Crates are one of the most exciting parts of Grow a Garden 2. You spend Sheckles (or Robux for a handful of premium ones) to crack open a crate and receive a random item from its loot pool. The items inside range from garden decorations and build pieces to powerful gear that can change how your whole session plays out. Before you spend everything you have earned on a single crate, it is worth knowing exactly what is inside each one and what your real chances of getting the good stuff are.
This guide covers every crate in Grow a Garden 2 as of June 2026, organised by type. You will find full drop tables, honest breakdowns of value, and a clear look at which crates are worth your hard-earned Sheckles.
How Crates Work in Grow a Garden 2
Crates are purchased from the in-game shop using Sheckles, the currency you earn from harvesting and selling crops. Some crates cost Robux instead, though most of the main build and decor crates use Sheckles. Once you buy a crate you open it immediately and receive one random item from its drop table. Every item has a listed percentage chance, and higher percentages mean you pull that item more often. Lower percentages represent the rare prizes that most players are chasing.
The items you get are cosmetic and build pieces: arches, fences, benches, signs, ladders, conveyors, bear traps, and more. These items let you customise your garden layout, add decoration, and make your plot look different from everyone else's. Guild Crates are a special category that reward gear and tools rather than decoration pieces, and those are covered in their own section below.
Build and Decor Crates
Build crates are the bread and butter of garden customisation. They focus on one type of item and offer multiple variants of it at different rarity levels. Here is every build and decor crate with its real drop table.
Arch Crate — Cost: 200,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Rare
This crate gives you one of four arch types for decorating entrances and paths in your garden. The Wood Arch is the most common pull at 35%, followed by the White Arch at 30% and the Small Arch at 25%. The Circle Arch is the rare prize here at only 10%. If you are grinding for the Circle Arch specifically, expect to open roughly ten crates on average before seeing one.
Bench Crate — Cost: 23 Robux — Rarity: Uncommon
The Bench Crate is very affordable and contains six different bench styles. The Normal Bench and Corner Bench each drop at 25%, making them the most likely outcomes. The White Bench comes in at 20%, the Dark Bench at 15%, and the Log Bench at 10%. The rarest pull is the Flower Bench, which has only a 5% chance. For players who want a decorated garden without spending many Sheckles, this crate is a great starting point.
Bear Trap Crate — Cost: 500,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Legendary
Bear traps protect your crops from other players who try to steal from your garden. This crate has three variants. The Common Beartrap drops at 90%, so that is almost always what you will get. The Golden Beartrap has an 8% chance, and the rare Rainbow Beartrap sits at just 2%. At half a million Sheckles per crate, this is a significant investment. Most players will come away with the Common variant, but the Rainbow Beartrap is one of the most eye-catching items in the game.
Conveyor Crate — Cost: 700,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Epic
Conveyors are mechanical build items that move things around your garden. The Conveyor Crate gives five different tiers. The Common conveyor is the most likely at 43%, the Uncommon at 25%, the Rare at 20%, the Epic at 10%, and the Super conveyor at a slim 2%. This is one of the pricier build crates, and the Super conveyor is genuinely rare. Most openings will land on Common or Uncommon.
Ladder Crate — Cost: 30,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Common
Ladders add vertical decoration to your garden. Four options are available: the standard Ladder at 40%, the Dark Oak Ladder at 30%, the Gold Ladder at 20%, and the Rainbow Ladder at 10%. At 30,000 Sheckles this crate is one of the more affordable options for mid-game players, and the Rainbow Ladder is a satisfying rare pull that makes your garden pop.
Sign Crate — Cost: 150,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Uncommon
Signs let you personalise your garden with custom text. The Basic Sign drops at 70%, which means most openings produce the plain version. The Gold Sign has a 25% chance, the Rainbow Sign sits at 4%, and the Big Sign is the rarest option at just 1%. If you are specifically after the Big Sign or Rainbow Sign, be prepared to open many crates.
Fence Crate — Cost: 299 Robux — Rarity: Legendary
The Fence Crate offers material-based fence variants. Wood drops at around 17%, Stone at about 14.5%, Stick at about 12.4%, and Bamboo at about 11%. This crate has more variants than most and no single dominant drop rate, meaning results feel more random than other crates. It costs Robux rather than Sheckles.
Roleplay Crate — Cost: 63 Robux — Rarity: Rare
This crate leans into interior decoration and lifestyle items. The Beach Towel, Bookcase, and Carpet each drop at around 21%. The Clock, Wood Floor, and Wood Wall each come in at about 10.5%. The rarest item is the Water Fountain at just over 5%. Great for players who want their garden to feel like a lived-in space rather than a pure farming plot.
Bridge Crate — Cost: 89 Robux — Rarity: Epic
The Bridge Crate adds crossing pieces to your garden. Drop details were not fully confirmed at the time of writing, but it is an Epic rarity crate priced in Robux.
Teleporter Pad Crate — Cost: 499 Robux — Rarity: Mythic
This crate gives you a teleportation pad to place in your garden. The standard Teleport Pad drops at 80%, the Big Teleport Pad at 15%, and the rare Huge Teleport Pad at only 5%. Teleporter pads let you create fast-travel spots inside your plot, which is a serious quality-of-life upgrade for larger gardens.
Seesaw Crate — Cost: 149 Robux — Rarity: Epic
The Seesaw Crate adds a fun play structure to your garden. If you like making your garden feel like a playground rather than a farm, this is one for the collection.
Weather Machine Crate — Cost: 799 Robux
This crate gives you a weather machine item that can influence conditions in your garden. A premium piece and one of the most unique decorative tools available.
Owner Door Crate — Cost: 179 Robux — Rarity: Legendary
The Owner Door Crate is a Legendary-tier crate giving you door options for the entrance to your garden plot.
Light Crate — Cost: 90,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Uncommon
Lights are atmospheric decorations for your garden. This crate costs 90,000 Sheckles and sits at Uncommon rarity.
Spring Crate — Cost: 900,000 Sheckles — Rarity: Epic
One of the pricier Sheckles-based crates. The Spring Crate adds springtime or bounce-themed decoration to your garden.
Wood Wall Crate — Cost: 15 Robux
This is one of the cheapest entry-level crates in the game. At just 15 Robux it is a low-risk way to start customising your garden walls.
Guild Crates — Gear and Tools by Rarity
Guild Crates are a completely different category. Instead of decoration items, they drop gear and tools that affect gameplay: sprinklers, watering cans, mushrooms, seeds, and more. There are six tiers of Guild Crate, each one containing more powerful items than the last. They do not show a Sheckles cost because they are typically earned or purchased through the Guild system rather than the standard shop.
Common Guild Crate — Rarity: Common
This is the entry-level Guild Crate and a solid source of early-game gear. The Common Watering Can drops at 30%, the Common Sprinkler and Uncommon Sprinkler each at 20%, the Trowel and Rare Sprinkler at 10% each, and a Common Seed Pack x5 at 10%. Every item here is genuinely useful for new players trying to build out their watering and planting setup.
Uncommon Guild Crate — Rarity: Uncommon
A step up from the Common Crate with better sprinklers in the pool. The Common Watering Can leads at about 26.6%, the Common and Uncommon Sprinklers each sit around 19%, the Rare Sprinkler at roughly 15%, the Trowel at about 10.6%, and a Common Seed Pack x5 rounds out the table at about 9.6%. Worth opening if you have extras — it skews toward useful rather than spectacular.
Rare Guild Crate — Rarity: Rare
Things start to get interesting here. The Rare Sprinkler has the top drop rate at about 33%, with the Jump Mushroom, Speed Mushroom, and Crowbar each sitting at about 22%. The mushrooms here change your movement speed and jump height, which can make navigating your garden much easier during busy sessions.
Epic Guild Crate — Rarity: Epic
The Epic Guild Crate drops high-value gear. The Shrink Mushroom, Supersize Mushroom, Gnome, and Invisibility Mushroom each have 20% chances. The Legendary Sprinkler and a Legendary Seed Pack each sit at 10%. The Gnome is a standout item that actively defends your garden by attacking intruders, and the Invisibility Mushroom lets you sneak around unseen. Opening one of these is always exciting.
Legendary Guild Crate — Rarity: Legendary
Five powerful items share the pool here with a bonus seed pack option. The Gnome, Legendary Sprinkler, Teleporter, and Invisibility Mushroom each have 20% odds. The Super Watering Can and a Legendary Seed Pack x2 each come in at 10%. The Teleporter alone is worth 60,000 Sheckles if bought directly, making this one of the best-value crates when you get lucky on the top items.
Mythic Guild Crate — Rarity: Mythic
The Mythic Guild Crate is the most powerful non-Guild-system crate and its drop table reflects that. The Super Watering Can leads at about 35%, the Super Sprinkler and Raccoon pet each come in around 23.5%, a Legendary Seed Pack x3 at about 12%, and the Secret Seed Pack at roughly 6%. Landing the Raccoon here is genuinely rare — it is a Super-rarity pet that steals fruit from other gardens at night and raises your steal limit, which makes it one of the most valuable pets in the game.
Super Guild Crate — Rarity: Super
The highest Guild Crate tier gives out bulk quantities of premium items. Super Watering Can x10 leads at about 43%, Super Sprinkler x10 at about 29%, and Secret Seed Pack x20 at about 29%. These quantities make this crate exceptional value for established players who are fully invested in the Guild system.
Which Crates Are Worth Your Sheckles?
Not all crates offer the same return on investment. Here is a practical breakdown based on what you actually get.
Best value for Sheckles: The Arch Crate at 200,000 Sheckles gives you a guaranteed useful garden piece with a 10% shot at the rare Circle Arch. The Ladder Crate at 30,000 is even more accessible with a 10% Rainbow Ladder as the top prize. These two are good targets for mid-game players.
High cost, low guaranteed value: The Bear Trap Crate at 500,000 Sheckles lands on the Common Beartrap 90% of the time. It is a big spend for a very likely common result. Only chase the Rainbow Beartrap if protecting your garden is a top priority and you can afford the repeat openings.
Best Guild Crate to target: The Epic Guild Crate is the sweet spot. Four of its six items appear at 20% each, so the table is relatively balanced and every item in the pool is genuinely useful. The Mythic and Super variants are better in absolute terms but are much harder to acquire.
Decor crates under 100 Robux: The Bench Crate, Wood Wall Crate, and Roleplay Crate are all cheap enough that opening a few is low-risk. Even common pulls from these crates add personality to your garden, which is the whole point.
Avoid overspending early: The Conveyor Crate at 700,000 Sheckles and the Spring Crate at 900,000 Sheckles are better left until late game when your income is solid. The items are cool but not essential to your farming progress.
Tips for Crate Hunters
Focus on one category at a time. Decide whether you are building out your garden look or upgrading your gear, and spend your Sheckles accordingly. Mixing between the two slows progress in both directions.
Check your rarity tier before spending. Common and Uncommon crates almost always give something useful. Legendary and Mythic crates have better individual items but higher variance — you might open five in a row and land on the most common drop each time.
Guild Crates scale with your progression. Start with the Common Guild Crate to fill out basic sprinklers and watering tools, then work your way up as you earn more resources through the Guild system.
Rainbow versions are cosmetic highlights, not stat boosts. The Rainbow Beartrap, Rainbow Ladder, and Rainbow Sign all look incredible but function the same as their Common equivalents. If visual flair matters to you, they are worth chasing. If pure performance is your goal, prioritise Guild Crate upgrades instead.
Knowing what is inside every crate before you spend is the single biggest advantage you can have as a Grow a Garden 2 player. Use this guide to make every Sheckle count.


