I remember standing in the lobby as the sun set and hearing the first theft alarm — my heart dropped. You feel the game change the moment a pet announces itself and the panic starts to spread. I learned fast which companions earn you cash and which simply look pretty.
Editor’s Note: This post was last updated on June 13, 2026.
Grow a Garden 2 Pets Tier List: Overview
Most players I watch on YouTube treat their lobby like a stock exchange, checking pets between matches.
You can buy any Grow a Garden 2 pet from the lobby, but they are not equal: some are steady earners, some are defensive nightmares, and a few feel useless after the first week. Below I’ve ordered all companions by the value they add to core play — stealing, defending, and speeding plant growth — so you can pick what actually changes your matches.
| Tier | Pets |
|---|---|
| S Tier | Raccoon, Black Dragon, Ice Serpent, Unicorn |
| A Tier | Bee, Golden Dragonfly, Deer, Bunny |
| B Tier | Frog |
| C Tier | Robin, Owl, Monkey |
Which pet is best in Grow a Garden 2?
If your question is short and brutal — “Which pet should I buy right now?” — the honest answer is: buy the one that fixes your biggest leak. If you get robbed every night, Raccoon is priority. If people raid your plots and you need a deterrent, Black Dragon or Bee will stop the bleeding.
Grow a Garden 2 Pet Tier List: How I ranked them
On Discord I see two kinds of arguments: whether a pet is flashy or whether it earns you matches.
I ranked pets by passive value (income, mutation odds, growth), defensive impact (stuns, freezes, damage), and long-term utility across matches. I cross-checked what creators and dataminers on Roblox forums were saying, scrubbed match footage, and re-tested the abilities in a handful of lobbies — then distilled the results into the tiers below.
Grow a Garden 2 S-Tier Pets
On stream, S-Tier pets are the ones viewers demand you show off — they change how you play.
S-Tier pets flip the math of a match. The Raccoon is a pickpocket in fur; it actively increases your night steals and adds +25 to the steal stash. The Black Dragon and Ice Serpent act as base sentries, setting intruders on fire or freezing them solid, making a raid feel impossible. The Unicorn raises the odds of rainbow mutations, which is the game’s highest ticket to big payouts.
| Pet | Traits |
|---|---|
| Raccoon | Steals from other players during the night and increases the steal stash by +25 |
| Black Dragon | Sets the intruders on fire |
| Ice Serpent | Freezes the intruders and turns them into ice |
| Unicorn | Boosts the chances of crops getting the rainbow mutation |
How do pets affect gameplay in Grow a Garden 2?
Pets change choices you make every second: do you protect, farm, or steal? A good companion pushes your playstyle toward the most profitable loop for your team.
Grow a Garden 2 A-Tier Pets
I often watch players swap between these pets during mid-game when momentum matters most.
A-Tier companions are reliable and versatile. The Bee stings raiders and protects your plot, the Golden Dragonfly raises gold mutation chances, the Deer speeds plant growth, and the Bunny increases movement — and that extra speed stacks with teammates. These pets rarely disappoint and slot into most team compositions without drama.
| Pet | Traits |
|---|---|
| Bee | Protects your plot and stings any incoming players who try to steal fruits. |
| Golden Dragonfly | Increases the chance of gold mutation among the plants in your garden |
| Deer | Increases the growth rate of plants in your garden |
| Bunny | Increases your movement speed, and the effect can stack with more bunnies in your team. |
Grow a Garden 2 B-Tier Pets
On beginner streams and in new-player guides, the Frog shows up because climbing is a common early pain point.
B-Tier is situational. The Frog increases jump height, which is useful when maps are fresh and plants are short, but that advantage fades as you and your opponents stack upgrades. Keep one if you’re still learning routes, otherwise replace it with something more profitable.
| Pet | Traits |
|---|---|
| Frog | Helps in increasing the jump height of the player |
Grow a Garden 2 C-Tier Pets
I see C-Tier pets praised in chat by players who love aesthetics more than wins.
These are the least useful in competitive matches. The Robin eats ripe plants and sometimes drops seeds — the payout is unreliable. The Owl improves night view and hoots when a rare spawn appears, but that rarely translates into consistent rewards. Keep them only if you enjoy the personality; they won’t change your match outcomes.
| Pet | Traits |
|---|---|
| Robin | Eats the ripe plants and occasionally drops Grow a Garden plant seeds |
| Owl | Improves the view during the nighttime and hoots loudly upon spotting a rare pet spawn |
If you want freebies to fast-track pet buys, check Roblox community posts, Discord servers, and YouTube creator videos for the latest Grow a Garden 2 codes and giveaways — creators often post codes and demo builds that can save you USD 5–10 (€5–9). I use a Google Sheet to track which pets I’ve tested and which ones I’ll sell from my inventory when a better option appears. The question is: which pet are you holding onto that’s costing you wins?