, verify the sync by checking that your stats match on both devices. Note that sync can take a few minutes to propagate after a solve.

What time does Wordle reset for streak purposes?

Wordle resets at midnight in your local time zone, unlike other NYT games that reset at midnight Eastern Time. This means you have until 11:59 PM in your local time zone to solve the puzzle and keep your streak alive. Be especially careful when traveling across time zones.

Can NYT support restore my lost Wordle streak?

In some cases, yes. If your streak was lost due to a technical glitch, cloud sync failure, or app bug, contacting NYT Games support through their help center has resulted in successful restorations for many users. However, if you genuinely missed a day or failed to solve, support will not manually override the reset.

What is the longest Wordle streak ever recorded?

The longest verified community streaks exceed 1,500 consecutive days, dating back to the original Josh Wardle version in late 2021. These are self-reported and verified through screenshot history. The NYT does not publish an official leaderboard, so community forums and social media remain the primary verification channels.

Does switching to Hard Mode break my streak?

No. Toggling Hard Mode on or off does not reset your streak. However, Hard Mode restricts your guesses to only include confirmed letters, which can make some puzzles significantly harder. If you switch modes mid-streak, be aware that your usual strategy may need adjustment to avoid a failed solve.

CH

Written by

Connections Hintz Editorial Team

Our team solves every NYT puzzle daily and publishes verified hints within minutes of each reset. With 500+ puzzles analyzed across Connections, Wordle, Strands, Spelling Bee, Mini Crossword, and Letter Boxed, we specialize in spoiler-free guidance that helps you solve puzzles on your own.

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