Free English, Hebrew, Jewish, and simple gematria values

Gematria Calculator

Every word has a number. Find it instantly.

Use this calculator for words, names, phrases, and Hebrew text. It calculates English, Hebrew, Jewish, simple, and reverse gematria values with clear letter breakdowns.

Ready Type to calculate
Root
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Breakdown
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Method Value Root Letter breakdown
English Ordinal A=1 through Z=26, the clearest English gematria baseline. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
Full Reduction A=1 through I=9, then repeats through the alphabet. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
Reverse Ordinal A=26 through Z=1, the alphabet read in reverse. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
Reverse Reduction Reverse alphabet values reduced to the 1-9 cycle. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
Hebrew Standard Hebrew letters using standard Mispar Hechrechi values. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
Jewish Gematria English letters mapped with larger traditional number jumps. 0 0 Enter text to calculate
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What is a gematria calculator?

A gematria calculator converts letters into numbers, then adds those numbers into a total. The important part is the method. English Ordinal, Hebrew Standard, Jewish Gematria, Full Reduction, and reverse systems all use different maps, so a serious tool should name the method beside the answer.

This free gematria calculator is built for quick results and careful checking. Type a word, name, phrase, sentence, or Hebrew word, and the result area shows the value, the normalized input, and the letter-by-letter arithmetic. That makes the answer easier to trust, discuss, and compare.

Fast workflow

How to use this gematria calculator

First, enter the exact text you want to study. The calculator ignores punctuation for the calculation, but spelling and word order still matter. A clean result starts with a stable input.

Second, read the method label before reading the number. A value in English Ordinal is not the same claim as a value in Full Reduction, Hebrew Standard, or Jewish Gematria. The interface keeps those systems visible so you can compare without mixing rules.

Third, use the share result action only after the result is clean. A shareable result link keeps the input in the URL, so another person can open the same calculation and audit the same letters.

Gematria calculator examples

Examples make the tool feel less like a black box. The table below shows the input, method, total, and letter math for common searches. If a result looks surprising, the breakdown is where you check it.

Input Method Value Letter breakdown Why it matters
LOVE English Ordinal 54 L=12, O=15, V=22, E=5 A clean English example because every letter uses the simple A-Z chart.
Gematria English Ordinal 74 G=7, E=5, M=13, A=1, T=20, R=18, I=9, A=1 This is the same simple gematria method many searchers expect first.
JESUS English Ordinal 74 J=10, E=5, S=19, U=21, S=19 Names are one of the most common gematria calculator use cases.
שלום Hebrew Standard 376 ש=300, ל=30, ו=6, ם=40 Hebrew text should be checked with a Hebrew gematria method.

Gematria calculator chart and letter values

A useful calculator should be backed by a visible chart. The simplest English gematria chart begins with A=1 and ends with Z=26. Reduction methods cycle values from 1 to 9, while reverse methods read the alphabet from Z back to A.

Letter English Ordinal Full Reduction Reverse Ordinal
A1126
B2225
C3324
D4423
E5522

View the complete gematria calculator chart

Method clarity

English, Hebrew, Jewish, and simple gematria calculator methods

English Ordinal is the simple A=1 through Z=26 system. It is the best starting point for English words, names, titles, and short phrases. When someone asks for simple gematria, this gematria calculator shows that baseline first.

Full Reduction compresses English letters into a 1 to 9 cycle. It is useful for smaller patterns, but it should not be mixed casually with ordinal totals. The calculator shows it beside the baseline so the difference stays visible.

Reverse methods read the alphabet from the opposite direction. These methods can be useful for comparison, especially when two related phrases do not match in the ordinary A-Z map.

Hebrew Standard uses traditional Hebrew letter values. Use it for native Hebrew text. Jewish Gematria is a separate English-letter map with larger jumps in value. This gematria calculator labels both clearly so the language and method stay attached to the number.

This gematria calculator currently supports English Ordinal, Full Reduction, Reverse Ordinal, Reverse Reduction, Hebrew Standard, and Jewish Gematria. Method notes were last reviewed on June 11, 2026.

How to read a gematria calculator result

A strong gematria calculator result has three parts: the input, the method, and the breakdown. If you only save the final number, you lose the context that makes the calculation useful. The same word can look ordinary in English Ordinal, compact in Full Reduction, and much larger in Jewish Gematria.

Treat a matching number as a starting point, not a verdict. Related words that share the same value in the same method can be interesting. Unrelated words that happen to share a value are weaker. The gematria calculator helps you separate the arithmetic from the interpretation.

For notes, write the full claim: "LOVE equals 54 in English Ordinal." That sentence is better than writing 54 alone because it names the input, result, and method in one line.

Manual check

How to calculate gematria by hand

To calculate a word by hand, choose one method first. For English Ordinal, write the alphabet from A to Z and assign A=1, B=2, C=3, and so on through Z=26. Then remove spaces and punctuation from the input, write the value under each letter, and add the values together.

For example, LOVE in English Ordinal is L=12, O=15, V=22, and E=5. The total is 54. If you switch to Full Reduction, the same letters use a smaller 1 to 9 cycle, so LOVE becomes L=3, O=6, V=4, and E=5, for a total of 18. Both results are valid, but they are different claims.

Hebrew words need their own map. The word שלום uses Hebrew Standard values: ש=300, ל=30, ו=6, and ם=40. The total is 376. This is why the method label matters. Without the method, the number alone is easy to misunderstand.

Common mistakes to avoid

The first mistake is changing the spelling until a favorite number appears. That can be entertaining, but it weakens the result. A cleaner workflow is to choose the natural spelling first, calculate it, and then decide whether the result is worth studying.

The second mistake is comparing unrelated words just because they share a number. Many words can land on the same total, especially in reduction methods. A stronger comparison starts with a real connection before the arithmetic begins: a name and title, a phrase and its abbreviation, or a Hebrew word and a related Hebrew phrase.

The third mistake is mixing systems in one claim. If one phrase is checked in English Ordinal and another phrase is checked in Jewish Gematria, the comparison is not clean. Keep the input stable, keep the method stable, and let the numbers be interesting without making them carry more meaning than the calculation supports.

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Gematria calculator FAQ

What is a gematria calculator?

A gematria calculator converts letters into numbers using a named gematria method, then adds the letter values into a total. This gematria calculator shows the method, total, and letter breakdown together.

How do I use this gematria calculator?

Enter a word, name, phrase, or sentence. The gematria calculator instantly shows English Ordinal, Full Reduction, Reverse Ordinal, Reverse Reduction, Hebrew Standard, and Jewish Gematria results.

What is simple gematria?

Simple gematria usually means the A=1 through Z=26 English letter map. This gematria calculator labels that method as English Ordinal and shows the same result with a visible breakdown.

Can a gematria calculator show different values for the same word?

Yes. A gematria calculator can show different values when the letter map, language, or reduction rule changes. The same phrase may have one value in English Ordinal and another value in Jewish Gematria.

Why should I use a gematria calculator with examples and charts?

Examples and charts make a gematria calculator easier to audit. The final number matters, but the visible letter values show how the result was produced.