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In ARC Raiders, upgrading your Stash from 64 to 280 slots is huge: you stop deleting purples, bank more raid loot, and turn steady coin farms into long-term power, not just another trip to the vendor.
If you have spent more than a couple of runs in Speranza, you already know how brutal that tiny stash feels; you limp back from a raid with a backpack full of purple and gold gear, hit the hub, and bang, "Stash Full" pops up right when you are trying to sort things out, and at that moment it is very tempting to wish you could just buy game currency or items on
EZNPC
and skip the pain, but the stash matters more than people realise because it is not just a junk drawer, it is the core of your long term setup, and if you ignore it you end up scrapping stuff you actually like just to cram in crafting mats.
How To Actually Expand The Stash
The game does explain stash upgrades, but it kind of hides the option in plain sight; when you are back in Speranza, open the Inventory screen and look over to the stash panel, right between the "Loadout" and "Stash" labels there is a small "Expand" button that a lot of players just gloss over, click that and you get a simple pop up with the next level, the cost, and how many extra slots you gain, and the nice bit is that it is all coin based so you do not need rare drops or some weird quest chain, you just pay the fee and the space unlocks instantly which is perfect when you need to dump stacks of biotech vials, alloys, or processor units before queuing for another run.
Costs And Breakpoints Worth Hitting
You start at Level 1 with 64 slots, and the early upgrades are cheap enough that you really should not skip them; Level 2 costs 5,000 coins and bumps you to 88 slots, Level 3 asks for 10,000 and lands you at 112, then Level 4 jumps to 15,000 for 136, and Level 5 wants 25,000 for 160 slots, after that the curve starts to sting a bit with Level 6 at 40,000, Level 7 at 60,000, Level 8 at 90,000, Level 9 at 130,000, and Level 10 topping out at 200,000 coins for a full 280 slots, so if you add it all up you are spending 575,000 coins which sounds scary, but spread over a bunch of sessions it is manageable, especially if you are running high paying spots like Hydro Domes on repeat.
Solo Players Vs Squad Hoarders
If you mostly run solo, it is worth rushing those early levels instead of sitting on a massive coin pile; hitting Level 5 quickly gives you 160 slots which is enough room to keep a couple of backup loadouts, an extra Surge Shield, some spare Bobcat rolls, and a few experimental builds without choking the stash, and that safety net really helps when you have a bad run and lose your current kit, while squad players can get away with stopping at Level 7 for a while because you can trade them items, spread materials across teammates, and let the social side of the game soak up some of the clutter, but either way you should not starve yourself of gear upgrades just to hoard coins for the very last levels.
Keeping Your Stash Under Control
The other half of the stash game is just basic housekeeping that people tend to ignore; clear out grey and trash tier items straight away by dismantling them into scrap, stop hanging onto every duplicate weapon when you already have a better roll, and try grouping stuff by purpose so you know which row is for raid ready weapons, which row is for crafting materials, and which is for things you are not sure about yet, and once you eventually grind your way up to the max stash level you stop living raid to raid and start playing like a quartermaster, able to stockpile gold tier guns, niche builds, and a healthy buffer of coins from events or things like ARC Raiders Redeem Codes that help you keep the stash growing instead of constantly fighting it.
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