Seed Trading Tier List Grow a Garden Roblox Trading Update

If you’ve been playing Grow a Garden in Roblox lately, you’ve probably heard the buzz — seed trading might be coming. While there’s no official confirmation just yet, this update could change how players view and value certain plants. So in preparation, here’s a complete breakdown of which seeds might be valuable for trading, and which ones are probably better off left in your inventory.


Seed Values and Trading Potential Grow a Garden

Below is a summary of the major seeds, categorized by potential value and usefulness if trading is added to Grow a Garden.

SS Tier – Top Value Seeds

  • Candy Blossom: Extremely rare and considered one of the most valuable seeds. Its low availability during earlier events makes it highly desirable.
  • Bone Blossom: Still insanely valuable due to its ability to generate massive shekel profits. Slight downside is the random fruit grab due to multiple blossoms.
  • Super Seed: Gained via Robux, this seed can turn any seed shop plant into a gold or rainbow variant. Strong trading potential due to the gambling factor.

S Tier – High Value but Situational

  • Fossilight: Aesthetic value is top-notch. Doesn’t bring profit, but it looks amazing.
  • Moon Blossom: Rare due to being from an older era; its age alone gives it collector value.
  • Taco Plant: Ugly? Maybe. Popular? Absolutely. Currently trending in player demand.
  • Grand Tomato: Brand new and fresh from the latest update, making it a hot item right now.

A Tier – Good Trade Value, but Not the Best

  • Sunflower: Cool design and hard to acquire, sits comfortably high.
  • Dragon Pepper: Short-time availability makes it rare enough for collectors.
  • Elder Strawberry: Currently the best seed shop plant, though restocks might reduce value.
  • Tranquil Bloom: Visually appealing and moderately rare, though not game-changing.

B Tier – Aesthetics or Rarity Without Profit Use

  • Burning Bud: Fun to grow massive versions, but not valuable in farming methods.
  • Giant Pine Cone: Used to be the hype, now mostly for collectors or large displays.
  • Moon Melon: Cool factor and decent demand balance out its high supply.
  • Maple Apple: Mid-level design and weak shekel value.
  • Traveler’s Fruit: Slightly rare, might be worth something to collectors.
  • Donut (Sugar Zomb): Fun but likely won’t retain long-term value.
  • Nectarthorns: Once undervalued, now appreciated for horn dino methods.

C Tier – Niche Use, Low Demand

  • Horn Dinos: Good for farming, but easily obtainable.
  • Spiked Mangoes: More common than expected, lowering trade potential.
  • Sugar Apples: Great utility but extremely overstocked.

D Tier – Very Little Trade Value

  • Beanstalk: Common and not very profitable. Can be used for building large climbable plants.
  • Elephant Ears: Rare but has no farming use, only useful to hardcore collectors.
  • Hive Plant: From a past event but lacks uniqueness or usefulness.

F Tier – The “Avoid These” Tier

  • Ember Lily: No value, no method, and visually unappealing. Best to skip entirely.

This potential seed trading update could completely change the Grow a Garden economy. If you’ve been hoarding seeds, it’s time to evaluate which ones might be your best trading chips. Focus on those with rarity, aesthetics, and farming utility, and hold off on dumping your stash until trading is confirmed and live.

If trading does launch, expect values to shift within the first few weeks as the market settles. For now, use this tier list to prepare and prioritize your best seeds — and maybe hold on to that Candy Blossom a little tighter. Stay tuned, and happy gardening!

Jay: A Content writer for Roonby.com Contact me on Jason@roonby.com, we can't reply to gmail for some reason.

This website uses cookies.