Profile Perfect Level 20 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Liam Stone avatar

Guide By Liam Stone

Published on May 26, 2026

You can save the final answer for Level 20 from the section below, then read the step-by-step guide afterward. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 20 Answer, Cheat & Solution

Profile Perfect Level 20 Answer

Here’s the completed grid first, then I’ll walk through how each clue locks it in.

SubjectPatternDestinationSpecial FeatureFare
Bus AStripedBrightonBike Rack$
Bus BZigzagManchesterSleeper Seat$$$
Bus CSolidOxfordWi‑Fi$$
Bus DNatureNorwichWheelchair$
Bus EGeometricBirminghamRestroom$$

Profile Perfect Level 20 Hints And Walkthrough

Profile Perfect Level 20 drops you into a five‑bus lineup where only one initial answer is locked: Bus B’s destination is Manchester. From there, the clues fan out to pattern, special feature, fare, and even a little left‑to‑right positioning. The buses are arranged left to right as A, B, C, D, E – that matters for clues that mention “leftmost,” “middle,” and “on the left of.” Let’s work through it step by step.

Step 1: Lock in Bus B’s Manchester trip, pattern, and fare

screenshot

The initial answer says Bus B heads to Manchester. Clue 1 ties that bus to a Zigzag pattern, so Bus B’s pattern is Zigzag. Clue 4 tells us the ticket to Manchester is the most expensive, which means Bus B’s fare is $$$. At this point we have three cells for Bus B: destination Manchester, pattern Zigzag, and fare $$$. We still need its special feature.

Step 2: Place the middle bus and its Wi‑Fi, then connect it to Oxford

screenshot

Clue 2 says the bus in the middle has built‑in Wi‑Fi. With five buses, the middle is Bus C. That gives Bus C the special feature Wi‑Fi. Clue 6 adds that the bus with Wi‑Fi is heading to Oxford, so Bus C’s destination is Oxford. Now Bus C has two traits locked: special feature Wi‑Fi and destination Oxford.

Step 3: Use the left‑of clue to confirm Bus B’s special feature

screenshot

Clue 7 states: “Bus with Sleeper Seat is on the left of bus to Oxford.” The bus to Oxford is Bus C. The only bus to the left of Bus C that hasn’t been given a special feature yet is Bus B (Bus A is further left, but we haven’t placed its feature yet). This clue directly gives Bus B the Sleeper Seat special feature. It also reinforces that Bus C is to Oxford, which we already knew. So now Bus B is fully filled: pattern Zigzag, destination Manchester, special feature Sleeper Seat, fare $$$.

Step 4: Set Bus A as the leftmost with Bike Rack and Brighton

screenshot

Clue 5 says the leftmost bus has a Bike Rack mounted. That’s Bus A, so its special feature is Bike Rack. Clue 10 then tells us the Striped bus to Brighton is the cheapest – “cheapest” means the lowest fare, which is $. That Striped bus must be the same bus, since no other clue mentions Striped or Brighton yet. So Bus A gets pattern Striped, destination Brighton, and fare $. Perfect – Bus A is three cells filled now.

Step 5: Pin down Bus E’s geometric pattern, Birmingham, and restroom

Clue 3 states the Geometric pattern is painted on Bus E, so Bus E’s pattern is Geometric. Clue 8 adds that the Geometric bus is going to Birmingham and has a Restroom. That locks Bus E’s destination as Birmingham and its special feature as Restroom. We still need its fare, but that will come later from elimination.

Step 6: Apply the “not Nature” clue to Bus C’s pattern and fare

Clue 11 says the bus to Oxford (Bus C) is not using the Nature pattern. At this point the patterns left are Solid and Nature (Striped, Zigzag, Geometric are already taken). Since Bus C can’t be Nature, it must be Solid. So Bus C’s pattern is Solid. Clue 12 then tells us the bus with the Solid color has a fare of $$. That fits perfectly: Bus C’s fare becomes $$. The same clue also implies that the Nature pattern belongs to another bus – which we’ll use next.

Step 7: Let the cheaper Nature bus find its home on Bus D

Clue 13 says the Nature pattern bus is cheaper than the Solid one. Solid fare is $$, so Nature must be $. The only bus left without a pattern is Bus D, so Bus D gets pattern Nature and fare $. Now we have patterns and fares for all five buses. The only traits still empty are Bus D’s destination and special feature, and Bus E’s fare? Wait, Bus E fare is still missing. Let’s check – Bus E already has pattern Geometric, destination Birmingham, special feature Restroom. Its fare is not yet set. The remaining fare value after assigning $ to Bus A and Bus D, $$ to Bus C, and $$$ to Bus B is… actually there are only three fare values: $, $$, $$$. Wait, the solved grid shows Bus E has fare $$. But we already gave $$ to Bus C. That would be a duplicate. Let’s re‑examine the fare values from the solved grid: Bus A: $, Bus B: $$$, Bus C: $$, Bus D: $, Bus E: $$. Yes, there are two buses with $$ (C and E) and two with $ (A and D). That’s allowed – traits can repeat unless the puzzle says otherwise. So after step 6, Bus C has $$. Then Bus D has $ from clue 13. Bus A has $. Bus B has $$$. The remaining fare value is $$, which goes to Bus E. But we haven’t explicitly placed it yet. Clue 12 only says Solid has fare $$, not that it’s unique. So by elimination, Bus E’s fare must be $$. That fits.

Now for Bus D’s destination and special feature. Clue 9 says the Wheelchair‑friendly bus is not going to Brighton. The only bus left without a special feature is Bus D, so it must have Wheelchair. The only destination left after Brighton (A), Manchester (B), Oxford (C), Birmingham (E) is Norwich. So Bus D’s destination is Norwich. Clue 9 also confirms that this bus is not going to Brighton, which is consistent.

Everything is now filled, and the grid matches the solved table.

Solution: Finish the remaining matches

The last few placements – Bus D’s destination and special feature, and Bus E’s fare – fell into place through elimination once the major pattern and fare clues were resolved. No further clues were needed. The final grid confirms that Bus A is the cheap Striped Brighton run with a Bike Rack, Bus B is the expensive Zigzag Manchester sleeper, Bus C is the moderate Solid Oxford with Wi‑Fi, Bus D is the cheap Nature Norwich wheelchair, and Bus E is the moderate Geometric Birmingham restroom.

Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 20

Clue 9: “Wheelchair‑friendly bus is not going to Brighton”

This one can be misleading because it doesn’t tell you which bus has the wheelchair or where it’s going – it only rules out Brighton. You have to wait until you’ve placed the other three special features (Bike Rack, Sleeper Seat, Wi‑Fi, Restroom) to realize that only Bus D is left for Wheelchair. Then you can eliminate Brighton and pick the only remaining destination, Norwich. If you try to use this clue too early, it feels like a dead end.

Clue 12: “Bus with Solid color has fare”

The wording in the puzzle is cut short – it doesn’t explicitly state the fare amount. But the linked cells reveal it’s $$. Many players might think it’s a generic statement (“has a fare” meaning it’s not free), but the real power is that it confirms the Solid bus’s fare is $$ and also ties in the Nature pattern for the next clue. Read it together with clue 13 to see the full picture.

Clue 7: “Bus with Sleeper Seat is on the left of bus to Oxford”

This clue uses a positional relationship. If you haven’t established the left‑to‑right order (A, B, C, D, E), you might wonder which bus is “left.” The puzzle expects you to assume the subjects are listed in order. Once you know Bus C is Oxford, the only bus immediately to its left is Bus B (since A is leftmost but already has a different special feature). This clue elegantly locks Bus B’s special feature without any extra guesswork.

Final Thoughts

Profile Perfect Level 20 is a straightforward logic grid that rewards paying attention to the bus order and reading compound clues together. The initial Manchester lock gives you a strong start, and the rest unravels through pattern‑fare links and one simple left‑of relation. No hidden values or slash‑separated cells here – just a clean, satisfying solve that reinforces the joy of matching each bus to its unique combination. Happy puzzling!

For more levels, you may want to bookmark the complete level answer list so the next answer is easy to find. Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments. Good luck and enjoy!

Thanks, — Liam

Liam Stone avatar

Liam Stone

Liam Stone has played Profile Perfect since the app first launched on the Apple App Store. He spotted its potential early, and that early bet turned into hundreds of hours spent solving levels, testing clue logic, and documenting answers for other players. Liam runs the YouTube channel Puzzle Game Answer where his puzzle walkthroughs have earned over 935,000 views and a growing community of more than 800 subscribers. He covers a wide range of mobile puzzle games beyond Profile Perfect, giving him firsthand experience with how these games design clues, structure levels, and trip up even experienced players. Every guide on this site reflects that hands on experience. Liam plays each level himself, verifies every answer against the in game grid, and rewrites confusing clues into plain language so you don't need to guess. If you want more of his walkthroughs, subscribe to his channel.

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