Car Flipper Map
Map knowledge saves flip time
Patch days can rebalance car prices silently. Re-run your personal flip notes after updates instead of trusting last week's community tier labels.
Checklist discipline prevents selling cars with one missing taillight that tanks condition score.
Fake Trello boards often list expired codes. Cross-check active codes in-game before assuming a string works.
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.
Map literacy matters: know the path from your workshop area to the tuning shop and back without wrong turns.
Major map zones
Assign workers to repeat installs on the same model family you flip weekly for best automation return.
Roleplay-heavy servers sometimes pay more for styled builds; grind servers favor fastest commons regardless of looks.
Co-op etiquette on public servers: do not snatch listings while another player is still inspecting damage.
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.
Navigation habits
Towing a new car requires a free bay. Sell or move completed cars before shopping long exploration routes.
Travel to the tuning shop with a fully repaired car and a budget for store performance parts if needed.
Collection garages display finished rares; they do not generate cash while occupying workshop bays.
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.
There is no verified official Trello board for Car Flipper. Track updates through Discord announcements and pages like Discord and updates instead of third-party kanban links.
Never use external code generators—they are scams. Redeem only through the in-game gift icon on the official Car Flipper experience by A&B Group.
Travel to the tuning shop with a fully repaired car and a budget for store performance parts if needed.
Reinvest flip profits into workshop bays before hoarding unopened rare containers for luck superstition.
Codes grant containers and stacked car parts. RELEASE is the largest launch bundle when live; like-milestone codes 1KLIKES and 2KLIKES typically grant container sets.
Leaderboard tuning accepts negative short-term ROI. Pure flippers stop upgrading when sale quotes stop rising.
Keep a personal log of models you flip: average buy, typical missing slots, and restored sell quote.
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.
PC players use WASD movement and mouse interact prompts. Mobile players use a virtual stick and tap prompts; both platforms support the full flip loop.
Uncommon containers bridge mid restoration projects where commons fail to drop matching doors or engines.
Mobile players should open containers while stationary to avoid mis-taps on tiny inventory icons.
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.
Mid-tier sports cars often repay modest tuning investment on resale. Economy sedans are better pure flip volume when code parts stock your inventory.
Build projects should finish one tuned car before starting three partial score grinds that consume parts.
Profit calculator pessimistic runs: estimate high repair cost and low sell price before rare buys.
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.