NYT Connections puzzle #1076 for May 22, 2026, looked manageable at first because several words naturally paired together, but the board became difficult once the obvious associations started overlapping. The yellow and green groups both contained language people hear regularly in work and social settings, which created multiple believable combinations that did not fully solve.
The biggest challenge came from the purple category. Several players likely tried building travel-related or casual-phrase groups before realizing the connection depended entirely on name homophones hidden inside the opening sounds of each phrase. The blue group also caused confusion because the conveyor-belt theme was spread across manufacturing, airports, retail, and restaurants instead of one obvious setting.
NYT Connections May 22 Hints
Yellow hint: Phrases used when reconnecting with someone.
Sharper clue: Think about communication after some time has passed.
Trap to avoid: A few of these sound like project-management or office workflow language, but the connection is personal contact.
Green hint: Accepted behavior inside a group or society.
Sharper clue: These describe informal expectations rather than official laws.
Trap to avoid: Don’t separate “unwritten rule” from the others just because it is longer.
Blue hint: Places where things move continuously in front of people.
Sharper clue: A moving belt or rotating system connects all four.
Trap to avoid: Airport and shopping words may tempt you into separate themes.
Purple hint: The beginning of each phrase sounds like a first name.
Sharper clue: Read the first word or sound aloud slowly.
Trap to avoid: The meanings of the phrases themselves are mostly irrelevant.
Main misleading paths: “Carry-on” and “baggage claim” strongly suggest a travel category, while “checkout lane” feels like it belongs with everyday errands or shopping-related phrases. “Touch base” and “follow up” also look like they belong with workplace terminology instead of reconnecting communication phrases. The puzzle intentionally mixed ordinary conversational language with more abstract wordplay to delay the purple reveal.
Today’s NYT Connections Answers
Yellow Group
Green Group
Blue Group
Purple Group
Today’s board rewarded players who stopped chasing obvious semantic links and started testing sound patterns instead. Several believable mini-groups existed, but only the homophone logic unlocked the final category cleanly.
For official gameplay and post-game analysis, players can visit the New York Times Connections page.















