Berechne jüdische Gematria-Werte mit traditionellen jüdischen Numerologie-Methoden. Einzigartige Wertzuordnung basierend auf der alten hebräischen Schreibertradition.
Jewish Gematria is a distinctive letter-number correspondence system that maps the English alphabet to values derived from the traditional Hebrew scribal tradition, but in a non-sequential arrangement that differs fundamentally from both Simple Gematria (A=1 to Z=26) and standard Hebrew Gematria. While Hebrew Gematria assigns values sequentially (the 10th English letter J = the 10th Hebrew letter Yod = 10, the 11th K = the 11th Hebrew letter Kaf = 20, etc.), Jewish Gematria uses a historically grounded but non-obvious mapping that reflects the specific values associated with the Jewish Kabbalistic and scribal traditions.
The complete Jewish Gematria mapping is: 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 the dramatic anomaly: J=600 and V=700 and W=900 are orders of magnitude larger than their neighboring letters. These extraordinary values derive from the traditional extended Hebrew alphabet, where the five "final form" letters (sofit letters) that appear only at word-ends in Hebrew receive values of 500, 600, 700, 800, and 900. In Jewish Gematria applied to English, these extended values are assigned to specific English letters according to a traditional correspondence that reflects deeper aspects of the Hebrew-English letter alignment.
Our Jewish gematria calculator implements this traditional mapping precisely, giving you access to one of the most historically authentic and numerologically rich gematria systems available for English text.
| Letter | Jewish Value | Hebrew Equivalent | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | Aleph (א) | First letter, unity |
| B | 2 | Bet (ב) | House, dwelling |
| C | 3 | Gimel (ג) | Camel, generosity |
| D | 4 | Dalet (ד) | Door, poverty |
| E | 5 | He (ה) | Window, divine breath |
| F | 6 | Vav (ו) | Hook, connection |
| G | 7 | Zayin (ז) | Weapon, sustenance |
| H | 8 | Chet (ח) | Fence, life |
| I | 9 | Tet (ט) | Serpent, good |
| J | 600 | Mem Sofit (ם) | Final Mem — hidden wisdom |
| K | 10 | Yod (י) | Hand, divine spark |
| L | 20 | Kaf (כ) | Palm, potential |
| M | 30 | Lamed (ל) | Ox goad, learning |
| N | 40 | Mem (מ) | Water, chaos, gestation |
| O | 50 | Nun (נ) | Fish, faithfulness |
| P | 60 | Samekh (ס) | Support, circular |
| Q | 70 | Ayin (ע) | Eye, perception |
| R | 80 | Pe (פ) | Mouth, speech |
| S | 90 | Tsadi (צ) | Righteous person, hunt |
| T | 100 | Qof (ק) | Back of head, holy/profane |
| U | 200 | Resh (ר) | Head, beginning |
| V | 700 | Nun Sofit (ן) | Final Nun — faithfulness |
| W | 900 | Tsadi Sofit (ץ) | Final Tsadi — highest righteousness |
| X | 300 | Shin (ש) | Tooth, fire, divine name |
| Y | 400 | Tav (ת) | Cross/mark, truth, completion |
| Z | 500 | Kaf Sofit (ך) | Final Kaf — expansive palm |
The unusual mapping of Jewish Gematria — particularly the high values assigned to J (600), V (700), W (900), X (300), Y (400), and Z (500) — is not arbitrary. It reflects a sophisticated understanding of the extended Hebrew numerical system and its correspondence with the English alphabet.
The standard Hebrew alphabet has 22 letters. However, five of these letters have special forms used specifically when they appear at the end of a word — these are called the "sofit" (final) forms:
In the "Mispar Gadol" (large number) system of Hebrew gematria — the system that counts the final-form letters at their extended values — the Hebrew alphabet effectively has 27 distinct letter values, reaching up to 900. This extended system is what Jewish Gematria draws upon when assigning high values to certain English letters.
The assignment of J=600 (the value of Mem Sofit) reflects a specific tradition in Jewish Kabbalistic letter correspondence. The letter J (or rather its sound) is associated in some traditions with the Hebrew letter Yod (value 10) — but in the Jewish Gematria system used here, J is instead assigned the value of the final Mem, which represents the hidden, internal, or esoteric dimension of wisdom (Mem is associated with water and with concealed knowledge). The value 600 for J creates dramatic numerical jumps in words containing J, which is part of the system's interpretive richness.
The assignment of W=900 (the value of Tsadi Sofit) reflects the placement of W as the highest-valued regular letter in the Jewish Gematria system for English. Tsadi Sofit represents the highest form of righteousness — the fully completed and elevated form of the righteous soul (the letter Tsadi is associated with the tzaddik, the righteous person). By assigning W=900, the system highlights words containing W as having a particularly high numerical weight in the Jewish tradition.
Understanding what makes Jewish Gematria distinctive helps you use it more effectively and interpret its results more meaningfully.
English Gematria assigns A=1 through Z=26 in perfect sequential order. Jewish Gematria uses the same values for A through I (1–9), then diverges radically: J jumps to 600 (not 10), K=10 (not 11), L=20 (not 12), M=30 (not 13), and so on. This means that any word containing the letters J, U, V, W, X, Y, or Z will have dramatically different values in Jewish Gematria compared to English Gematria.
Hebrew Gematria (as mapped to English in this calculator) uses the same A–I values (1–9) and the same ten-value structure for K–S (10–100 in steps of 10) and T–V (200–400), but then uses sequential values for W–Z (500, 600, 700, 800) instead of the non-sequential mappings in Jewish Gematria. The key difference is that Jewish Gematria places J=600, V=700, W=900, X=300, Y=400, Z=500 — a non-sequential arrangement — while Hebrew Gematria assigns W=500, X=600, Y=700, Z=800 — a sequential continuation of the hundreds.
The presence of J (600), V (700), W (900), X (300), Y (400), or Z (500) in a word dramatically elevates its Jewish Gematria value. This creates a clear distinction between words that contain these "elevated" letters and those that don't:
| Word | English Value | Jewish Value | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| LOVE | 54 | 775 | 14.4× |
| LIFE | 32 | 32 | 1.0× (no high-value letters) |
| JOY | 49 | 1,049 | 21.4× |
| PEACE | 30 | 74 | 2.5× |
| EXIST | 67 | 601 | 9.0× |
| MONEY | 72 | 468 | 6.5× |
| WIN | 52 | 952 | 18.3× |
| HOPE | 38 | 38 | 1.0× (no high-value letters) |
Words without any of J, V, W, X, Y, Z will have identical Jewish and a-through-s Hebrew gematria values. Words with these letters will have values dramatically elevated in the Jewish system. This creates a natural categorisation of English vocabulary into "ordinary weight" and "elevated weight" words in Jewish Gematria.
| Word | Jewish Value | Word | Jewish Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| GOD | 61 | DEVIL | 507 |
| JESUS | 985 | CHRIST | 299 |
| HOLY | 461 | BIBLE | 49 |
| ANGEL | 56 | DEMON | 109 |
| HEAVEN | 475 | HELL | 47 |
| FAITH | 229 | PRAYER | 286 |
| TRUTH | 488 | LOVE | 775 |
| PEACE | 74 | WAR | 903 |
| LIGHT | 254 | DARKNESS | 294 |
| WISDOM | 1083 | FOLLY | 461 |
| JUSTICE | 987 | MERCY | 293 |
| VICTORY | 1112 | DEFEAT | 174 |
| JOY | 1049 | GRIEF | 248 |
| LIFE | 32 | DEATH | 38 |
| TIME | 447 | ETERNITY | 492 |
In Hebrew Kabbalah, the distinction between the regular form of a letter and its final (sofit) form is spiritually significant. The regular form of a letter represents its active, manifest, outward-facing energy. The final form represents the concealed, internal, or completed energy — the full potential of the letter as it concludes a word and comes to rest.
By assigning J (600 = Mem Sofit), V (700 = Nun Sofit), W (900 = Tsadi Sofit), X (300 = Shin), Y (400 = Tav), and Z (500 = Kaf Sofit) — all of which carry either the final-form values or the highest regular values — Jewish Gematria encodes a specific interpretation of which English letters carry the most spiritually "weighty" or "complete" energy.
Jewish Gematria gives particular prominence to words containing the high-value letters. This means that words like WIN, WAY, VICTORY, WISDOM, JEWEL, EXIST, YOUNG, ZINC — all containing W, V, X, Y, Z — have dramatically elevated values. From a Kabbalistic perspective, this elevation could be interpreted as these words carrying a special resonance with the completed, finalised, highest forms of the Hebrew letters they correspond to.
613 is the traditional count of commandments (mitzvot) in the Torah. The word "MITZVAH" (commandment) in Jewish Gematria: M=30+I=9+T=100+Z=500+V=700+A=1+H=8 = 1,348. The word "TORAH" in Jewish Gematria: T=100+O=50+R=80+A=1+H=8 = 239. These values, while different from the Hebrew originals, can be compared and related in their own right as a framework for English-language exploration of Jewish concepts.
Type or paste any word, name, or phrase into the calculator input field. Jewish Gematria ignores spaces, numbers, and punctuation — only the 26 English letters A–Z are processed.
When you calculate a word in Jewish Gematria, pay particular attention to:
Because words without the high-value letters (J, V, W, X, Y, Z) will often have identical or similar Jewish and Hebrew gematria values, the most interesting comparisons are between:
Jewish Gematria is the most authentic available approximation of traditional Hebrew gematric methods applied to English text. By incorporating the extended Hebrew alphabet values (including the final-form letter values), it preserves something of the numerical structure of actual Hebrew gematria in a form accessible to English-language practitioners.
No other commonly used gematria system produces values as widely spread as Jewish Gematria. A short word with one or two high-value letters can equal thousands, while a longer word with only common letters might equal only a few dozen. This extreme range creates a distinctive value landscape where equivalences, when they do occur, are far more statistically surprising than in English Gematria's narrow range.
Because Jewish Gematria values span such a wide range (from a few units to several thousand for common words), finding two words that share a Jewish Gematria value is statistically less likely than in English Gematria. This rarity makes each discovered equivalence more potentially significant — there are simply fewer coincidental matches in such a wide-range system.
The high-value letters J, V, W, X, Y, Z include the sounds associated with some profound concepts in English: "VISION" (V), "WISDOM" (W and V), "JUSTICE" (J), "YEARLY" (Y), "ZEALOUS" (Z and S). By elevating these letters, Jewish Gematria implicitly highlights words connected with visionary awareness, wisdom, justice, cyclical time, and passionate commitment — all deeply resonant themes in Jewish spiritual tradition.
Jewish Gematria values can be compared with actual Hebrew gematria values of Hebrew words to find interesting cross-linguistic equivalences. For example, finding that an English word has a Jewish Gematria value matching the Hebrew gematria of a significant Hebrew word or phrase opens a bridge between the two languages for research and reflection.
The most common error in Jewish Gematria is forgetting that the mapping is non-sequential. After I=9, the sequence does NOT continue 10, 11, 12... Instead, J=600, K=10, L=20, M=30. And at the end, U=200, V=700, W=900, X=300, Y=400, Z=500. These values are easily confused with the sequential pattern because practitioners have usually learned English Gematria (A=1 to Z=26) first, and the instinct to continue the sequence is strong. Always double-check Jewish Gematria values using the reference table.
Beginners often fail to account for how dramatically a single J, V, or W can change a word's Jewish Gematria value. The word "JOY" = J(600)+O(50)+Y(400) = 1,050 — a value that might surprise someone expecting a similar magnitude to the English Gematria value of 49. Before calculating a word with Jewish Gematria, scan it for the letters J, V, W, X, Y, Z and recognise that any of these will dominate the total.
Because Jewish Gematria values are in a completely different numerical range from English Gematria values for words with high-value letters, comparing a word's Jewish Gematria value with another word's English Gematria value is meaningless. Always compare like with like — Jewish values with Jewish values, English with English.
Jewish Gematria, Hebrew Gematria, English Gematria, and the other systems in this calculator all give different values for the same words. Each system has its own internal consistency and its own tradition of interpretation. Using the value from one system while citing the interpretive tradition of another is a category error. Be specific about which system you are using and which tradition of interpretation you are applying.
Q: Why does J equal 600 in Jewish Gematria when it's the 10th letter?
A: In the sequential system (Hebrew Gematria as applied to English), J is the 10th letter and corresponds to the Hebrew Yod, which equals 10. However, in Jewish Gematria as used in this calculator, J is assigned the value of Mem Sofit (final Mem), which is 600. This assignment reflects a specific traditional correspondence between the English letter J and the Hebrew final-form letter that is part of the Jewish mystical tradition of letter correspondences. The dramatic value of 600 for J is one of Jewish Gematria's most distinctive and consequential features.
Q: Is Jewish Gematria the same as what rabbis use in the Talmud?
A: The Jewish Gematria used in this calculator is an English-alphabet adaptation of traditional Hebrew gematria methods. Rabbis in the Talmud used gematria on the original Hebrew text — calculating values for Hebrew words using the standard Hebrew aleph-bet values. The English-adapted Jewish Gematria in this calculator is not what Talmudic rabbis used; rather, it is a modern system that attempts to import the structure of extended Hebrew numerology (including final-form letter values) into the English alphabet. For authentic Talmudic-style gematria, you would need to work with the original Hebrew text.
Q: What is the Jewish Gematria of the number 18 (Chai)?
A: The Hebrew word Chai (חי, life) has a gematria of 18 in standard Hebrew gematria (Chet=8, Yod=10). The English word "LIFE" in Jewish Gematria = L(20)+I(9)+F(6)+E(5) = 40. The English word EIGHTEEN = E(5)+I(9)+G(7)+H(8)+T(100)+E(5)+E(5)+N(40) = 179 in Jewish Gematria. The connection between 18 and life is specific to the Hebrew Chai, which is why it's important to work with Hebrew originals for Hebrew-specific concepts.
Q: What words have the highest Jewish Gematria values?
A: Words with multiple high-value letters (J, V, W, X, Y, Z) will have the highest Jewish Gematria values. For example: "WIZARDRY" = W(900)+I(9)+Z(500)+A(1)+R(80)+D(4)+R(80)+Y(400) = 1,974. "VIXENISH" = V(700)+I(9)+X(300)+E(5)+N(40)+I(9)+S(90)+H(8) = 1,161. "JAWBONE" = J(600)+A(1)+W(900)+B(2)+O(50)+N(40)+E(5) = 1,598. These very high values for relatively common words illustrate the dramatic effect of the high-value letters in Jewish Gematria.
Q: Can Jewish Gematria be used to study the Bible?
A: Yes, with the important caveat that you're studying the English text, not the original Hebrew or Greek. Applying Jewish Gematria to English Bible translations gives you a Hebrew-tradition-inspired numerical perspective on English words. This can be interesting and illuminating, but it's fundamentally different from authentic Hebrew gematria of the original text. For serious scholarly gematric Bible study, working with the original Hebrew is essential. However, exploring Jewish Gematria patterns in English translations can be a valuable personal spiritual practice.
Q: How does Jewish Gematria relate to the Kabbalah?
A: Jewish Gematria draws on the same extended Hebrew alphabet that Kabbalistic gematria uses — specifically, the inclusion of the final-form letters (sofit letters) with values 500–900. In Kabbalistic practice, these extended values represent the highest, most inward, or most completed aspects of the corresponding letters and concepts. By using these extended values in an English-alphabet context, Jewish Gematria imports a Kabbalistic depth of numerical symbolism into English gematric analysis.
In most words calculated with Jewish Gematria, one letter (almost always one of J, V, W, X, Y, Z) dominates the total — often comprising more than 50% of the word's value. Identifying this dominant letter and understanding its Hebrew correspondence can give additional interpretive insight. For example, in the word WISDOM (=1,083), W=900 is the dominant letter (83% of the total), and W corresponds to Tsadi Sofit — the final, completed form of the righteousness archetype. This suggests that in Jewish Gematria, WISDOM is primarily a word of "completed righteousness" — an interesting interpretive angle.
An advanced technique is to calculate a word's value twice: once with standard values (replacing J, V, W, X, Y, Z with their sequential English equivalents of 10, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26) and once with Jewish Gematria's traditional values. The difference between these two values represents the "elevation" — the numerical weight added by the extended Hebrew letter values. Words with a large elevation (like WISDOM) are particularly associated with the Kabbalistic "final form" energies.
An interesting analytical technique is to calculate the Jewish Gematria values of only the vowels (A=1, E=5, I=9, O=50, U=200) and only the consonants separately, then compare the two sub-totals. In Hebrew tradition, vowels and consonants carry different spiritual functions — vowels are associated with breath and the divine (the name YHVH consists entirely of letters that were originally vowels), while consonants give words their structure and outer form.
Jewish Gematria occupies a unique position in the gematria landscape. Its non-sequential mapping — particularly the dramatic high values assigned to J (600), V (700), W (900), X (300), Y (400), and Z (500) — creates a numerical world that is at once more challenging and more potentially meaningful than simpler sequential systems.
The system's connection to the extended Hebrew alphabet, including the mystically significant final-form letters, gives it a depth of tradition and symbolism that purely modern systems lack. At the same time, its application to English text makes it accessible to English-language researchers who want to engage with Hebrew Kabbalistic numerical traditions without first becoming fluent in Hebrew.
When you use our Jewish gematria calculator, you are engaging with a tradition that spans thousands of years of Jewish mystical thought — a tradition in which numbers are not merely quantities but qualities, in which the value of a letter is a measurement of its spiritual weight, and in which the mathematical relationships between words reveal the hidden architecture of meaning that underlies all language. Whether you approach this tradition as a believer, a scholar, or a curious explorer, Jewish Gematria offers a numerically rich and spiritually resonant perspective on the words that define our world.