Profile Perfect Level 226 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 11, 2026
Start with the final answer for Level 226 below, then keep going for the complete step-by-step explanation. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 226 Answer
If you’re stuck on this trash-bin sorting puzzle, I’ve got the full solution right here. The completed grid comes first, and then I’ll walk through every clue that locks it in.
| Subject | Type | Color | Nearby Animal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trash Bin A | Wheeled | Black | Cat |
| Trash Bin B | Classic | Green | Crow |
| Trash Bin C | Hooded | Red | Dog |
| Trash Bin D | Swing Top | Brown | Raccoon |
Profile Perfect Level 226 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 226 gives you four trash bins (A, B, C, D) and three traits: Type, Color, and Nearby Animal. The first clue already locks in Trash Bin B’s type as Classic, and we know the crows are hanging around that bin. From there, the other clues chip away at the remaining bins until every attribute is set. Let’s work through it step by step.
Step 1: Use the starting answer to place Trash Bin B’s animal
The puzzle opens with a locked answer: Trash Bin B is Classic. Clue 1 ties that directly to the crows: “Crows are seen rummaging through the [initial].” That means Trash Bin B’s nearby animal is Crow. So right away we have:
- Trash Bin B → Type: Classic, Animal: Crow.
That gives us a solid foothold because we know exactly what’s going on with Bin B, and we can start eliminating possibilities for the others.
Step 2: Narrow down the Hooded type using Clue 2
Clue 2 says the Hooded type is not Trash Bin A or D. That leaves only Trash Bin C as a candidate for Hooded. So Trash Bin C’s type is Hooded. We don’t know its color or animal yet, but we know the type is locked.
Step 3: Match the Cat with the leftmost Black bin
Clue 3 is a big one: “A Cat is scavenging food near the leftmost Black bin.” The leftmost bin in the lineup (A, B, C, D) is Trash Bin A. So Bin A must be Black, and its nearby animal is Cat. The clue also mentions the Crow again, but we already have that at Bin B. So now:
- Trash Bin A → Color: Black, Animal: Cat.
- Trash Bin B (already) → Animal: Crow.
Step 4: Link the Red bin with the Hooded type
Clue 4 says “The Red bin is a Hooded trash bin.” We already know Hooded is Trash Bin C, so that means Bin C’s color is Red. So:
- Trash Bin C → Type: Hooded, Color: Red.
Now we have three bins partially filled. Bin D is the only one without any confirmed type, color, or animal yet.
Step 5: Use the Swing Top clue to determine Bin D’s type and Bin A’s color connection
Clue 5 says “The Swing Top trash bin color is not Black.” This tells us two things. First, the Swing Top bin is not Bin A, because Bin A is Black. So Swing Top must be Bin D (the only bin left without a type). Second, it confirms Bin A’s color as Black, which we already had. So:
- Trash Bin D → Type: Swing Top.
We also know from Clue 5 that the Swing Top bin’s color is not Black, but we don’t know its actual color yet.
Step 6: Unpack the “left of” neighbor clue for Dogs and Raccoons
Clue 6 is a positional clue: “Dog is near the bin to the left where Raccoon is.” This means the bin with the Dog is immediately to the left of the bin with the Raccoon. We have four bins in order A, B, C, D. The only possible left-right neighbor pairs are (A, B), (B, C), (C, D). Where could Dog and Raccoon sit?
- If Dog were at A, Raccoon at B – possible.
- If Dog at B, Raccoon at C – possible.
- If Dog at C, Raccoon at D – possible.
We need to see what other clues say. Clue 6 also assigns Trash Bin A’s type as Wheeled. That’s a direct fill: Trash Bin A → Type: Wheeled. So now we know Bin A’s type. And we already have Bin B as Classic, Bin C as Hooded, Bin D as Swing Top – all types are filled.
Now back to the neighbor clue. Let’s check which bins already have animals. Bin A has Cat, Bin B has Crow. So Dog and Raccoon must be at Bin C and Bin D. Could Dog be at Bin C and Raccoon at Bin D? That works because C is left of D. Could Dog be at Bin B and Raccoon at Bin C? No, because Bin B already has Crow. Could Dog be at Bin A and Raccoon at Bin B? No, Bin A has Cat and Bin B has Crow. So the only valid placement is Dog at Bin C and Raccoon at Bin D. That matches the “left of” relationship perfectly. So:
- Trash Bin C → Animal: Dog.
- Trash Bin D → Animal: Raccoon.
Step 7: Finish with the color of Bin D using Clue 7
Clue 7 says “Raccoon is not looking for food at the Green one.” We already know Raccoon is at Bin D, so Bin D is not Green. What about the colors so far? Bin A is Black, Bin C is Red, Bin B hasn’t been assigned a color yet. Bin D needs a color. The remaining colors from the set (Black, Green, Red, Brown) are Green and Brown. Since Bin D is not Green, it must be Brown. That leaves Green for Bin B. So:
- Trash Bin B → Color: Green.
- Trash Bin D → Color: Brown.
Solution: Complete the grid
All four rows are now full. Let’s recap:
- Trash Bin A: Type Wheeled, Color Black, Animal Cat.
- Trash Bin B: Type Classic, Color Green, Animal Crow.
- Trash Bin C: Type Hooded, Color Red, Animal Dog.
- Trash Bin D: Type Swing Top, Color Brown, Animal Raccoon.
Every clue has been satisfied, and the final grid matches the solved table at the top. No hidden values needed – everything was directly deducible from the clues.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 226
Clue 6: “Dog is near the bin to the left where Raccoon is”
This clue can trip you up because it uses “near” and “to the left” together. It essentially means the Dog bin is immediately left of the Raccoon bin. If you try to place Dog and Raccoon without checking the other bins’ already-assigned animals (Cat and Crow), you might put them in wrong spots. The key is to realize that Bin A and Bin B already have Cat and Crow respectively, so Dog and Raccoon must go to the last two bins – and the only left-of relationship that works is C (left) and D (right).
Clue 5: “The Swing Top trash bin color is not Black”
This one seems simple, but players sometimes forget that the Swing Top bin hasn’t been identified yet. The clue doesn’t directly say which bin is Swing Top; it just tells us that whatever bin it is, its color isn’t Black. You need to combine it with Clue 2 and Clue 3 to figure out that Swing Top must be Bin D, because Bin A is already Black, Bin B is Classic, and Bin C is Hooded. The clue also indirectly confirms that Bin A is Black, which you already had from Clue 3 – so it’s more of a double-check than a new piece of info.
Clue 7: “Raccoon is not looking for food at the Green one”
This clue is the last push, but it’s easy to overlook because it only eliminates one color option. If you’ve already placed Dog at Bin C and Raccoon at Bin D, you know Bin D cannot be Green. That leaves Brown as the only choice for Bin D, and Bin B gets Green. Without that elimination, you might try to guess which of the two remaining colors goes where, but the clue forces the answer.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 226 is a clean, straightforward logic grid once you see how the clues link together. The starting lock on Classic Bin B with crows sets the stage, and then the Hooded/Red connection, the leftmost Black bin with a cat, and the neighbor relationship between Dog and Raccoon fill everything in neatly. No confusing slash-values or hidden traits – just a satisfying chain of deductions from left to right. Give it another try if you were stuck, and you’ll see how each clue builds on the last until the grid is complete.
For more levels, you may want to bookmark the full answer archive 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
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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