Cash Cleaner Simulator - Tips

Cash Cleaner Simulator tips and tricks for cleaning, sorting, counting and shipping money

Cash Cleaner Simulator is less about working quickly than designing a laboratory where mistakes are difficult to make. A pile of unsorted notes can pass through several machines in minutes, but one counterfeit bundle mixed into the wrong delivery can waste far more time than the machines saved.

The best cleaners build a visible workflow. New deliveries enter through one zone, dirty and wet money goes toward cleaning, dry notes move to counting, sorted stacks reach packaging, and finished orders remain separate from personal reserves.

These spoiler-light Cash Cleaner Simulator tips cover job selection, receiving deliveries, washing, drying, counting, sorting, counterfeit and marked bills, containers, tools, laboratory upgrades, smartphone apps, hidden secrets and efficient late-game layouts.


Read the Entire Job Before Accepting It

Do not choose work solely by the reward. Open the job and inspect every condition:

  • Required currency.
  • Required total value.
  • Specific denominations.
  • Minimum or exact bill count.
  • Required container.
  • Clean, wet, dirty or inked condition.
  • Counterfeit or marked-note requirements.
  • Time limit.

A high-paying order can be inefficient when it demands a condition your current equipment cannot process comfortably.

Accept Compatible Jobs Together

Multiple active jobs can share the same preparation work. Two orders requesting clean US dollars allow you to wash, dry and sort one combined delivery before separating the final packages.

Avoid combining jobs when one requires counterfeit, marked, wet or specifically packaged money. Special conditions should remain isolated from the moment their container arrives.

Track One Job While Processing Several

The Task Tracker can highlight one active order even when several are open. Select the job whose requirements are easiest to confuse, such as a specific denomination or marking.

Ordinary value-only work can be checked manually after the complex order is secured.


Create a Receiving Zone

Keep the delivery area clear except for incoming containers. Place pallets, boxes or marked floor spaces nearby for initial classification.

A simple receiving layout can contain:

  • Unopened deliveries.
  • US dollars.
  • Euros.
  • Yen or other currencies.
  • Mixed contents.
  • Coins and valuables.
  • Rubbish and empty packaging.

Do not wash or count directly inside the delivery zone. New boxes can fall onto processed money and mix several jobs together.

Process One Container at a Time

Move one bag or box away from the drop point, scan it, open it and classify its contents before touching the next delivery.

Opening everything simultaneously creates an impressive mountain of cash, but it also destroys the easiest clue about which notes belong to which client.

Scan Before Opening

The scanner can reveal useful information about a container and its contents. Use it to decide where the delivery should be opened.

A mixed or suspicious container belongs in an inspection area. A straightforward batch of dirty notes can go directly beside the washing station.

Keep Story Deliveries Separate

Unique jobs may provide notes, valuables or containers needed later. Store unusual marked bills, counterfeit batches and named quest objects away from ordinary reserves.

A labelled box is cheaper than discovering hours later that a required stack was packed into a random side job.


Build a One-Way Workflow

Arrange the laboratory so money moves in one direction:

  1. Receive and scan.
  2. Open and remove rubbish.
  3. Separate by condition and currency.
  4. Wash dirty money.
  5. Dry wet money.
  6. Count and sort.
  7. Inspect suspicious notes.
  8. Stack and package.
  9. Move completed jobs to shipping.

Walking back and forth across the room is a sign that two stations should be moved closer together.

Keep the Washer Near Receiving

Dirty deliveries are usually bulky and messy. Positioning the washer near the receiving zone reduces the distance that loose contaminated money must travel.

Leave enough space around the input to empty bags and retrieve spills without standing inside the delivery drop area.

Put the Dryer Beside the Washer

Wet notes should move directly from washing to drying. A long route encourages droplets, spills and accidental mixing with clean stock.

The dryer can handle very large piles, so one well-positioned dryer may support several washers.

Place Counters After the Dryer

Counting wet money is poor workflow. Dry first, then send notes into the machine that separates the currency or denomination needed for the active order.

Leave receiving trays, boxes or pallets near counter outputs so rejected notes do not land in unrelated piles.


Do Not Wash Everything Automatically

Some incoming money is already clean. Scan and inspect the delivery before feeding it into the washer.

Washing clean notes creates unnecessary loading, unloading and drying work. Separate clean bills immediately and send only dirty or otherwise washable items through the cleaning stage.

Remove Money from Bags Before Drying

Money may wash while inside certain containers, but closed or automatically closing bags can prevent efficient drying. Empty the wet notes before loading the dryer.

Keep the container nearby until you know whether it can be cleaned, reused or should be discarded.

Respect Washer Capacity

A washer can accept a large handful, but overfilling it risks spills and awkward unloading. Feed predictable batches rather than pushing the entire laboratory floor into one opening.

Several smaller, organised loads are faster than one load followed by five minutes of collecting escaped notes.

Do Not Overbuy Dryers

The dryer handles large quantities efficiently. Expanding washing capacity usually provides a better return than purchasing several dryers that remain idle.

Use Cleaner Conservatively

When a machine uses cleaning products or selectable wash types, do not fill it with a huge reserve before confirming the next jobs. Changing a wash configuration can waste unused cleaner in some versions.


Understand Stacks, Handfuls and Piles

Cash exists in several physical forms:

  • Loose bill: One individually selectable note.
  • Neat stack: An organised group, commonly up to 100 notes.
  • Handful: A bulk collection used for moving larger quantities.
  • Pile: A combined physics object formed from many nearby loose bills.
  • Pack: A strapped or wrapped group suited to storage and shipping.

Choose the form according to the next step. Machines like bulk inputs; exact orders prefer known stacks; long-term storage benefits from packs.

Make Full Stacks of 100

A full stack creates a simple mental calculation. One hundred $50 bills equals $5,000. One hundred $100 bills equals $10,000.

Packing complete stacks reduces counting errors and makes later orders much faster.

Do Not Mix Denominations Inside Reserve Boxes

A box marked “USD” is not organised enough once several jobs require exact values. Separate high-value denominations from small bills.

At minimum, keep dedicated storage for the denominations used most often.

Use Small Bills as a Finishing Tool

High denominations complete most of an order quickly. Small notes are useful for adjusting the final value without opening a full pack.

Do not spend the entire early game carefully packaging every low-value bill. Store a manageable reserve and prioritise denominations that provide more value per action.


Upgrade the Money Counter Early

The basic counter is valuable, but later models improve capacity, sorting and counterfeit handling. A stronger counter reduces repetitive manual work more than many decorative purchases.

Prioritise equipment that shortens the repeated process used by every order.

Learn Each Counter's Output Direction

Counters can throw accepted and rejected bills into different areas. Test a small batch before placing the machine beside valuable reserves.

Put containers beneath each output so the result remains separated even when the physics arc is wider than expected.

Do Not Overfill Counter Inputs

Different counter models accept different quantities. Excess money can remain outside the active input or spill across the floor.

Feed the machine in known handfuls until you understand its capacity.

Configure One Job at a Time

Before loading a large pile, confirm the selected currency, denomination, quantity and rejection settings. A machine configured for yesterday's order can turn today's delivery into several confusing piles.

Use Multiple Counters as a Pipeline

Later in the game, several machines can form a semi-automated sorting line. The first separates currency, another selects a high denomination and a final machine prepares exact stacks.

Build one reliable line before purchasing enough equipment to fill the room. Automation is only useful when every output has a controlled destination.


Inspect Counterfeit Bills Before Shipping

Counterfeit money may look acceptable at a glance but fail a client's requirements. Use suitable counters, scanners or inspection equipment to separate it.

Do not destroy every counterfeit note. Some jobs specifically request fake money, making a labelled reserve useful.

Keep Counterfeits in a Dedicated Container

Never store counterfeit notes beside ordinary money of the same denomination. Their visual similarity makes accidental mixing almost inevitable.

Use an unmistakable container and keep it away from the normal packaging table.

Use UV Light for Marked Bills

Marked notes may carry police, gang or other hidden identifiers visible under ultraviolet light. The official game description also points players toward UV equipment and the day-night cycle when searching for hidden details.

Darken the area, activate the UV source and inspect manageable batches rather than an enormous overlapping pile.

Sort Marked Notes in Small Batches

A stack of 50 or 100 is easier to inspect than several thousand overlapping bills. Separate visible types into dedicated bins, reshuffle the remaining batch and inspect it again.

Keep at least a modest reserve of each unusual marking until the story and high-level jobs no longer require them.

Do Not Mix Marked Money with the Pig Fund Too Early

Late progression may consume enormous amounts of money, but rare marked or counterfeit batches can still be needed by specific jobs. Complete their known requirements before sacrificing unique stock.


Keep the Knife Available

The knife opens wrapped packs, treasury bags, locked cases and mattresses. It is one of the few tools worth carrying regularly.

Return it to the same inventory slot after every use so it does not disappear beneath a pile of boxes.

Cut Treasury Bags Instead of Fighting the Opening

Some heavy-duty bags are designed to be cut. Empty them fully before burning, washing or discarding the container.

Cut Mattresses Completely

Mattresses can require more than one cut before their contents become accessible or before they can be reused for a related job.

Check the contextual prompt again after the first cut.

Buy Tape in Bulk

Packaging supplies are inexpensive compared with the time lost when a nearly completed order cannot be sealed. Keep a combined reserve on the packaging table.

Keep Clean Containers

Reusable boxes, bags and cases can satisfy future packaging requirements. Store them open and away from the delivery zone so they are easy to identify.

Discard or burn contaminated containers only after confirming that they are empty and have no future use.

Close Containers Before Moving Them

Open boxes and bags can spill. Close them before carrying, throwing or stacking them on a trolley.

This is especially important for mixed coins, valuables and exact-value deliveries.


Keep Packaging Separate from Sorting

The packaging table should contain finished stacks, tape, plastic and empty client containers—not unsorted deliveries.

A clean packaging area reduces the risk of adding one dirty or counterfeit note to an otherwise valid order.

Package Exact Values

Sending more than requested usually wastes money without improving the reward. Build the total from known stacks and use smaller denominations only for the remainder.

Check the task one last time before closing the container.

Use the Correct Container

Some clients request a box, backpack, sports bag or another specific package. An exact amount inside the wrong container is still the wrong delivery.

Keep Completed Orders in a Dispatch Zone

Move every finished job to one clearly defined area near shipping. Do not leave completed packages among empty reusable containers.

Attach a mental or physical label to each package before starting the next one.


Buy Functional Upgrades Before Decorations

The Dark Market sells useful tools, larger machines, workplace upgrades and cosmetic objects. Early currency should reduce repeated labour.

Prioritise:

  • Improved money counters.
  • Washing capacity.
  • Worktable functions.
  • UV inspection equipment.
  • Storage containers and pallets.
  • Useful access or laboratory expansions.

Decorations become more enjoyable once the business already runs efficiently.

Upgrade the Worktable

Worktable additions improve inspection, sorting and processing. Many are inexpensive relative to major machines, so check for upgrades whenever a new level or area becomes available.

Expand Storage Before Automation

A new machine creates more output. Without boxes, pallets and clear lanes, that extra output becomes another pile on the floor.

Buy enough storage to control the result before expanding the pipeline.

Do Not Buy Every Novelty Immediately

Racks, slides and unusual objects may be entertaining but are not always the fastest route to higher income. Purchase them after the essential workflow is complete or when you have a specific layout in mind.


Organise by Condition Before Denomination

In the receiving area, the first distinction should usually be:

  • Clean and dry.
  • Dirty.
  • Wet.
  • Inked or chemically stained.
  • Suspicious or counterfeit.
  • Marked.

There is little value in perfectly sorting a denomination that must immediately be washed and scattered again.

Sort by Currency Next

Once condition is resolved, separate currencies before denominations. A counter line can then process one monetary system without repeatedly rejecting unrelated notes.

Sort High Denominations First

High-value bills satisfy orders with fewer physical objects. Process them first and keep smaller notes as adjustment stock.

Use Colour-Coded Storage

Different boxes, pallets or laboratory zones make currencies and conditions recognisable from across the room.

Consistency matters more than the exact colours. Never change the meaning of a storage zone halfway through a session.


Keep Rubbish Away from Money

Two pieces of rubbish can combine into a trash bag, making cleanup faster. Create rubbish near the furnace or disposal zone rather than beside clean notes.

One trash object included in the first Grab Mode sweep can turn an easy money collection into a mixed handful.

Check Rubbish for Hidden Money and Valuables

Do not burn an unopened container or large trash object immediately. Search it, scan it and confirm that every useful item has been removed.

Do Not Burn Quest Items

Unique objects can resemble decorations or rubbish. When an unfamiliar item arrives with a story job, store it until its purpose is clear.


Use the Day-Night Cycle

Some secrets, marks and environmental clues become easier to see in darkness or under UV light. Explore the laboratory at different times instead of treating night as a purely cosmetic change.

Search Newly Unlocked Areas Completely

Laboratory expansions can contain equipment, tools, story clues, access routes and hidden valuables. Search shelves, upper platforms, narrow gaps and spaces behind large machinery.

Look Up

Ladders and upper levels are easy to overlook in a workplace dominated by floor piles. Valuable objects and progression mechanisms can sit above the main work area.

Use the Scanner Outside Jobs

The scanner can help identify unusual environmental objects and secrets, not only incoming money. Sweep new areas before filling them with equipment.


Prepare Before Timed Jobs

Timed tasks are usually manageable when the laboratory already contains clean, sorted reserves. Do not accept one while every counter is misconfigured and the packaging table is buried.

Before accepting:

  • Check existing stock.
  • Clear the receiving zone.
  • Set the correct counter.
  • Place the requested empty container nearby.
  • Restock tape and packaging.

Use Reserves to Finish the Job First

When possible, fulfil a timed order from stored clean packs, then process the newly delivered money without pressure.

This turns the incoming contents into replacement inventory rather than an emergency workload.


Do Not Hoard Every Low-Value Bill

Storage and handling time have value. Thousands of tiny notes may be worth less to your workflow than one organised box of large denominations.

Keep enough small cash for exact totals and unusual bill-count jobs, but do not allow it to consume every container.

Do Not Destroy Unusual Items Immediately

Counterfeits, marked notes, jewellery, statues and odd valuables may appear in later jobs. Create a miscellaneous secure-storage area until you understand their demand.

Maintain an Emergency Reserve

Keep clean, high-value packs in each common currency. A reserve lets you complete profitable or timed work before processing the supplied delivery.

Protect Rare Stock from Normal Automation

Do not feed marked, counterfeit or story-specific notes into a general mixed pipeline. One automated machine can separate them—or launch them into a pile where their identity is lost.


Common Beginner Mistakes

  • Opening every delivery in the same place.
  • Accepting a job without reading the container requirement.
  • Washing money that was already clean.
  • Drying notes while they remain trapped inside a closed bag.
  • Overfilling washers and counters.
  • Throwing organised stacks instead of placing them.
  • Mixing currencies before sorting.
  • Storing counterfeit notes with ordinary cash.
  • Discarding rare marked bills too early.
  • Sending more value than the client requested.
  • Using the packaging table as general storage.
  • Buying decorative equipment before essential machines.
  • Leaving completed orders beside empty containers.
  • Burning unfamiliar objects without checking them.
  • Starting a timed job without prepared reserves.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do first with a new delivery?

Move one container away from the drop zone, scan it, read the active job, open it and separate the contents by condition and currency.

Should I wash all incoming money?

No. Wash only dirty or appropriately stained money. Clean, dry notes can move directly to counting and sorting.

How should I organise my laboratory?

Build a one-way route from receiving to washing, drying, counting, inspection, packaging and dispatch. Keep reserves and special notes outside that route.

What should I buy first?

Prioritise a useful counter, washing equipment, worktable upgrades, UV inspection and enough storage to control each machine's output.

Should I keep counterfeit money?

Yes. Some jobs request counterfeit bills. Store them in a clearly labelled container away from genuine notes.

How do I identify marked bills?

Use UV lighting in a dark environment and inspect manageable stacks on the worktable or another clear surface.

Why is my order stuck below 100%?

Check the currency, total value, denomination, physical bill count, container, condition, counterfeit status and markings.

Should I accept several jobs?

Yes, when their processing requirements are compatible. Keep special-condition or story jobs isolated.

How many notes should I place in a stack?

Stacks of 100 are easiest to calculate and package. Keep smaller stacks only when an order requires an unusual total.

What should I carry in the inventory?

The knife, rare notes, quest-specific objects, small valuables and items that are easily lost. Leave common packaging supplies on a dedicated table.

Should I keep empty containers?

Keep clean, reusable containers because later jobs may request them. Store them open and away from newly delivered packages.

How do I stop money from spilling everywhere?

Respect machine capacities, use receiving containers at outputs, close boxes before moving them and place stacks rather than throwing them.

Are low-denomination notes worth keeping?

Keep a moderate reserve for exact totals and bill-count jobs. High denominations are more efficient for most value-based work.

How do I handle wet containers?

Allow reusable wet containers to dry, but remove the money so the notes can dry efficiently on their own.

What is the best use of the smartphone?

Check DARK NET for work, Task Tracker for exact requirements, Black Market for upgrades and the scanner for incoming deliveries and environmental clues.

How do I prepare for a timed order?

Clear the workplace, configure the counter, prepare the requested container and maintain clean high-value reserves before accepting it.

Should I throw away fake or marked notes?

Not until you are certain no current or future job requires them. Separate and label unusual stock instead.

Why should I use the night cycle?

Darkness and UV equipment can reveal hidden marks, secrets and environmental details that are difficult to see during normal lighting.

Can I automate the entire process?

Later equipment can automate much of washing, counting and sorting, but receiving, special inspection, exact packaging and error correction still benefit from careful organisation.

What is the most important efficiency tip?

Never let processed money move backward through the workflow. Every batch should travel from receiving toward dispatch without crossing unsorted deliveries again.


Final Advice

The fastest Cash Cleaner Simulator laboratory is not the one with the most machines. It is the one where every pile has an obvious meaning. A box should tell you its currency, condition and destination before you open it.

Process one delivery at a time, wash only what needs washing, dry before counting, keep rare notes separate and package exact values from known stacks. Once the floor stops being your filing system, the game changes from frantic cleanup into a satisfying production line.

Read our Cash Cleaner Simulator Controls Guide for object pickup, Grab Mode, dropping and throwing items, smartphone commands, inventory management and machine interactions.

7

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!


You must be logged in to post a comment.

Login Register