Fix It Up trading
Search live Fix It Up player-to-player listings by value, category (Junkyard/Auction/Event/Robux) and demand — every trade is item-for-item with verified traders, no real money and no platform-set prices.
TradingKeep is a fan-made player-to-player marketplace — not affiliated with or endorsed by Fix It Up or its publisher. Game and item names and images belong to their respective owners.
Trading rules
Fix It Up is a car-restoration game: you buy junk cars, fix and customize them, then trade the finished builds with other players. Trading is player-to-player — you can set your own asking price on a car or use the in-game auction house to bid on other players' cars — and it's car-for-car. The in-game Cash you earn from flipping isn't the trade unit, so values here are community reference points, not prices, and they diverge sharply from a car's original purchase cost. Confirm a car's condition and parts in the trade window before you commit.
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In Fix It Up, the thing that actually changes hands is the cars themselves — the builds you drag out of the Junkyard, strip, paint, and fit with new parts before handing them off to another player. Every deal is car-for-car. Trading only opens up once both players have flipped 50 cars, so everyone at the table has already put real time into the game before they swap. From there you have two ways to make a deal: name your own terms on a finished car and swap it directly through the game's contract system, or use the in-game auction house to bid on other players' builds. The Euros you earn flipping junk are not the trade unit — they fund junkyard rides, paint, and spare parts, but they never cross a trade window, so a car's standing in the community floats completely free of whatever it took to put together.
A car's trade demand is built from a few stacking things. Category is the first read: the catalog sorts cars into Junkyard finds, Auction pulls, Event cars, and Robux cars, and each carries its own scarcity story. Auction cars like the Porx JT2 RF climb because they were limited pulls with very low spawn rates that are effectively unobtainable now; Robux cars like the Mata FX7 sit high because access is gated behind a paid source; and Junkyard chase pieces like the DOGO Desafio rise on pure desirability and how hard the build is to finish. Past category, the individual car matters — its exact model, rarity, and how well it has been built and finished — and Event cars that rotated out and can no longer be earned hold their pull because supply is frozen.
The scams here all key on one fact: two cars can wear the same name and look identical while carrying very different builds underneath. The classic move is passing off a car with lower-grade or wrong parts, a lower spec, or a worse finish than the desirable version you agreed on. So always open the car in the trade window and confirm its actual spec and the exact parts fitted before you commit — never from a screenshot or a description in chat. Watch for last-second swaps right before you confirm, and be wary of anyone rushing you or pushing a deal off-platform. Use a community value list the smart way: as a shared reference for how cars compare, not a fixed number, so it tells you whether a car-for-car swap is roughly balanced rather than settling it for you.
Fix It Up trading FAQ
Does TradingKeep charge any fees?
No — TradingKeep is completely free. There are no fees and we never take a cut of your trades.
How does trading Fix It Up items work?
It's item-for-item, player-to-player trading. You post the item you have — and the rolls it came with — plus what you'd take for it. Other players make offers, you accept the one you like, and you complete the trade in-game. No middlemen, no money.
Is any real money involved?
No. TradingKeep is item-for-item only. Real-money and gift-card offers break game rules and are banned here — report anyone who tries.
How does TradingKeep stop scams?
Several ways at once: trade-verified reviews so a trader's history is real, chat that renders every link as plain text so phishing can't land, a dual-confirm step on every trade, and a report system tied to visible outcomes.
What is a "trade-verified" review?
A review you can trust: it unlocks only after a completed trade that both sides confirmed. No drive-by ratings and no review-bombing.
Do my listings expire?
Listings stay live for 30 days and can be bumped every 6 hours to stay near the top. Done trading? Cancel a listing any time.
