Grow a Garden 2: Spring Crate Prop Cost, Uses, and Build Explained

Mango fruit in Grow A Garden 2 / Image via YouTube - KrimBlox
QUICK ANSWER
To get a Spring prop, buy and open a Spring Crate (an Epic-rarity crate) from the Props Shop in the central plaza for 900,000 Sheckles (or reportedly 99 Robux), then place the prop you roll inside your garden using the Build Tool’s Build menu.

The Spring prop in Grow a Garden 2 isn’t a single item you walk up and buy — it comes out of the Spring Crate, a randomized crate sold at the props station. You pay the Sheckles, open the crate, and roll one of the spring-themed variants, then decorate your garden with whatever you get. Here’s where the crate is, what’s actually inside it, and how to place the prop once it’s yours.

Where to buy the Spring Crate and what it costs

The crate lives at the Props Shop (also called the prop station or Prop Vendor), which sits in the center of the overworld map — near the market hub alongside the Seed Shop and Guild stand. Walk up and interact with it to open the shop list, and you’ll see every prop crate currently in stock, including the Spring Crate.

The Spring Crate is listed as an Epic-rarity crate and costs 900,000 Sheckles. One listing also gives a Robux price of 99 Robux and a shop stock of 1–3, though those two figures come from a single source and aren’t widely confirmed. The vendor is run by an NPC named Charlotte if you’re trying to spot the right stall in a crowded plaza.

What the Spring prop actually is

First, the naming. There isn’t one confirmed item literally called the “Spring prop.” The Spring Crate rolls one of four Spring variantsUncommon Spring, Rare Spring, Mythic Spring, and Super Spring — so when people say “the Spring prop,” they really mean whichever of those four you pull. That’s worth knowing before you spend, because buying one crate is a roll, not a purchase of a specific variant.

On what it does: the consensus across players is that props in this game are purely cosmetic — decorations that change how your farm looks but don’t affect crops, growth speed, jump height, or income. There’s an unverified claim floating around that the Spring prop acts like the mushroom bounce pads and can fling you upward to reach higher-tier fruit. Treat that as unconfirmed and contradicted by every other account that calls props static, decorative items. If you’re buying purely for a gameplay boost, go in expecting cosmetics, not a bounce.

How to buy, place, and position the Spring prop in Grow a Garden 2

STEP 1/6
 

Open the Props Shop

Head to the central plaza and interact with the prop station to open the shop list.

Open the Props Shop
Open the Props Shop | JustBOZ/YouTube
STEP 2/6
 

Find the Spring Crate

Look for the Spring Crate, an Epic-rarity crate listed for about 900,000 Sheckles (or reportedly 99 Robux).

Find the Spring Crate
Find the Spring Crate | JustBOZ/YouTube
STEP 3/6
 

Buy the Spring Crate

Purchase it — opening the crate rolls one random Spring variant, not a guaranteed prop.

Buy the Spring Crate
Buy the Spring Crate | JustBOZ/YouTube
STEP 4/6
 

Place the crate in your garden

Return to your garden and place the crate; it’s consumed once placed.

Place the crate in your garden
Place the crate in your garden | JustBOZ/YouTube
STEP 5/6
 

Open Build mode

Equip the Build Tool and select Build to open your props stash.

Open Build mode
Open Build mode | JustBOZ/YouTube
STEP 6/6
 

Position the Spring prop

Select the Spring prop from your stash and place it anywhere you want inside your garden.

QUICK WIN

Save up well past 900,000 Sheckles before you shop — since each crate is a random roll, buying several in one trip gives you far better odds at the rarer Mythic or Super Spring than rolling one crate at a time.


Video help

Spring Crate contents and reported drop odds

Spring Variant Rarity Tier Drop Chance
Uncommon Spring Uncommon 67.71%
Rare Spring Rare 26.04%
Mythic Spring Mythic 5.21%
Super Spring Super 1.04%

Because the game is new, the developers haven’t published official drop rates for the Spring Crate — only the general rule that rarer props carry lower odds. The numbers below are the most detailed breakdown that’s circulated so far, but they come from a single source, so read them as reported odds rather than confirmed values. There’s also no documented pity system or guaranteed roll, so a streak of common pulls is entirely possible.

At those rates, more than two-thirds of crates land on the Uncommon Spring, and the Super Spring shows up barely once in a hundred openings — which is why hunting the top variant gets expensive fast at 900,000 Sheckles a crate.

Placing and moving the prop with the Build Tool

Once a Spring prop is in your stash, placing it is quick. Equip the Build Tool from your hotkey bar or inventory, click Build to open your props stash, pick the Spring prop you own, and drop it down. The one real constraint is location: props can only go inside your garden’s fence — you can’t place them out in the overworld or on a neighbor’s plot.

Nothing about placement is permanent. Use the Build Tool again, hit Remove, and select the prop to send it back to your stash, where it’s safe to place again later. You can also rearrange and rotate props freely within your plot boundaries, so it’s worth experimenting with positioning rather than committing to the first spot.

Common mistakes when chasing Spring props

The big one is expecting a guaranteed variant from a single crate. You’re paying for a roll on the table above, not for a specific Spring prop, so don’t drop 900,000 Sheckles assuming you’ll walk away with the Super Spring. The second is counting on a gameplay bonus — the bounce/launch effect is unverified and goes against the cosmetic-only consensus, so buy for the look, not for a confirmed boost. The third is simply trying to place the prop outside your garden; it only works within your fenced plot.

What to chase after the Spring Crate

Since every crate run drains Sheckles, the most useful next step is faster Sheckle farming — better seeds, sprinklers, and tighter harvest cycles all help you rebuild toward the next 900,000. From there, the Spring Crate is just one corner of a wider prop lineup, so it’s worth scanning the full crate list for other themed decorations and weighing whether pricier options like the Teleporter Pad Crate are worth saving for before you keep rolling Springs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Spring prop actually give a bounce or any gameplay boost?

Most likely not. There’s an unverified claim that it flings you upward like a mushroom pad to reach higher fruit, but that’s contradicted by the wider consensus that props are purely cosmetic and don’t affect jump height, crops, or income. Until it’s confirmed in-game, treat the Spring prop as decoration only.

How much does the Spring Crate cost?

It’s listed at 900,000 Sheckles. One source also gives a Robux price of 99 Robux, but that figure is single-sourced and not widely confirmed.

Are you guaranteed a specific Spring prop from one crate?

No. Opening a Spring Crate rolls one of four variants — Uncommon, Rare, Mythic, or Super Spring — based on drop odds, with no published pity system. Targeting the rarer variants means buying and opening multiple crates.

Where is the Props Shop and who sells the Spring Crate?

The Props Shop is at the center of the overworld map, near the market hub alongside the Seed Shop and Guild stand. The prop vendor there, an NPC named Charlotte, sells the Spring Crate.

Can you move or remove a placed Spring prop?

Yes. Equip the Build Tool, click Remove, and select the prop to return it to your stash, then place it again whenever you like. You can also rearrange and rotate props anywhere inside your garden fence.

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