
This guide focuses on the Spanish versions of Wordle for March 27, 2026: the standard five-letter puzzle and the variant that includes accented letters (the tildes mode). You get progressive hints, explanation of the word patterns, and then the reported solutions for the day. I will also walk through a structured approach you can reuse on future days to keep your streak safe.
One important caveat: the Spanish Wordle ecosystem is fragmented across several sites. For English Wordle, the New York Times provides an official archive. For Spanish Wordle and its tildes variant, archives can disagree and aren’t always independently verifiable in real time. The answers given here (“NIETO” and “ÓBOLO”) match what Spanish coverage reports for March 27, 2026, but you should treat them as reported solutions rather than absolute, NYT-level canon.
Before diving into today’s hints, it helps to be clear about the rules of the two Spanish modes, because they behave slightly differently from the original English Wordle.
In the standard Spanish Wordle (the one equivalent to the classic English version):
This is comparable to the NYT Wordle: five letters, standard feedback, one puzzle per day.
The tildes variant behaves differently and is unique to Spanish-language Wordle clones:
Functionally, this makes the tildes puzzle feel more like a mini Spanish vocabulary test. You have to think about stress patterns and where accents usually fall, which is critical for today’s word.
For the March 27, 2026 puzzles, a structured approach helps more than brute forcing random guesses. The same framework works both in normal mode and with tildes.
For Spanish specifically, your first word should:
Examples of solid openers (typed without accents in normal mode):
With tildes mode, I still open with a clean five-letter word without repeating letters, even though answers can be longer or shorter, then adjust based on length once the game reveals it.
After your first guess:
This discipline is what usually lets me finish most Spanish Wordles in 3–4 guesses instead of wasting attempts on “gut-feel” words that don’t respect the feedback.
Two things that make a big difference on days like March 27:
Keeping this in mind will make today’s tildes solution feel much more obvious once you see the pattern of repeated letters.
Below are ordered hints for the standard Spanish Wordle for March 27, 2026. Each line is more specific than the previous one, so stop reading as soon as you think you can solve it. All hints are based on reported coverage of today’s puzzle.

At this stage you should already start thinking of common family or relationship words, especially ones that end in -O.
So you are looking at a five-letter masculine noun starting with N, using only the remaining vowels (E, I, O, sometimes Y depending on the word list, but mostly E, I, O).
The word names a person who is the son of someone’s son.
If you still cannot see it, you are one step away from the reported solution.
Spoiler warning: the next line reveals the reported answer for today’s normal puzzle. If you want to confirm it in your own browser by solving manually, stop here.
According to current Spanish coverage, the solution to the normal Spanish Wordle for March 27, 2026 (#1541) is:
NIETO
This fits all the hints: five letters, masculine singular noun, N as the first letter, three vowels (I, E, O), and the meaning “grandson” (child of one’s child).
Because archives for Spanish Wordle are less standardized than the official NYT Wordle, keep in mind that some clones may occasionally rotate or localize word lists; however, NIETO is the consistent answer being reported for today’s standard puzzle.

Now for the accented variant. This puzzle behaves differently: lengths vary, and a tilde is guaranteed to appear. Again, the hints below get progressively more explicit.
At this level you know you are looking at a five-letter word in the tildes mode, with the first and last letters as vowels and at least one repeated vowel.
At this point, you know that Ó is the opening letter, and the pattern must include two more Os somewhere inside, with two consonants filling the remaining spots.
The word refers to a small contribution made for a specific purpose, essentially a modest financial offering.
If you can think of an old-fashioned or literary Spanish term for a small donation or contribution, you’re basically there.
Spoiler warning: the next line reveals the reported solution for the March 27, 2026 tildes puzzle. Only read it if you are done attempting the puzzle yourself.
Based on current Spanish reports, the solution to the tildes-mode Wordle for March 27, 2026 (#1488) is:

ÓBOLO
This fits the constraints exactly:
Remember that in the tildes variant, Ó is not interchangeable with O. When typing, you must actually enter the accented character for the game to mark it green.
Both of these Spanish puzzles are inspired by the original Wordle, a small web game created by developer Josh Wardle. It went viral in early 2022 thanks to its simple daily format and shareable results grid.
The New York Times acquired the English-language Wordle in 2022 and now maintains the official daily puzzle and archive. Spanish Wordle and its tildes variant are maintained separately by Spanish-language sites, which is why their numbering and archives don’t always line up perfectly with the NYT’s English version or with each other.
The popularity of Wordle quickly led to numerous offshoots and themed clones, including more experimental variants like Absurdle, gaming-themed versions, and other language-specific adaptations. The Spanish tildes mode is one of the more mechanically interesting ones because it forces you to think explicitly about accents and orthography instead of just letters.
Even though this guide is anchored to the March 27, 2026 puzzles (“NIETO” and “ÓBOLO” as reported solutions), the more useful part long-term is the method you apply each day. Here is a concise checklist you can reuse:
Applied consistently, that process makes days like March 27, 2026 straightforward: the normal puzzle converges naturally on NIETO as soon as you lock in N and the vowel set, and the tildes puzzle highlights ÓBOLO once you realize all the vowels are O with a required initial accent.
If you are primarily interested in keeping your streak alive rather than playing fully blind, use the hints in order: structure → letters → meaning → solution. That way you still do most of the thinking yourself, and external guides stay as a safety net instead of a full shortcut.
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