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NYT Crossword Answers

April 15, 2026 · 74 clues

Today's full New York Times Crossword answers are organized below in a cleaner layout, so you can check one stuck section without scanning a cluttered answer post.

37 across answers 37 down answers Longest answer: VODKATONIC

Across answers

Every across clue and answer from the April 15, 2026 NYT Crossword.

1A

Playbill groups

CASTS
6A

"He's very modest - he has a lot to be modest about," e.g.

GIBE
10A

Like an enthusiast

AVID
14A

Tokyo-based brewery

ASAHI
15A

Musical instrument whose second syllable sounds like a part of other musical instruments

OBOE
16A

Snackable seaweed

NORI
17A

Put all the bold letters in this clue together?

MAKEASTINK
19A

Aussie greeting

GDAY
20A

Paper view?

OPED
21A

One reason to pucker up

KISS
22A

Its antlers can grow up to an inch per day

ELK
23A

Cheese tested as cannon ammunition on "MythBusters" (it didn't work)

EDAM
25A

How two people might walk

ABREAST
29A

Put all the bold letters in this clue together?

MAKEASTINK
32A

Get into a get-up

CLOTHE
33A

Mamá's boy

NINO
34A

Gold, at the Milano Cortina Olympics

ORO
35A

"Dagnabbit!"

RATS
36A

Sheriff's backup

POSSE
38A

Tech review site

CNET
39A

"I love," in Italian and Spanish

AMO
40A

Veg out in a spa?

CUKE
41A

Works out, say

TRAINS
43A

Put all the bold letters in this clue together?

MAKEASTINK
46A

Russian revolutionary of the early 1900s

TROTSKY
47A

Longtime Yankee nickname

AROD
48A

"___ to the West Wind"

ODE
49A

Isle in Scotland's Inner Hebrides

SKYE
51A

"It's fun to stay at the ___" (1978 lyric)

YMCA
55A

Presidential power

VETO
57A

Put all the bold letters in this clue together?

MAKEASTINK
59A

Blizzard ingredient

OREO
60A

English singer Parks

ARLO
61A

Potato-based Hanukkah serving

LATKE
62A

Heartfelt, say

WARM
63A

Cat's cry

MEOW
64A

Parts of a copse

TREES

Down answers

Every down clue and answer from the April 15, 2026 NYT Crossword.

1D

Hunter's attire, informally

CAMO
2D

"Like, now!"

ASAP
3D

Drink that's often served hot in the winter

SAKE
4D

When and where, in slang

THEDEETS
5D

One-named singer with the 2022 hit "Unstoppable"

SIA
6D

The moment of truth

GOTIME
7D

Bird with a long, downward-curving bill

IBIS
8D

Brest besties

BONSAMIS
9D

"Holy cannoli!"

EEK
10D

Geometers' calculations

ANGLES
11D

Clear cocktail often served with lime

VODKATONIC
12D

Apt letters missing from ret_ _ement pl_n

IRA
13D

Like some remodels, for short

DIY
18D

Genre for Blink-182 and Sum 41

SKATEPUNK
22D

Toy inventer Rubik

ERNO
24D

Bit of Morse code

DAH
26D

Completely beat

BONETIRED
27D

Like a glassy lake

SERENE
28D

Puts on display, with "out"

TROTS
29D

Tumult

CLAMOR
30D

Big name in plumbing

ROTOROOTER
31D

Photographer Adams

ANSEL
32D

Woodworking or glass blowing

CRAFT
37D

"All right, I'm convinced"

OKAYSURE
38D

Milky Way or Mars

CANDYBAR
40D

Suit, e.g.

CASE
42D

Indian P.M. of the 1990s

RAO
44D

Destination for Frodo in "The Lord of the Rings"

MTDOOM
45D

Tried not to draw attention

LAYLOW
50D

Letter between Juliet and Lima

KILO
52D

Dole (out)

METE
53D

Order for a wedding reception

CAKE
54D

One of the Twelve Olympians

ARES
55D

Promise

VOW
56D

Pitching stat

ERA
57D

Comic book onomatopoeia

BAM
58D

Music genre prefix

ALT

How to use today's NYT Crossword answer page

The April 15, 2026 New York Times Crossword includes 74 confirmed clue answers, split into 37 across entries and 37 down entries. That scale changes how you should use an answer page. On a Mini, one revealed word can unlock the whole grid in seconds. On the full crossword, the smarter move is to reveal only the part of the board that is blocking you. That is why this page keeps every clue paired with its label and answer in compact cards. You can jump to the precise section you need, recover momentum, and return to the puzzle without over-spoiling the rest of the grid.

Today's answer set stretches from short fill all the way up to a longer entry of VODKATONIC. In a full-size crossword, those longer entries often function like beams in the puzzle's structure. They create the crossings that stabilize the rest of the board. If you are stuck, start with the longest or most distinctive clue in the area you have already opened. Once one anchor entry lands, several shorter answers usually become much easier because the crossing letters cut down the number of realistic options immediately.

The across and down split also tells you something about the puzzle's solving rhythm. Across clues usually feel more conversational on first read because they are encountered in a left-to-right sweep. Down clues tend to be where the board tightens, because they either confirm your guesses or expose a wrong assumption fast. Reading the answer archive after you solve is useful for exactly that reason. You can see which answer shapes were clean, which ones were deceptive, and where the grid demanded more patience than the clue wording first suggested.

Another important difference between the full crossword and shorter daily games is variety. A large grid can combine everyday phrases, proper nouns, abbreviations, trivia, wordplay, and theme material all at once. If you treat every clue the same way, you lose time. The better approach is to classify the clue before you solve it. Is it definitional? Is it playful? Is it likely to hide a phrase? Is it pointing toward a common crossword abbreviation? That quick classification step makes the answer page more useful because you are not just reading solutions, you are training yourself to notice clue types faster on future puzzles.

If you want the lightest possible spoiler path, reveal one clue at a time from the section where your grid is stalled. Do not read the whole page top to bottom unless you are done solving.

Best strategy for future full crossword puzzles

Open with certainty, not ambition. Fill the clues you know cold, especially short ones with tight definitions, obvious abbreviations, and clue formats you recognize instantly. Then use those letters to attack the medium-length entries that sit at the center of the grid. Many solvers lose time by diving straight into the cleverest theme clue on the page. That is rarely the fastest route. A full crossword rewards accumulation. Ten easy answers in different parts of the board are often worth more than one brilliant solve in isolation.

When you do hit resistance, pay attention to why. If several clues in one section remain vague, the problem may not be the clues themselves. It may be a single wrong crossing that is contaminating everything nearby. That is another reason answer archives matter. When you compare your miss with the published fill, you start noticing recurring traps: assuming a tense too early, forcing a trivia answer that almost fits, or ignoring a clue that signaled abbreviation. Those patterns repeat across weeks and months, and they are exactly what separates casual solving from steady improvement.

Use the archive as a study tool, not just a rescue tool. Finish a puzzle, then revisit the clues that delayed you most. Read the answer, read the clue again, and ask what signal you missed. Over time, that review habit makes the full crossword feel much less random. You start seeing how clue language maps to fill, how theme entries announce themselves, and how constructors hide easy answers in plain sight. That is the fastest way to turn a daily answer page into actual solving progress.