Car Flipper Performance Upgrades
Performance upgrade paths
After the tutorial, a gift icon appears on your HUD. That is the only legitimate place to redeem codes such as RELEASE, 1KLIKES, and 2KLIKES when they are active.
Use the profit calculator before expensive purchases. Enter buy price, estimated repair cost including parts you must buy, and expected sell price after restoration.
Visual customization adds showroom appeal on social servers. Coherent paint themes sell better than random part mashups even when scores are similar.
Roleplay-heavy servers sometimes pay more for styled builds; grind servers favor fastest commons regardless of looks.
Tuning shop score plateaus appear after several installs—stop when each new part adds negligible points.
Upgrade categories
Workshop expansion adds bays so you can run parallel flips. Storage upgrades prevent inventory overflow when large code rewards arrive. Workers automate repetitive installs once assigned.
Performance parts install at the tuning shop after bench work finishes. They differ from repair car parts—do not waste performance gear on incomplete wrecks.
Diagnosis before purchase saves cash: camera-walk damaged cars in the world when possible before clicking buy.
Travel to the tuning shop with a fully repaired car and a budget for store performance parts if needed.
Integration
Community car pages on this wiki describe flip strategy and collection goals. They are not official tier lists from A&B Group—always verify buy and sell numbers in your own session after patches.
Map literacy matters: know the path from your workshop area to the tuning shop and back without wrong turns.
Inventory space is a hard gate: expand storage before redeeming RELEASE if your shelves are already full.
Keep a personal log of models you flip: average buy, typical missing slots, and restored sell quote.
Patch days can rebalance car prices silently. Re-run your personal flip notes after updates instead of trusting last week's community tier labels.
Workshop cosmetic upgrades are optional until functional bays and storage feel comfortable for your pace.
Repair matching rules are strict: a door for one sedan family will not install on a different chassis.
The repair checklist helps track exterior, mechanical, and interior slots so you do not sell cars with hidden missing components.
Assign workers to repeat installs on the same model family you flip weekly for best automation return.
Flip margin equals sell minus buy minus repair and tuning costs—throughput multiplies profit once bays increase.
Car Flipper by A&B Group on Roblox is a restoration business sim: you buy damaged vehicles, repair them with matching car parts, optionally tune at the tuning shop, then sell for profit or keep rare models.
Selling versus keeping is an economic choice: kept cars tie up bays and cash. Collectors budget one display slot; grinders sell quickly to fund the next buy.
Towing a new car requires a free bay. Sell or move completed cars before shopping long exploration routes.
Engine and transmission slots are high-impact repairs—prioritize them when cash is tight over minor cosmetics.
The repair bench lists every missing or broken slot on a car. Installing the correct part family for that model raises condition; partial repairs sell for less than full restorations.
Opening every container immediately after redemption can clog storage. Sort parts by model family you flip often; discard or sell unrelated duplicates when the economy allows.
Discord announcement channels beat rumor threads for confirming whether a code still works for everyone.
Seasonal code events may add limited containers—note event names because wiki pages can lag holiday drops.
World exploration is how you find damaged listings priced below restored value. Haul time back to your workshop is real cost; efficient routes beat random driving.