How to Make a Printable Wordle Pack PDF (Classroom Sets, Party Games & Travel)
The classic daily Wordle has one obvious limit: one puzzle a day. That is perfect for a solo morning ritual and useless the moment you want a stack of puzzles — for a classroom of thirty, a party of ten, or a long flight with no signal. The fix is an unlimited version of the game that lets you play (and capture) as many puzzles as you want, then bind them into a printable pack. Here is the full workflow, from generating puzzles to printing a ready-to-use set.
Step 1: Generate as many puzzles as you need
The daily game gives you exactly one word, which is no good for building a pack. What you want is an unlimited mode you can replay back to back. Infinite Wordle does exactly that — the same five-letter, six-guess format as the original, but with no daily cap, so you can spin up puzzle after puzzle in one sitting. It is free, runs in the browser with nothing to install, and because there is no “come back tomorrow” wall, you can sit down once and generate a whole week's worth of words in a few minutes. That unlimited supply is what makes a printable pack practical in the first place.
Step 2: Capture each puzzle as a PDF page
Two reliable ways to turn an on-screen puzzle into a paper-ready page:
- Print to PDF — with the blank grid (or the solved board, for your answer key) on screen, press Ctrl/Cmd + P and choose “Save as PDF.” Enable background graphics so the grid and tile colors survive.
- Screenshot, then convert — when the page has ads or navigation around the grid, screenshot just the board and turn the image into a clean PDF page with our free JPG to PDF converter. One puzzle per page, nothing else.
Capture the blank grid for the playable page and the solved board for the key. Name the files so they sort naturally — puzzle-01.pdf, answer-01.pdf — and a full set comes together quickly.
Step 3: Bind the puzzles into one pack
Combine your puzzle pages into a single document with our Merge PDF tool — drag them into whatever order works. A structure that holds up well:
- Instructions page — a quick “how to play” up front, handy for a classroom or party where not everyone knows the rules.
- Puzzle pages — one blank grid per page, optionally grouped from easier to harder words.
- Answer key at the back — solved boards merged in as the final section, so you can check or score without spoiling the front.
If a screenshot came in sideways or you need to pull a few pages for a smaller group, our Rotate PDF and Split PDF tools handle it without rebuilding the file.
Printing tips
- Print one puzzle page per player. Everyone works their own grid, then you reveal answers together — far better than crowding one sheet.
- Keep the answer key on your copy only for classroom or party use, so nobody peeks.
- Grayscale is fine for blank grids. The empty board prints perfectly without color and saves ink; reserve color for solved answer boards if you want them clear.
- Compress before sharing. Emailing a pack to co-teachers or a game group? The Compress PDF tool shrinks screenshot-heavy packs so they send without bouncing.
Who is this for? More people than you would think
- Teachers — a printed Wordle set is a popular vocabulary and spelling warm-up, and one pack covers a whole class at once.
- Party hosts — a stack of puzzles makes an easy group game with no phones required.
- Travelers — a printed pack needs no battery or signal on a flight or road trip.
- Parents — a screen-free puzzle book for car rides and waiting rooms.
Frequently asked questions
How is an unlimited Wordle different from the daily one?
The gameplay is identical — five-letter word, six guesses, color feedback on each letter. The only difference is that an unlimited version like Infinite Wordle removes the once-a-day cap, so you can play puzzle after puzzle in a single session, which is exactly what you need to build a pack.
Is it okay to print these for a classroom or party?
Printing puzzle pages for your own class, group, or family use is generally fine. What you should not do is sell collections built from someone else's game — if you are making copies for a large event, check the site's terms first.
How many puzzles should a pack have?
For a classroom or party session, 10–20 puzzles is the sweet spot — enough to keep everyone busy, small enough to staple per player. For a travel book, 30–40 gives you a couple of weeks of solving.
The bottom line
The daily limit is the only thing standing between Wordle and a great group activity, and an unlimited version removes it. Generate a batch of puzzles on infinitewordle.net, capture each as a PDF page, and bind them into a printable pack with the free convert and merge tools here on PDFDrives. A few minutes of setup gives you a reusable set ready for a classroom, a party, or a quiet flight.