To get an Owner Door, buy and open an Owner Door Crate from the Props Shop in the central marketplace, then place the door at your fenced garden entrance with the Build Tool so other players are blocked while you can still get in.
The Owner Door is one of the first proper defensive Props in Grow a Garden 2, and it does one job well: it seals the entrance to a fenced garden so only you can walk through. The in-game tooltip is blank, which has led some players to write it off as decoration — but it functions as an owner-only gate. Below is how to buy one, roll a variant you actually want, and place it so it genuinely protects your crops.
What the Owner Door actually does
The Owner Door is a defensive Prop, not a cosmetic one. Drop it into the gap of a fully fenced garden and it blocks other players from walking in while still letting you pass — an owner-only access gate. Because the game ships it without a description, it’s easy to assume it’s purely decorative, and that’s a common misread.
In practice it sits in the same category as fences: a tool for keeping people out. The important caveat is that a door on its own does almost nothing. It only earns its keep once the rest of your garden is walled off and the door is the single opening left.
How to get and place the Owner Door in Grow a Garden 2
Go to the Props tab
Head to the main marketplace area and open the Props tab where the shop’s crates are listed.

Find the Owner Door Crate
Scroll through the props until the Owner Door Crate appears — it only shows up if it’s currently in stock.

Check its price
Click the crate to see the current price before you commit, since the cost is gated by what’s in stock.

Buy the crate
Purchase it on the spot if you can afford it, then open it to receive one of the four Owner Door variants.
Place and confirm
Position the door where you want it in your garden and confirm the placement.
Video help
Owner Door variants and their drop odds
| Owner Door variant | Drop chance |
|---|---|
| Oak Owner Door | 75% |
| Dark Oak Owner Door | 20% |
| Gold Owner Door | 4% |
| Rainbow Owner Door | 1% |
Every Owner Door comes out of the same crate, and which one you get is a roll rather than a choice. There are four variants, and the rarer skins can take several opens to land — the percentages below are roll chances inside the crate, not prices.
The Oak door is what you’ll see most of the time, while Gold and especially Rainbow are the showpiece pulls. The Rainbow’s roughly 1% rate shows up in only one place, so treat it as the rarest roll rather than a locked-in number — but every variant gates your entrance the same way, so a common Oak protects a garden exactly as well as a Rainbow.
Placing, moving, and removing the door
All of this runs through the Build Tool. Equip it from your hotkey bar or inventory and press Build to open your Props stash, which shows every prop you own. Select the Owner Door (or whichever variant you rolled), then place it inside your garden fence — specifically in the gap where players would otherwise step in.
If you want to reposition it later, open the Build Tool again, hit Remove, and click the door. It returns to your Prop stash so you can drop it somewhere better. The thing to get right is placement: the door only matters when it’s the single opening in a fully enclosed fence. Leave another gap, a low wall players can hop, or a climbable prop nearby, and the door is doing nothing.
Why the door alone won’t stop theft
The most common mistake is treating an Owner Door as a complete defense. It isn’t. The door solves the entrance and nothing else, so it’s meant to go up after you’ve fenced the whole garden — an open side or a jumpable wall makes the door pointless.
Two mechanics matter more than most players realize. Theft is reportedly a night-only event, so your crops aren’t at risk during the day. And if you simply stand inside your own garden, it’s automatically treated as locked and can’t be stolen from at all, regardless of which props you’ve placed. Doors and fences earn their value mainly when you’re away — roaming, shopping, or out raiding someone else.
When you’re sitting on valuable crops and don’t want to babysit them with fences, just stand inside your own garden — it auto-locks while you’re there, and theft can only happen at night anyway.
Defenses to pair with the Owner Door
Treat the door as one piece of a layout. Fences are the obvious partner — they seal the gaps the door doesn’t cover — and Bear Traps add a way to catch intruders who do get close. On top of that, players combine doors and fences with defensive crops like the Venus Fly Trap (reportedly strips a large chunk of an intruder’s health) and Dragon’s Breath for chip damage, plus a defensive pet like the Bee that swarms anyone who breaks in.
If raiding stresses you out entirely, the cleanest option is a private server, which can be created for free and keeps your garden completely safe from other players.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does the Owner Door Crate cost, and what currency does it use?
The crate is reportedly priced around 1.5M of the standard in-game currency, though that figure comes from a single source and is gated by what’s in stock when you visit. The currency name isn’t confirmed yet — some players call it “Sheckles,” but it’s just as often referred to as plain coins or currency, and there’s no verified Robux price for the crate.
Does an Owner Door make my garden completely theft-proof?
No. The door only locks down the entrance, so it has to be paired with full fences around the rest of the garden. On its own, with open sides or low walls, it won’t stop anyone.
When can other players actually steal from my garden?
Theft is reported as a night-only mechanic, and even then, standing inside your own garden auto-locks it. You’re most exposed at night while you’re away from your plot.
How do I move or remove an Owner Door after placing it?
Open the Build Tool, choose Remove, and click the door. It goes back to your Prop stash, and you can place it again wherever you like.
What is the rarest Owner Door variant?
The Rainbow Owner Door is the rarest roll, reportedly around 1% (a single-source figure), followed by the Gold Owner Door at about 4%. Oak and Dark Oak make up the rest of the crate.