Nutze unseren kostenlosen Gematria-Rechner, um den numerischen Wert jedes Wortes oder jeder Phrase zu finden. Unterstützt 9 Methoden einschließlich Englisch, Hebräisch und Umgekehrte Gematria.
A gematria calculator is a digital tool that converts any word, name, or phrase into its corresponding numerical value using one or more defined letter-to-number mapping systems. Instead of manually looking up each letter's assigned number and adding them together — a process that can be tedious and error-prone — a gematria calculator does everything instantly, displaying not only the total gematria value but also a complete letter-by-letter breakdown so you can verify each step of the calculation.
The word "gematria" itself derives from the Greek word geometria, meaning geometry or measurement. This linguistic borrowing reflects the deep connection ancient cultures drew between the shape and sound of letters and their mathematical properties. In its most fundamental form, gematria is the practice of assigning numerical values to letters and then using those values to discover hidden relationships between words, names, phrases, and concepts.
Our free online gematria calculator supports nine distinct calculation methods: English Gematria, Hebrew Gematria, Simple Gematria, Jewish Gematria, Ordinal Gematria, Full Reduction, Single Reduction, Sumerian Gematria, and Reverse Gematria. Each method uses a different numerical mapping, producing different results for the same input — making this tool invaluable for anyone who wants to explore gematria comprehensively rather than through one lens alone.
To truly understand gematria, you need to understand where it came from — and the answer stretches back thousands of years across multiple civilisations. Gematria is not a modern invention or a passing trend. It is one of the oldest intellectual traditions in human history, practised by Babylonian scribes, Hebrew rabbis, Greek philosophers, early Christian theologians, Islamic scholars, and Renaissance mystics alike.
The earliest known use of a letter-number correspondence system appears in Mesopotamia. Archaeologists have found evidence that Babylonian scribes, working roughly between 800 and 600 BCE, used a numerical cipher in cuneiform writing. One famous example is an inscription from the palace of Sargon II (reigned 721–705 BCE) at Khorsabad, in which the king boasts that he built the city walls to a length equal to the gematria value of his own name — 16,283 cubits. This is one of the first documented instances of using a letter-number equivalence for a meaningful, intentional purpose.
The Sumerian connection goes even deeper. The Sumerians used a base-60 (sexagesimal) number system — a system so mathematically rich that we still use it today when we divide an hour into 60 minutes and a minute into 60 seconds. The Sumerian gematria method — where A=6, B=12, C=18, and each letter's value is its position multiplied by 6 — is a modern reconstruction inspired by this ancient sexagesimal tradition, and it produces distinctly different numerical relationships compared to other systems.
The most developed and historically significant gematria tradition is Hebrew. The Hebrew alphabet (aleph-bet) has been assigned numerical values since at least the third century BCE, when Jews living in the Hellenistic world began to encounter Greek isopsephy (the Greek equivalent of gematria). Hebrew gematria became a cornerstone of Jewish esoteric thought, particularly in Kabbalistic mysticism, where every letter of the Torah is considered to carry divine significance on multiple levels.
In Hebrew gematria, the 22 letters of the aleph-bet are divided into three groups:
When applied to the English alphabet (as in our Hebrew gematria calculator), each English letter is mapped to its positionally equivalent Hebrew letter value, preserving the ancient structure of units, tens, and hundreds.
Simultaneously with the Hebrew tradition, and quite independently, ancient Greeks developed their own letter-number system called isopsephy (from isos = equal, psephos = pebble, since counting with pebbles was an early calculation method). The 24 letters of the Greek alphabet were each assigned a numerical value, and Greek writers used these values to create numerological wordplay, hidden acrostics, and mystical commentary.
The most famous example of Greek isopsephy in a religious context is the number 666 from the Book of Revelation, which many scholars believe is a coded reference to the Roman Emperor Nero — whose name in Greek characters has an isopsephic value of 666. This kind of coded political commentary, hidden in plain sight through numerical equivalence, was a sophisticated literary technique of the ancient world.
In Jewish scholarly tradition, gematria is recognised as one of the 32 hermeneutical rules of Rabbi Eliezer ben Yose Ha-Gelili for interpreting the Torah. The Talmud contains numerous gematria-based interpretations. One classic example: in Genesis 14:14, the number of men Abraham marshalled to rescue his nephew Lot is given as 318. Talmudic commentators observe that 318 is the gematria value of Eliezer — the name of Abraham's servant. This suggests that Abraham went alone, with only his faithful servant Eliezer, rather than a literal army of 318 men.
Another famous example: the Hebrew phrase "one LORD" (Adonai Echad, from the Shema prayer) has a gematria value of 39. The word dew (tal) also equals 39. Kabbalistic tradition interprets this as a mystical connection between divine unity and the life-giving dew that nourishes the earth.
The flowering of Kabbalistic mysticism in medieval Spain and Provence (12th–13th centuries CE) brought gematria to its highest level of sophistication. The Zohar, composed primarily by Moses de León in the 13th century, is replete with gematria interpretations. The Kabbalists developed four levels of Torah interpretation — PaRDeS (an acronym for Peshat, Remez, Derash, and Sod, meaning literal, allegorical, homiletical, and mystical) — and gematria was the primary tool of Sod, the deepest mystical level.
Famous Kabbalistic gematria relationships include:
Early Christian writers adopted gematria from their Jewish contemporaries and from Hellenistic culture. The most famous Christian gematria is 888, the value of the Greek name "Jesus" (Ἰησοῦς / ΙΗΣΟΥΣ) using Greek isopsephy: I(10) + H(8) + Σ(200) + Ο(70) + Υ(400) + Σ(200) = 888. Early Christian apologists used this number symbolically, noting that 888 is the "number of Jesus" in contrast to 666, the "number of the beast."
The second-century text known as the Epistle of Barnabas uses gematria to interpret Genesis 14:14: the 318 servants of Abraham are said to represent Jesus because T (the cross-shaped Greek letter tau) = 300 and IH (the first two letters of the Greek IHSOUS) = 18, giving 318. This is one of the earliest documented uses of gematria in Christian theological writing.
Arabic gematria, known as Abjad numerals, follows the same principle of assigning numerical values to letters. The word abjad itself is composed of the first four letters of the Arabic alphabet in their ancient Semitic order: alif (1), ba (2), jim (3), dal (4). Islamic scholars used abjad numerals in poetry, calligraphy, and mystical texts, particularly in Sufi traditions. The name of God in Arabic, Allah (الله), has an abjad value of 66, a number considered of great mystical significance in Islamic mysticism.
During the Renaissance, European scholars became fascinated with the Jewish Kabbalah and developed what is now called "Christian Kabbalah" — an attempt to integrate Kabbalistic wisdom, including gematria, with Christian theology. Figures such as Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Johannes Reuchlin, and later Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa wrote extensively about the mystical properties of letters and numbers. Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy (1531) contains extensive tables of gematria values and letter correspondences that influenced Western occultism for centuries.
At its core, gematria calculation is simple: assign a number to each letter, then add all the numbers in a word or phrase together. The result is the gematria value of that word or phrase. The variation between different gematria methods lies entirely in which numbers are assigned to which letters.
Our gematria calculator supports nine different calculation methods. Understanding each one helps you choose the right method for your research and interpret results correctly.
English Gematria is the most widely used modern gematria system in the English-speaking world. It assigns sequential values to the 26 letters of the English alphabet: A=1, B=2, C=3, all the way to Z=26. This system is sometimes called "standard gematria" or "basic gematria" in popular usage, and it forms the foundation for most modern English gematria research.
English gematria is intuitive and easy to calculate mentally. Because the values are low (maximum 26 per letter), the totals for most words fall between 20 and 200, making them manageable for mental arithmetic or quick comparison.
Simple Gematria uses exactly the same letter values as English Gematria — A=1 through Z=26. In practice, the two terms are often used interchangeably by modern gematria practitioners, though some purists distinguish them by context: "Simple Gematria" is sometimes used to emphasise the straightforwardness of the system, particularly when contrasting it with more complex methods like Jewish Gematria or Full Reduction.
Ordinal Gematria also uses the same A=1 to Z=26 values, but the name emphasises the ordinal (positional) nature of the assignment — each letter's value is simply its position in the alphabet. The word "ordinal" distinguishes this system from systems that use non-positional values (such as Jewish Gematria or Hebrew Gematria). Some gematria databases track "Ordinal" separately from "English" and "Simple" as a category label even when the numbers are identical.
Sumerian Gematria multiplies each letter's alphabetical position by 6: A=6, B=12, C=18, D=24, E=30, F=36, G=42, H=48, I=54, J=60, K=66, L=72, M=78, N=84, O=90, P=96, Q=102, R=108, S=114, T=120, U=126, V=132, W=138, X=144, Y=150, Z=156.
The factor of 6 is inspired by the ancient Sumerian sexagesimal (base-60) number system — one of the most sophisticated mathematical systems of the ancient world. Sumerian gematria values are exactly 6× the English/Simple/Ordinal values, so the word "LOVE" that equals 54 in English equals 324 in Sumerian. This system is popular among researchers who believe that certain word combinations produce totals that are significant multiples of 6, 60, or 360.
Reverse Gematria inverts the English/Ordinal system: instead of A=1 and Z=26, it assigns A=26, B=25, C=24, and so on down to Z=1. This creates a mirror image of the standard system. The total of any word in English Gematria plus its total in Reverse Gematria always equals 27 × (number of letters in the word), a mathematical property that some researchers find significant.
Reverse gematria is used to examine words from the "other direction" — sometimes producing numerical equivalences that the forward system misses. It is a favourite tool of researchers who believe that language encodes information in both directions.
Hebrew Gematria, when applied to English text, maps each English letter to the value of its positionally corresponding Hebrew letter. The Hebrew alphabet has 22 letters (plus 5 final-form letters), and their traditional values follow the pattern of units (1–9), tens (10–90), and hundreds (100–400+).
The mapping is: A=1, B=2, C=3, D=4, E=5, F=6, G=7, H=8, I=9, J=10, K=20, L=30, M=40, N=50, O=60, P=70, Q=80, R=90, S=100, T=200, U=300, V=400, W=500, X=600, Y=700, Z=800.
As you can see, the values jump from single digits to tens and then to hundreds, creating a much wider range of possible totals. A single word can easily have a Hebrew gematria value in the thousands. This system is ideal for researchers seeking connections with actual Hebrew gematria values of words in the Torah and Talmud.
Jewish Gematria uses a specific traditional mapping that differs from the simple positional approach. In this system: A=1, B=2, C=3, D=4, E=5, F=6, G=7, H=8, I=9, J=600, K=10, L=20, M=30, N=40, O=50, P=60, Q=70, R=80, S=90, T=100, U=200, V=700, W=900, X=300, Y=400, Z=500.
Notice that J=600 and V=700 and W=900 — these are the "final letter" values from the traditional extended Hebrew alphabet. This unique mapping can produce dramatically different results from other systems and is used by researchers specifically interested in traditional Jewish numerological analysis.
Full Reduction Gematria takes each letter's ordinal value (1–26) and reduces it to a single digit using the digital root method. This means adding the digits of the value together until you reach a single digit:
Full Reduction gematria produces smaller, more manageable numbers and is related to the numerological practice of reducing numbers to their single-digit essence. It is used by numerologists and gematria researchers who work with the concept of "life path numbers" and other single-digit numerological values.
Single Reduction Gematria uses the same letter-value mapping as Full Reduction. The two systems are functionally identical at the letter level, both reducing each letter's ordinal position to a single digit before summing. In some research frameworks, "Single Reduction" refers to applying the reduction only once (rather than repeatedly), though in most practical applications the results are the same as Full Reduction.
The following tables give you the complete letter values for all nine gematria methods. Use these as a reference for manual calculations or to verify the results from our gematria calculator.
| Letter | English / Simple / Ordinal | Sumerian (×6) | Reverse | Hebrew | Jewish | Full / Single Reduction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | 6 | 26 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| B | 2 | 12 | 25 | 2 | 2 | 2 |
| C | 3 | 18 | 24 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| D | 4 | 24 | 23 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| E | 5 | 30 | 22 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| F | 6 | 36 | 21 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| G | 7 | 42 | 20 | 7 | 7 | 7 |
| H | 8 | 48 | 19 | 8 | 8 | 8 |
| I | 9 | 54 | 18 | 9 | 9 | 9 |
| J | 10 | 60 | 17 | 10 | 600 | 1 |
| K | 11 | 66 | 16 | 20 | 10 | 2 |
| L | 12 | 72 | 15 | 30 | 20 | 3 |
| M | 13 | 78 | 14 | 40 | 30 | 4 |
| N | 14 | 84 | 13 | 50 | 40 | 5 |
| O | 15 | 90 | 12 | 60 | 50 | 6 |
| P | 16 | 96 | 11 | 70 | 60 | 7 |
| Q | 17 | 102 | 10 | 80 | 70 | 8 |
| R | 18 | 108 | 9 | 90 | 80 | 9 |
| S | 19 | 114 | 8 | 100 | 90 | 1 |
| T | 20 | 120 | 7 | 200 | 100 | 2 |
| U | 21 | 126 | 6 | 300 | 200 | 3 |
| V | 22 | 132 | 5 | 400 | 700 | 4 |
| W | 23 | 138 | 4 | 500 | 900 | 5 |
| X | 24 | 144 | 3 | 600 | 300 | 6 |
| Y | 25 | 150 | 2 | 700 | 400 | 7 |
| Z | 26 | 156 | 1 | 800 | 500 | 8 |
Our free gematria calculator is designed to be as simple as possible while giving you the most complete information. Here is a detailed guide to using every feature:
Type or paste any word, name, or phrase into the large input field at the top of the calculator. The calculator accepts any combination of letters; spaces and punctuation are automatically ignored. You can enter a single letter, a single word, a full name, a phrase, a sentence, or even a longer passage — though very long texts may produce very large numbers in some systems.
Tips for input:
Click on any of the nine method tabs below the input field: English, Hebrew, Simple, Jewish, Ordinal, Full Reduction, Single Reduction, Sumerian, or Reverse. The calculator immediately recalculates and displays results for your selected method.
You can switch between methods at any time without re-entering your text — this makes it easy to compare the value of the same word across all nine systems in seconds.
The calculator displays two main pieces of information:
Click the "Copy Result" button to copy the total gematria value to your clipboard. This is useful when you want to record results, compare multiple calculations, or share findings with others. The button briefly shows "Copied!" to confirm the action.
Click the "Clear" button to reset the calculator and enter a new word or phrase. Alternatively, simply select all the text in the input field and type your new text over it.
The best way to understand gematria is through real examples. Here are over 50 carefully calculated examples across different methods, covering common words, famous names, spiritual terms, and interesting discoveries.
Notable: HATE and DARK both equal 34 in English gematria — a connection that gematria researchers find meaningful, suggesting these concepts vibrate at the same numerical frequency.
Notable: JESUS = 74 and LUCIFER = 74 in English gematria. This equivalence is frequently noted in gematria research — some interpret it as representing the dual nature of the universe, while others see it as a mathematical coincidence to be discerned carefully.
One of the most powerful uses of a multi-method gematria calculator is discovering when different words share values across different systems. Here are some fascinating cross-method equivalences:
A fascinating area of gematria research explores whether number-words equal their own numeric value when calculated:
Notable: FIVE and NINE both equal 42 in English gematria — despite being different numbers, they vibrate at the same frequency according to this system.
Manual gematria calculation — looking up each letter, writing down the value, adding them all up — takes time and is prone to arithmetic errors. Our gematria calculator produces instant, guaranteed-accurate results for any length of text across all nine methods simultaneously. What might take a person ten minutes to calculate manually is done in a fraction of a second.
Instead of using nine different reference books or switching between nine separate tools, our calculator lets you compare all methods for the same text by simply clicking a tab. This multi-method capability is invaluable for serious researchers who want to see the full numerical profile of a word or phrase rather than a single value.
The detailed breakdown table is one of the most important features of a good gematria calculator. It shows you exactly how the total was reached — which is essential for learning, teaching, verifying results, and explaining your findings to others. You can trace any result back to its individual letter values and confirm the calculation is correct.
For those engaged in Biblical hermeneutics, Kabbalistic study, numerology, or any other spiritually oriented practice that uses gematria, having an accurate and comprehensive calculator is essential. Our tool covers the Hebrew and Jewish gematria methods most relevant to religious study, as well as the English systems used in modern spiritual analysis.
Students of linguistics, cryptography, history, religion, philosophy, and mathematics will all find gematria calculators valuable. The tool makes it easy to explore the historical practice of gematria firsthand, to test claimed equivalences, and to understand the mathematical structure underlying different letter-number systems.
Writers, poets, artists, and musicians increasingly use gematria as a creative tool. Choosing words or phrases with specific gematria values can add layers of meaning to a creative work — visible to those who know how to look, invisible to those who don't. Our calculator makes it easy to craft text with intentional numerical properties.
Many people use gematria to analyse names — their own name, the name of a child they're considering, the name of a business, or the name of a place. By calculating the gematria value of a name and comparing it with other significant values (such as birth dates, life path numbers, or important words), you can explore the numerical resonance of the name.
Gematria research often involves looking for patterns — words that share values, phrases whose values are mathematically related (multiples, factors, differences), or texts whose values encode meaningful information. Our calculator's speed makes systematic pattern research practical: you can calculate hundreds of words in an hour rather than spending a week on manual calculations.
By supporting Hebrew, Jewish, and multiple English-based systems, our calculator lets you explore gematria from multiple cultural perspectives. The same word might have completely different values in different traditions — and discovering these differences illuminates how each culture approached the relationship between language and number.
Our gematria calculator is completely free, requires no registration, stores no data, and works on any device with a web browser. You can use it privately to explore personal names, sacred texts, or speculative research without any account creation or data collection.
Historians and archaeologists studying ancient texts that contain numerical references can use gematria calculators to quickly test whether a given number might be the gematria value of a particular name or phrase. This kind of rapid hypothesis-testing would be impractical without a calculator.
Our calculator is available in seven languages — English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, German, Italian, and Russian — making it accessible to researchers around the world, regardless of their primary language.
The calculator is fully mobile-responsive, so you can perform gematria calculations on your smartphone or tablet just as easily as on a desktop computer. This means the tool is always with you, whether you're studying at home, in a library, or attending a lecture.
Unlike some gematria software that requires downloading and installing programmes, our online calculator works directly in your web browser with no installation needed. Updates and improvements are applied automatically without any action on your part.
Perhaps most importantly, using a gematria calculator encourages critical thinking about the relationship between language, number, and meaning. Rather than accepting claimed gematria equivalences on faith, you can verify them yourself instantly. This empowers you to evaluate gematria research with your own eyes and make informed judgements about what connections are genuinely interesting versus coincidental.
The most common gematria error is comparing values calculated using different systems. For example, claiming that word A (calculated in English gematria) equals word B (calculated in Hebrew gematria) is meaningless — you're comparing apples and oranges. Always verify that both values you're comparing use the same method. Our calculator clearly labels each result with the method used, so you can always confirm this.
Different gematria researchers and tools handle spaces differently. Some include spaces as zero-value characters (which doesn't affect the total), while others include them as valued characters in certain systems. Most standard gematria practice ignores spaces entirely. If you're comparing your results with someone else's, make sure you both handle spaces the same way. Our calculator ignores all non-alphabetic characters for consistency.
For Hebrew-based systems applied to English, the mapping of which English letter corresponds to which Hebrew letter is not always standardised. Different researchers use slightly different mappings, which can produce different results. Be aware of which mapping system your tool or reference uses and stick to it consistently.
One of the most serious intellectual mistakes in gematria research is confirmation bias — calculating gematria values for hundreds of word pairs until you find one that matches, then presenting that match as significant while ignoring all the non-matches. With 26 letters and multiple methods, coincidental numerical equivalences are statistically inevitable. A gematria connection is only meaningful if it was predicted before the calculation, or if it is one of very few connections examined rather than one cherry-picked from many.
Not every gematria match is the result of intentional encoding. Many historical texts do not contain deliberate gematria. When a researcher claims that a particular number in an ancient text "proves" a gematria connection, they need to demonstrate that the author of that text actually used gematria — not just that the numbers happen to match. Archaeological and textual context matters enormously.
With nine gematria methods, you have nine different values for every word. If you search long enough, almost any two words will share a value in at least one method. This doesn't make the connection meaningful. The more methods you check, the higher the probability of a coincidental match — so checking all nine methods makes every coincidence statistically likely.
When studying Hebrew religious texts (Torah, Talmud, Kabbalah), you should calculate the gematria of the original Hebrew words — not the English translations. The English translation of a Hebrew word will almost never have the same gematria value as the original Hebrew word, because the translation uses different letters. Our Hebrew gematria calculator maps English to Hebrew values, which is useful for certain kinds of study, but it does not replace actual Hebrew gematria for Hebrew textual analysis.
Some gematria practitioners reduce every number to a single digit (e.g., 74 → 7+4 → 11 → 1+1 → 2). While reduction is a valid technique in numerology, over-reducing can eliminate important information. The number 74 has specific properties that 2 does not; reducing them to the same value collapses meaningful distinctions. Use reduction deliberately and consistently, not as a way to make non-matching numbers appear to match.
When you find a gematria pattern in a text (especially a modern text), it's tempting to assume the author placed it there intentionally. However, gematria patterns emerge spontaneously in natural language due to the statistical properties of letters. A gematria match in a newspaper article does not mean the journalist was practising gematria — it means the English language has consistent mathematical properties that produce these patterns everywhere. Intent requires evidence beyond mere numerical coincidence.
English gematria was developed for the English language, and Hebrew gematria for Hebrew. Applying English gematria to, say, French or Spanish words will give you values, but those values don't have the same cultural or historical significance as English or Hebrew gematria values do in their respective traditions. When using gematria across languages, be explicit about what system you're using and why.
Gematria holds a special and venerated place in Jewish tradition. It is not merely a curiosity or a game — it is a serious hermeneutical tool that has been used by rabbinical scholars for over two millennia to illuminate the deeper meanings of sacred texts.
Rabbi Eliezer ben Yose Ha-Gelili compiled a list of 32 rules for interpreting the Torah. Gematria appears on this list, alongside other interpretive methods such as gezera shawa (analogy based on shared words) and kal va-chomer (argument from the lighter to the heavier). This inclusion means that gematria has the same level of scholarly legitimacy in Jewish law as logical argumentation — it is a recognised and respected method of textual analysis, not a fringe practice.
Some of the most famous gematria interpretations in Jewish tradition include:
Kabbalistic tradition developed numerous elaborations on basic gematria. Some key techniques include:
Early Christians inherited the gematric tradition from their Jewish contemporaries and from the broader Hellenistic culture in which Christianity was born. Gematria appears in several New Testament contexts and was widely used by early Church Fathers in their theological arguments.
Perhaps the most famous number in Christian history, 666 from the Book of Revelation (13:18), is almost certainly a gematria reference. The text says: "Let the one who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man." This explicit instruction to "calculate" the number strongly implies gematria. The most widely accepted scholarly interpretation is that 666 is the Greek isopsephic value of "Neron Kaiser" (Nero Caesar) spelled in Hebrew characters — a coded political critique of the Roman Emperor Nero's persecution of Christians.
In Greek isopsephy, the name Jesus (ΙΗΣΟΥΣ) equals 888: I=10, H=8, S=200, O=70, U=400, S=200. The number 8 was associated with the eighth day (the day of resurrection, since Christ rose on the first day of the week, which early Christians called the eighth day). Three 8s reinforced this symbolism threefold. Early Christian writers explicitly cited this value as evidence of Jesus's divine nature.
In the 21st century, gematria has entered mainstream popular culture in several ways:
Several hip-hop artists and musicians have publicly discussed their use of gematria in their work. Jay-Z's album "The Blueprint" includes various numerological references. The band Muse references gematria in their album artwork and music videos. Tool is famous for incorporating complex mathematical structures — including gematric values — into their music. The number 46&2, referenced in Tool's song of that name, relates to chromosome counts that gematria researchers have analysed extensively.
The film "Pi" (1998) directed by Darren Aronofsky centres on a mathematician who discovers patterns in the stock market and gematric connections in the Torah. "The Number 23" (2007) explores numerical obsession related to gematria and numerology. The television series "Lost" used numerology and number patterns (including 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42 — the "Hurley numbers") that gematria enthusiasts have analysed in depth.
The internet has enabled the growth of large online communities devoted to gematria research. Websites, YouTube channels, Reddit communities, and social media groups dedicated to gematria collectively attract millions of visitors. These communities analyse current events, celebrities, corporations, and political figures through the lens of gematria, looking for patterns and connections between names, dates, and news headlines.
Gematria and numerology are closely related but distinct disciplines. Understanding the difference helps you use both tools more effectively.
Both gematria and numerology assign numerical values to words, names, and dates, then interpret the significance of those numbers. Both have ancient roots in multiple cultures. Both are used for personal name analysis, date analysis, and spiritual inquiry. Both reduce multi-digit numbers to single digits or master numbers (11, 22, 33) for interpretation.
Numerology is primarily concerned with the numbers themselves — their archetypal meanings, their relationship to personality and destiny, and their appearance in birthdates and life events. It typically uses a simplified letter-number chart (where letters are assigned values 1–9 in a repeating pattern) and focuses on reducing everything to single digits or master numbers.
Gematria, by contrast, is more concerned with the relationships between words — finding pairs or groups of words that share numerical values, discovering hidden textual patterns, and connecting language to sacred or cosmological meanings. Gematria preserves the full numerical value of a word rather than always reducing it, and it operates with multiple different letter-number systems rather than just one.
Many modern practitioners combine gematria and numerology by calculating both the gematria value of their name and their numerological life path number (derived from their birth date), then looking for relationships between these values. For example, if your name has a gematria value that reduces to 7, and your life path number is also 7, this is often interpreted as a significant alignment.
Notarikon is the practice of using the initial letters of a phrase to form a word, or vice versa — expanding a word into a phrase whose initial letters match the original. For example, the Hebrew word bereshit (beginning) can be read as an acronym for a phrase meaning "In the beginning God saw that Israel would accept the Torah." Notarikon is used alongside gematria in Kabbalistic analysis, and the gematria values of both the original word and the expanded phrase are often compared.
Temurah involves substituting letters according to a defined cipher system. The most famous temurah cipher is Atbash, where the last letter replaces the first, the second-to-last replaces the second, and so on. The gematria values of words before and after temurah transformation are often analysed for additional meaning. The prophets Jeremiah and Ezekiel used Atbash in the Hebrew Bible — "Babel" in Jeremiah 51:41 is coded as "Sheshach" using Atbash.
In traditional Hebrew gematria, the rule of colel permits a researcher to add or subtract one from a gematria value when comparing two words. This is because a word can be considered to "include" itself — the wholeness of the word itself is worth 1 additional unit. Colel provides flexibility but should be used judiciously to prevent cherry-picking.
Chain gematria involves calculating the gematria value of a word, then calculating the gematria value of the resulting number spelled out as a word, and so on — creating a chain of transformations. For example: LOVE → 54 → "FIFTY FOUR" → calculate gematria of "FIFTY FOUR" → continue. This technique reveals deep structural relationships between concepts and their numerical representations.
Advanced practitioners look for patterns not just in individual word equivalences but across entire phrases, paragraphs, or chapters. For example, counting the total number of letters in a passage, comparing it to the gematria value of the first word, or finding that alternating words in a text have values that form a sequence. These techniques require patience and systematic calculation — exactly what our gematria calculator is designed to support.
The academic study of gematria falls primarily within the fields of religious studies, history of science, linguistics, and the history of mathematics. Mainstream science does not validate the mystical claims often associated with gematria — the claim that certain numbers have inherent spiritual significance, or that gematria reveals hidden messages encoded in reality. However, the academic study of gematria as a historical and cultural phenomenon is robust and legitimate.
From a purely statistical perspective, finding a numerical match between two words using gematria is not as surprising as it might seem. In English gematria, where values range from 1 to about 200 for most common words, the probability of two random words sharing a value is significant. With nine different methods available, the probability of finding at least one matching value for any two words is quite high. This statistical reality doesn't mean gematria is meaningless — but it does mean that individual matches should not be over-interpreted without broader context.
Linguists have used gematria-like analysis to study patterns in ancient texts — for example, to identify scribal codes, detect hidden acrostics, or analyse the mathematical structure of poetic compositions. The Book of Psalms, for instance, contains numerous acrostic poems where the initial letters of successive verses spell out the Hebrew alphabet — a formal device that has interesting gematric properties.
Historians of cryptography consider gematria one of the earliest known forms of substitution cipher — replacing letters with numbers. While rudimentary compared to modern cryptographic systems, gematria represents an important early step in the development of coded communication. The use of gematria to encode political messages (such as the 666 reference to Nero) demonstrates its practical application as a form of ancient cryptography.
Q: What is the most accurate gematria method?
A: There is no single "most accurate" gematria method — accuracy depends entirely on what you're trying to achieve. For studying Hebrew religious texts and Kabbalah, Hebrew Gematria (which maps the English alphabet to Hebrew letter values) is most appropriate. For modern English research, English/Simple/Ordinal gematria (A=1 to Z=26) is the standard. For Jewish textual analysis, Jewish Gematria captures the traditional mapping. No method is inherently more correct than another — they are simply different systems with different historical contexts and applications.
Q: Is gematria the same as numerology?
A: Gematria and numerology are related but distinct. Both convert words and names to numbers for interpretive purposes, but they differ in their methods, goals, and cultural origins. Numerology typically uses a simplified 1–9 letter chart and focuses on personal destiny numbers, life path numbers, and the archetypal meanings of single-digit numbers. Gematria uses multiple different letter-number systems, preserves full numerical values rather than always reducing, and is primarily concerned with finding numerical equivalences between different words and phrases rather than with personal numerological analysis.
Q: Why does the same word have different values in different methods?
A: Because different methods assign different numerical values to each letter. In English Gematria, A=1; in Hebrew Gematria, A is still 1, but L=30 (not 12 as in English); in Jewish Gematria, J=600 (not 10 as in English). Since the letter values differ across systems, the totals for any given word also differ. This is why it's essential to always specify which method you're using when sharing gematria values.
Q: Can gematria predict the future?
A: No established scientific evidence supports the idea that gematria can predict future events. Some practitioners claim to have found gematria connections between words and events, but these claims typically involve significant post-hoc analysis (finding connections after the fact), cherry-picking from many calculations, and applying multiple methods until a match is found. It is not possible to reliably predict future events through gematria or any other numerological system.
Q: What is the gematria value of my name?
A: Enter your name in our gematria calculator above to find out! The value will depend on which method you choose. Most people are interested in their English Gematria value (A=1 to Z=26), but you can check all nine methods with a single click. Your name will have nine different gematria values — one for each method — and each reveals a different numerical dimension of your name.
Q: Is gematria used in modern religion?
A: Yes. Gematria is actively used in contemporary Orthodox Jewish study and Kabbalistic practice. Many synagogues and Jewish educational institutions teach gematria as part of Torah interpretation. It is also used in various Sufi traditions in Islam, and by practitioners of Western esotericism and occultism. Modern Christianity generally does not use gematria, though some Protestant and Catholic scholars study it in the context of biblical hermeneutics and textual criticism.
Q: What is the highest possible gematria value?
A: In theory, there is no upper limit — a very long phrase could have an arbitrarily high gematria value. For a single letter, the highest value in our supported systems is 900 (W in Jewish Gematria). For a single common English word, Hebrew and Jewish Gematria tend to produce the largest values because some letters have values in the hundreds. The word "WIZARD" in Hebrew Gematria, for example: W=500, I=9, Z=800, A=1, R=90, D=4 = 1,404.
Q: Is gematria the same in all languages?
A: No. Gematria developed independently in different cultures, each with its own alphabet and letter-number correspondence system. Hebrew gematria, Greek isopsephy, Arabic abjad numerals, and various modern systems (like English gematria) are all distinct. They share the general principle of assigning numbers to letters, but the specific assignments, the cultural contexts, and the interpretive traditions differ substantially. Our calculator focuses on English-based systems and English approximations of Hebrew and Jewish systems.
Q: How old is gematria?
A: The earliest documented use of a letter-number correspondence system is from Mesopotamia, approximately 800–600 BCE (roughly 2,700 to 2,900 years ago). Hebrew gematria developed during the same period and was elaborated extensively during the rabbinic period (first few centuries CE) and the medieval Kabbalistic period (12th–17th centuries CE). Greek isopsephy also dates to approximately the 5th–3rd centuries BCE. English gematria, as applied to the modern English alphabet, is a much more recent development — primarily from the late 19th and 20th centuries CE.
Q: What does it mean when two words have the same gematria value?
A: In gematria tradition, when two words share the same numerical value, they are considered to be numerically equivalent — they vibrate at the same "frequency" or have a hidden connection in the structure of reality or language. The significance of any particular equivalence depends on the interpretive tradition you follow. In Jewish tradition, a gematria equivalence suggests a conceptual link between the two words that illuminates both meanings. In modern English gematria practice, equivalences are often interpreted as revealing hidden patterns in the language or in current events. From a purely mathematical standpoint, equivalences are statistically inevitable and may or may not be meaningful.
Q: What is Full Reduction gematria used for?
A: Full Reduction gematria is used when the practitioner wants to work with single-digit values rather than the larger numbers produced by other systems. It is particularly popular among numerologically-oriented gematria researchers because it connects naturally with numerological life path numbers, soul urge numbers, and other single-digit numerological concepts. Full Reduction is also used when looking for patterns that persist across words of very different lengths, since even long words produce small single-digit values.
Q: Can I use gematria for Bible study?
A: Yes, with some important caveats. For studying the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), gematria should ideally be applied to the original Hebrew text, not to English translations. Our calculator supports Hebrew gematria values mapped to the English alphabet, which is a useful approximation but not identical to calculating actual Hebrew gematria. For the New Testament, Greek isopsephy (Greek letter-number equivalence) is the historically appropriate system. English gematria, while interesting for exploring English translations, is a modern system not historically connected to the ancient texts.
Q: What is the gematria value of the word "gematria"?
A: In English Gematria (A=1 to Z=26): G=7, E=5, M=13, A=1, T=20, R=18, I=9, A=1 = 74. In Sumerian Gematria: G=42, E=30, M=78, A=6, T=120, R=108, I=54, A=6 = 444. In Full Reduction: G=7, E=5, M=4, A=1, T=2, R=9, I=9, A=1 = 38 → 3+8 = 11 (a master number in numerology). In Reverse Gematria: G=20, E=22, M=14, A=26, T=7, R=9, I=18, A=26 = 142.
Q: Is there a gematria value for numbers themselves?
A: Yes — when you spell out a number as a word, that word has a gematria value. For example, "ONE" = 34, "TWO" = 58, "THREE" = 56, "FOUR" = 60, "FIVE" = 42, "SIX" = 52, "SEVEN" = 65, "EIGHT" = 49, "NINE" = 42, "TEN" = 39 (all in English gematria). Notice that FIVE and NINE both equal 42 — a coincidence that gematria researchers have noted and interpreted in various ways.
Q: How does Sumerian gematria relate to actual Sumerian number systems?
A: The connection is primarily inspirational rather than historically documented. The ancient Sumerians used a sexagesimal (base-60) number system, and the modern "Sumerian Gematria" system — which multiplies each letter's position by 6 — is designed to honour this connection to the number 6 (as a factor of 60). However, there is no documented historical evidence that the ancient Sumerians used this specific letter-number correspondence system with the English alphabet. The system was developed by modern gematria researchers who were inspired by Sumerian mathematical traditions.
Q: What are some famous gematria discoveries in modern times?
A: Modern gematria research has produced numerous claimed "discoveries" — equivalences between words and phrases related to current events, prominent figures, and significant dates. Some examples that circulate widely in gematria communities include the claim that "CORONA" = 66 in English gematria (C=3, O=15, R=18, O=15, N=14, A=1 = 66), that various political leaders' names share values with related political terms, and that significant historical dates can be connected to gematria values of related phrases. These findings should be evaluated critically rather than accepted uncritically, keeping in mind the statistical inevitability of coincidental matches across many calculations.
Q: What is the difference between gematria and cryptography?
A: Gematria replaces letters with numbers but does not conceal the mapping — anyone who knows the system can decode the numbers back to letters. True cryptography hides the mapping or uses complex mathematical operations to make decoding without the key effectively impossible. However, gematria does function as a simple substitution cipher when used to encode political messages (as in the 666 = Nero example from the Book of Revelation). Modern cryptography is vastly more sophisticated, but gematria represents an important early step in the history of coded communication.
Q: Can I use gematria for business names?
A: Many entrepreneurs and business owners consult gematria (along with numerology, feng shui, and other traditional systems) when choosing a business name. In English gematria practice, some values are considered more auspicious than others — for example, names that reduce to 1 (leadership, new beginnings), 8 (abundance, business success), or 33 (the "master teacher" number) are often preferred. However, there is no scientific evidence that a business's gematria value affects its commercial success, and other factors (product quality, market fit, marketing) are obviously far more important. If you find meaning in choosing a name with a specific gematria value, our calculator can help you explore the options.
Q: Are there any books I can read to learn more about gematria?
A: Yes. Some recommended books for learning about gematria from various perspectives include: "The Sefer Yetzirah" (Book of Formation) — one of the earliest Kabbalistic texts, foundational to Hebrew gematria; "The Bahir" and "The Zohar" — central Kabbalistic texts rich with gematria; "Gematria: The Numbers of Infinity" by Bligh Bond and Tsura Lea Lea Simcox; "The Complete Book of Gematria" by various modern authors; "Gematria and the Tanakh" by Brian Pivik; and for academic context, "The Mystical Torah: An Introduction to the Kabbalah" by Elie Wiesel and various academic works on Jewish mysticism by Gershom Scholem, particularly "Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism."
Q: How do I interpret a gematria value once I have it?
A: Interpretation depends on your framework. In traditional Hebrew/Kabbalistic gematria, you look for other Hebrew words with the same value and consider the conceptual connections between them. In numerology-influenced gematria, you reduce the value to a single digit (or master number) and consult numerological meanings (1=new beginnings, 2=duality, 3=creativity, 4=stability, 5=change, 6=harmony, 7=spiritual depth, 8=abundance, 9=completion). In modern English gematria, you compare the value to other significant words and phrases to find patterns. In all traditions, interpretation is ultimately a hermeneutical exercise — you are using number as a lens through which to perceive deeper meaning, and the richness of that meaning depends on your own knowledge, intuition, and analytical framework.
| Aspect | Manual Calculation | Online Gematria Calculator |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 5–15 minutes per word (multiple methods) | Instantaneous for all 9 methods |
| Accuracy | Prone to arithmetic errors | Guaranteed accurate |
| Methods supported | One at a time, requires separate charts | All 9 methods simultaneously |
| Letter breakdown | Must be done manually | Automatically displayed |
| Long texts | Very tedious and error-prone | Handled instantly |
| Tools required | Reference charts, pen, paper, calculator | Just a web browser |
| Cost | Free but time-intensive | Completely free |
| Accessibility | Requires knowing the charts | No prior knowledge needed |
Gematria is one of the most ancient and enduring intellectual traditions in human history. Spanning at least 2,700 years across multiple cultures and civilisations, it represents humanity's deep and persistent intuition that language and number are not merely practical tools but windows into the underlying structure of reality itself.
Whether you approach gematria as a serious religious scholar, a curious student of history, an enthusiastic numerologist, a creative writer seeking to add hidden layers of meaning to your work, or a sceptic who wants to understand why millions of people find these numerical patterns compelling — our gematria calculator gives you the tools you need to explore, verify, and think critically about this ancient practice.
The nine methods supported by this calculator represent the full breadth of the major English-applicable gematria systems: from the elegantly simple (English/Simple/Ordinal, A=1 to Z=26) to the mathematically rich (Hebrew gematria, with values reaching into the hundreds) to the historically evocative (Sumerian, inspired by the 4,000-year-old sexagesimal system) to the numerologically focused (Full Reduction, distilling every word to its single-digit essence).
Use our calculator freely, use it often, and use it critically. Question every connection you find, seek historical and cultural context for every claim, and remember that the most profound insights in gematria come not from any single numerical match but from the accumulated patterns discovered over years of patient, systematic study. The numbers are there, waiting to be found — and with the right tools, anyone can begin the search.