Spelling that sticks, without the struggle.
Every word your child gets wrong comes back until they get it right. Reception to Year 6, read aloud so they practise alone. No leaderboards, no timers.
£19.99/yr · up to 4 children · No card to start · 30-day money-back
Your child's year group
Spell as many as you can.
↓ click to start the challenge
Sound on: the word and an example sentence play automatically
A Friday test measures spelling. It does not teach it.
Most children cram words on a Thursday and forget them by Monday.
Ten words come home. They get crammed on Thursday, passed on Friday, and most are gone by the next week. Your child learned to get through one test, not to spell the word.
Every word stays in rotation. The ones your child gets wrong come back more often; the ones they have mastered fade. Spellings move into memory and stay there, across the whole curriculum, not just this week's ten.
What happens to a word they get wrong.
A word they get wrong goes straight back into rotation. SpellCast brings it back until they get it right.
A word they get wrong is not marked and forgotten. It goes straight into rotation.
It comes back soon, while it is still fresh. Closer this time, so it returns again.
They get it. Good, but once is not learned, so SpellCast will check again.
Right again, with a gap in between. Now it has stuck, and it eases off.
Multiply that by every word in the curriculum, Reception to Year 6, and that is the whole of SpellCast.
The results, so far.
What the numbers show from real classrooms.
Measured across thousands of real attempts in a UK primary school. Early data, and we will keep showing it as more schools join.
Four ways to play. No scoreboard in any of them.
Your child and the next word. No ranking. No clock. No one watching.
The actual words their teacher set, waiting on the home screen as something to take on. This is the one they come for: their real spellings for the week, turned into a quest to finish.
Hear a curriculum word, spell it from memory. The ones they miss come back more often. No clock.
See the word, then it hides and they spell it. For building confidence before a test.
A sixty-second flurry, for when they want one. Optional, never the default.

Built so they want to, not have to.
A wizard or witch of their own to kit out. A familiar to look after. A streak that belongs to them. The rewards are private and they are the child's, which is exactly why children open it without being asked.
A child who freezes at a leaderboard practises here exactly like everyone else. There is no ranking to see. Just the next word.

Their actual school words, read aloud.
Paste in this week's list from school. Every word gets recorded in a clear British voice, with an example sentence so the meaning lands. You never dictate spellings again.
New words are ready to practise within a few minutes of adding them.

Made for the children who usually opt out.
The calm, no-scoreboard design is the default. Not a setting buried in a menu.
No public scores, ever
A child never sees where they rank. The whole experience is private.
Dyslexia-friendly type
One tap switches any child to OpenDyslexic, from the parent or teacher view.
Every word spoken aloud
Word and example sentence read aloud on every attempt. No adult needed to run practice.
Reduced motion
SpellCast honours the reduced-motion setting on the device, automatically.
- Up to four children on one plan
- Every game mode
- Every National Curriculum word, Reception to Year 6
- Your own word lists, read aloud
- The parent dashboard
No card to start. 30-day money-back after that, no forms.

Landed here for your school?
SpellCast runs across a whole primary for a flat £399 a year, however many pupils you have.
- One flat price, any size of school. No per-pupil maths.
- Six weeks free to try, no card. The compliance pack is ready for your DPO.
- The same calm, no-leaderboard practice, with a teacher dashboard on top.

Our resources are free, forever
Word lists, rule guides, dictation scripts and parent guides. Free to read, print and share, no account needed. The app is paid; the teaching never is.











