How to Redeem Car Flipper Codes
Before you redeem any code
Use the profit calculator before expensive purchases. Enter buy price, estimated repair cost including parts you must buy, and expected sell price after restoration.
Mid-tier sports cars often repay modest tuning investment on resale. Economy sedans are better pure flip volume when code parts stock your inventory.
Uncommon containers bridge mid restoration projects where commons fail to drop matching doors or engines.
Engine and transmission slots are high-impact repairs—prioritize them when cash is tight over minor cosmetics.
Step-by-step redemption on PC
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.
Patch days can rebalance car prices silently. Re-run your personal flip notes after updates instead of trusting last week's community tier labels.
Build projects should finish one tuned car before starting three partial score grinds that consume parts.
Seasonal code events may add limited containers—note event names because wiki pages can lag holiday drops.
Step-by-step redemption on mobile
Map literacy matters: know the path from your workshop area to the tuning shop and back without wrong turns.
Assign workers to repeat installs on the same model family you flip weekly for best automation return.
Workshop cosmetic upgrades are optional until functional bays and storage feel comfortable for your pace.
After redemption: using rewards wisely
Rare collectibles spawn infrequently. Restoration may require rare container RNG or tuning shop store purchases—check margin before buying a damaged rare.
Towing a new car requires a free bay. Sell or move completed cars before shopping long exploration routes.
Flip margin equals sell minus buy minus repair and tuning costs—throughput multiplies profit once bays increase.
Beginners should complete how to play, redeem codes, then read repair system before exotic purchases.
| Order | Code | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | RELEASE | Largest direct part injection |
| 2 | 1KLIKES | Container trio |
| 3 | 2KLIKES | Second container trio |
Remember the three milestone strings players verify most often: RELEASE for launch bundles, 1KLIKES for first like milestone containers, and 2KLIKES for the follow-up milestone when still active.
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.