Monster Truck Hill Climb Racing Complete Guide (Stats, Upgrades, Best Stages and Tips)

Monster truck hill climb racing is one of the most searched topics by players sitting at 80,000 to 100,000 coins wondering one thing. Should I buy it or keep saving? That coin grind is real. You earned every single one of those coins on Countryside with the Jeep. Now you need a straight answer. This guide gives you exactly that. Unlock cost, correct upgrade order, best stages, flip fixes, fuel truth, and coin farming numbers. All tested. No filler.
Monster Truck Hill Climb Racing — Quick Facts
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Vehicle Number | 3rd vehicle in the game |
| Unlock Cost | 100,000 coins |
| Full Upgrade Cost | 5,101,000 coins |
| Best For | Beginners, Moon farming, rough terrain |
| Upgrade Slots | Engine, Suspension, Tires, Mid-Air Control |
| Best Stages | Moon, Arctic, Countryside, Desert |
| Avoid | Cave, long-distance Highway runs |
| Biggest Weakness | No fuel tank upgrade |
| Coins Per Run on Moon | 80,000 to 120,000 |
How many coins does the Monster Truck cost in Hill Climb Racing?
The Monster Truck costs 100,000 coins to unlock. It is the 3rd vehicle in Hill Climb Racing. Fingersoft placed it right after the Motocross Bike in the progression ladder.
Here is where it sits against the vehicles around it:
| Vehicle | Unlock Cost |
|---|---|
| Jeep | Free |
| Motocross Bike | 75,000 coins |
| Monster Truck | 100,000 coins |
| Tractor | 150,000 coins |
| Race Car | 250,000 coins |
That 25,000 coin gap between the Motocross Bike and Monster Truck matters. On Countryside with the Jeep, you earn roughly 5,000 to 15,000 coins per run. Saving 100,000 coins from scratch takes 2 to 4 days of regular play. On Highway with an upgraded Jeep, you cut that time in half.
Is the Monster Truck worth buying in Hill Climb Racing?
Yes. For most players, the Monster Truck is worth every coin at 100,000.
The big tires absorb bumps that flip the Jeep. Newton Bill stays alive longer. You go further. You earn more coins per run. The 4-wheel grip holds on Arctic ice and Countryside bumps where smaller vehicles slide and crash.
Is the Monster Truck the best first vehicle to buy after the Jeep?
Most players face this exact decision. You have saved close to 75,000 to 100,000 coins. Do you go Motocross Bike or Monster Truck?
| Factor | Motocross Bike | Monster Truck |
|---|---|---|
| Unlock Cost | 75,000 coins | 100,000 coins |
| Best Stage | Moon flips | Countryside, Arctic, Moon |
| Flip Risk | High without Air Control upgrade | Low — big tires absorb terrain |
| Coin Farming on Moon | 100,000 to 150,000 per run | 80,000 to 120,000 per run |
| Beginner Friendly | Medium | High |
| Upgrade Priority | Air Control first | Engine first |
The Motocross Bike earns more coins per Moon run. But it flips constantly until you upgrade Air Control. Beginners lose runs every 30 seconds with it.
The Monster Truck costs 25,000 more coins. But it is forgiving. Big tires roll over bumps the Motocross Bike crashes on. You stay alive longer. You collect more ground coins per run even before you get to Moon.
What is the correct upgrade order for the Monster Truck in Hill Climb Racing?
Most guides say Engine then Suspension then Tires. That order costs you coins and causes extra flips. The Monster Truck has 4 upgrade slots: Engine, Tires, Suspension, and Mid-Air Control. Here is the correct sequence:
| Step | Upgrade | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Engine | More power means more distance and more coins per run. Always first. |
| 2nd | Tires | Cuts the flip rate on landing. Better grip on Arctic ice and Countryside bumps. |
| 3rd | Suspension | Smoother landings after jumps. Reduces bounce that causes late-run crashes. |
| 4th | Mid-Air Control | Only matters once you farm flips on Moon. Useless before the other three are solid. |
Full upgrade cost breakdown:
| Upgrade | Max Levels |
|---|---|
| Engine | 12 levels |
| Tires | 16 levels |
| Suspension | 14 levels |
| Mid-Air Control | 10 levels |
| Total Cost | 5,101,000 coins |
Why does my Monster Truck keep flipping in Hill Climb Racing?
The Monster Truck flips because it is tall and top-heavy. The big tires push the centre of gravity higher than any small vehicle in the garage. On steep downhills or after hard landings, the front dips and the truck goes over.
| Situation | Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Flipping backwards on uphill | Holding full throttle lifts front wheels | Feather the gas — tap it, do not hold |
| Nose diving after jumps | Front dips when airborne | Tap brake mid-air to lift the front back up |
| Sliding sideways on landing | No tire grip on impact | Upgrade Tires before Suspension |
| Flipping on steep downhill | Too much speed into decline angle | Ease off before the crest, let the truck settle |
The most common flip new players make is holding full throttle on every hill. That works on the Jeep because it is low and light. The Monster Truck is heavy and tall. Full throttle on a steep climb lifts the front wheels and the truck flips backwards every time.
Why does the Monster Truck run out of fuel so fast in Hill Climb Racing?
The Monster Truck has no fuel tank upgrade. That is the core problem.
Look at the Jeep. It has a Fuel upgrade slot. The Motocross Bike has one. The Race Car has one. The Monster Truck does not. Fingersoft gave it Mid-Air Control instead.
This means every other vehicle can extend its fuel range as you progress. The Monster Truck runs the same fuel capacity from the day you unlock it to the day you fully upgrade it.
On stages where fuel cans sit close together, this is not a problem. Countryside, Arctic, and Moon all have manageable fuel can spacing for the Monster Truck. On Highway, fuel cans spread further apart the deeper you go. The Monster Truck hits empty before smaller, lighter vehicles do on long Highway runs.
What is the best stage for the Monster Truck in Hill Climb Racing?
Not every stage suits the Monster Truck equally. Here is the full breakdown:
| Stage | Rating | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Moon | ⭐ Best | Low gravity gives long air time and 80,000 to 120,000 coins per run |
| Arctic | Great | Tires grip ice better than most vehicles |
| Countryside | Great | Rolling hills suit the big tires perfectly |
| Desert | Good | Sandy terrain handled well, fuel burns a bit faster |
| Alien Planet | Good | Low gravity like Moon, powerful engine shines |
| Ragnarok | Good | Absorbs rock impacts, holds ground on uneven drops |
| Mountain | Average | Steep sections flip it without full upgrades |
| Highway | Average | Fine on flats but fuel runs out on long distance runs |
| Cave | Avoid | Too tall for low ceilings, constant crashes |
| Volcano | Avoid | Extreme inclines flip it repeatedly |
The Moon stage is the Monster Truck’s home. Low gravity keeps Newton Bill airborne longer than any surface stage. The airtime coin multiplier stacks fast. Chain 3 to 4 flips per hill and your coins per run jumps hard.
Cave is the worst stage for the Monster Truck. The truck is simply too tall. It clips ceilings constantly and crashes before you hit 500 meters. Do not waste coins unlocking Cave for a Monster Truck run.
Is the Monster Truck good for coin farming in Hill Climb Racing?
Yes, on the right stage. Here is what you realistically earn per run:
| Stage | Coins Per Run |
|---|---|
| Moon fully upgraded | 80,000 to 120,000 |
| Countryside | 10,000 to 20,000 |
| Desert | 20,000 to 40,000 |
| Arctic | 15,000 to 30,000 |
Moon is the answer. Low gravity means longer air time. Longer air time means the coin multiplier climbs higher. With Mid-Air Control fully upgraded, you chain 3 to 5 flips per hill. Each flip pays 1,000 coins on top of the airtime income.
The Motocross Bike earns 100,000 to 150,000 per Moon run. The Monster Truck earns 80,000 to 120,000. The Motocross Bike wins on raw numbers. But the Monster Truck is far more stable. Beginners lose Motocross Bike runs constantly. A solid Monster Truck run on Moon finishes clean and earns more per session simply because it does not crash as often.
How to Get the Monster Truck Free in Hill Climb Racing
In the standard game, you need 100,000 coins. From a fresh start on Countryside with the Jeep, that takes 2 to 4 days of regular play. Upgrade your Engine to level 2 first. Move to Highway once Engine hits level 3. Stack coins faster there.
Final Verdict — Is the Monster Truck Worth It?
For beginners, yes. The Monster Truck is the most forgiving vehicle you can buy at the 100,000 coin mark. Big tires, stable build, strong engine. It teaches you throttle control without punishing every small mistake.
For coin farmers, yes on Moon. 80,000 to 120,000 coins per run is strong mid-game farming. Not the highest ceiling in the game but consistent and stable.
For speed runners chasing Highway records or Cave distances, skip it. Save for the Race Car at 250,000 or go straight for the Rally Car at 500,000 coins. The Monster Truck is not built for speed or downforce stages. Once your coins are ready, check the Super Offroad complete guide to see if it matches your playstyle and stage preference.
The fuel weakness is real. No fuel upgrade means the Monster Truck has a hard ceiling on stages like Highway. Play to its strengths. Moon, Arctic, Countryside. Stay away from Cave and long Highway runs.
At 100,000 coins, nothing else in that price range handles rough terrain as well. The Monster Truck earns its place in every serious garage. When you are ready to step up from the Monster Truck, the Tank Hill Climb Racing guide covers everything you need before spending 1,000,000 coins.






