Colordle Solver
Crack the daily color code with pinpoint accuracy. Enter your guesses, input the similarity percentage, and watch the solver narrow down the exact match.
Search and select a color name from the game
Enter the similarity % score you received
Find the answer from filtered results

What is Colordle?
Colordle is a minimalist daily color-guessing game that challenges players to identify a secret hex code. Inspired by the Wordle format, it replaces letters with colors.
Every day, a new mystery color is selected and your goal is to guess its exact shade by entering color names. After each guess, the game gives you a percentage score indicating how close your choice is â 100% means you've cracked the code!
How to Play
- 1 Enter a color name like "Sky Blue" or a hex code like #87CEEB
- 2 Review the % similarity score â higher is closer to the target
- 3 Input your guesses into this solver to filter thousands of colors
- 4 Continue refining until you find the exact match!
â Why Use a Colordle Helper?
With over 30,000 named colors in modern digital palettes, finding the exact hex code manually is nearly impossible. Our solver uses the Delta E (CIE2000) algorithm â the gold standard for measuring perceptual color difference â to compute visual distance and eliminate wrong answers instantly.
Whether you want daily help or want to improve your color theory knowledge, this is the most accurate Colordle solver available online.
More Colordle Tools
Get today's answer, review past colors, or browse the full archive.
Colordle Solver FAQ
What is the Colordle Solver?
The Colordle Solver is a tool designed to help you solve the daily color-guessing game more efficiently. By entering your guesses and the similarity percentages you receive, the solver filters through a database of named colors to find the most likely answers.
How accurate is the percentage calculation?
Our solver uses the Delta E (CIE2000) standard in the LAB color space, which is the most widely accepted method for measuring color difference as perceived by the human eye. This matches the logic used in modern Colordle implementations.
Is this solver cheating?
It's a utility for those who are stuck or simply want to learn more about how colors relate to each other. Many players use it as a learning tool to better understand hex codes and color similarities.
Where do you get the list of color names?
We use an extensive open-source library of named colors, ensuring that most common and scientific color names used in games are accounted for.
Can I use this solver on mobile?
Yes! The Colordle Solver is fully responsive and works great on mobile devices, tablets, and desktops. The color cards and input fields are optimized for touch interactions.
How many guesses does it usually take?
With our solver, most users can find the answer in 2-4 guesses. The key is entering accurate percentage scores â even small decimal differences help the algorithm narrow down the correct color significantly.
How Color Distance Calculation Works
Color perception is surprisingly complex. Two colors might look identical to one person but different to another. That's why Colordle and our solver use the Delta E (CIE2000) algorithm â a sophisticated formula that measures how different two colors appear to the human eye.
The calculation happens in the LAB color space, which was designed to be perceptually uniform. This means that a Delta E of 2.0 represents the same visual difference regardless of which colors you're comparing. The RGB and HEX color spaces we use on screens don't have this property â a small RGB change might be very visible in one color but invisible in another.
When you enter a percentage score from Colordle, our solver converts it to a Delta E value and filters the color database to find colors that would produce similar scores. This mathematical approach is far more accurate than guessing based on color names or categories alone.
Tips for Getting Better at Colordle
Colordle rewards color knowledge and strategic guessing. Here are tips to improve your game:
- Start with primary and secondary colors â Colors like Red, Blue, Yellow, Green, Orange, and Purple are good starting points. They're evenly distributed around the color wheel and give you broad information.
- Pay attention to saturation and brightness â A 50% match might mean you have the right hue but wrong saturation. Try brighter and darker versions of similar colors.
- Learn color families â Colors cluster into families: warm (reds, oranges, yellows), cool (blues, greens, purples), neutrals (grays, browns, whites). Identify the family first, then narrow down.
- Use the percentage strategically â A score above 70% means you're very close. A score below 30% means you're far away. Use this to decide whether to refine your current guess or try a completely different color.
- Learn color names â The more color names you know, the better. Colors like "Cerulean", "Chartreuse", "Burgundy", and "Teal" are common in Colordle and have specific hex values.
Understanding Hex Color Codes
Every color in Colordle is represented by a hex code â a 6-character string like #FF5733 that defines the exact color. Understanding hex codes can help you make better guesses.
First 2 Characters (Red)
The first two characters control the red component. 00 is no red, FF is maximum red. Higher values mean more red in the color.
Middle 2 Characters (Green)
The middle two characters control green. 00 is no green, FF is maximum green. This affects how "warm" or "cool" a color appears.
Last 2 Characters (Blue)
The last two characters control blue. 00 is no blue, FF is maximum blue. Blue values strongly affect whether a color feels "warm" or "cool".
For example, #FF0000 is pure red, #00FF00 is pure green, #0000FF is pure blue, #FFFFFF is white, and #000000 is black. Colors like #FF5733 (a reddish-orange) have high red, moderate green, and low blue values.
Common Colordle Color Categories
Colordle answers tend to fall into several categories. Knowing these can help you make educated guesses:
đ¨ Named Colors
Common color names like Crimson, Navy, Teal, Coral, Olive. These are everyday colors most people recognize.
đ¸ Nature Colors
Colors named after natural things: Sky Blue, Forest Green, Sunset, Ocean, Sand. These often have specific, recognizable shades.
đ Food Colors
Colors named after foods: Cherry, Lemon, Lime, Chocolate, Coffee. These evoke specific visual associations.
đ Gem Colors
Colors named after gems and minerals: Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, Amber, Jade. These tend to be rich, saturated colors.