What are premium squares?

If you look at a Scrabble board, you will see some rows and columns have both premium-letter squares and premium-word squares.

When a double- or triple-letter square and a double- or triple-word square are three or four spaces apart, you have a chance for a really big score if you can cover both, especially with a high-value tile on the premium-letter square.

A word like WINDY, with either the W or the Y on a triple-letter square and the whole thing on a double-word square, would score you forty points.

QUIT, with the Q on the double-letter square and the word tripled, would bag you sixty-nine – a bonus-level score for playing just three or four tiles. Remember to enjoy the look on your opponent’s face as you count up the points.

By Barry Grossman

Barry is a leading UK Scrabble player and winner of several tournaments. He is the author of Scrabble for Beginners (Chambers), Need to Know Scrabble, Scrabble – Play to Win and The Little Book of Scrabble Trickster. He has also contributed to numerous other books on the subject of words and word-games, has been a series champion of Channel 4’s Countdown, and has written four comedy series for BBC Radio 4. He lives in Hertford.

All opinions expressed on this blog are those of the individual writers, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or policies of Collins, or its parent company, HarperCollins.

Other Articles

The letter R

The R is one of the one-point tiles, meaning it is a common letter and may be useful for making bonus words. The most obvious prefix and suffix using R are RE- and -ER. This does rather point to the main weakness of the R – it tends to need… Read More

The letter Q

Ah, we’ve reached it at last. The most difficult, frustrating letter of them all – but sometimes, if it falls right, a passport to a lovely high score. You know the only two-letter Q word – QI, with its appropriate meaning of vital energy. The only three- letter Qs are:… Read More

The letter P

A good tile to get, on a par with the M. In fact, M and P go particularly well together (except perhaps in politics), like in words containing IMP and EMP: BLIMP, WIMP, HEMP, TEMPT, etc. Two-letter words with the P are: PA father… Read More