Profile Perfect Level 257 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on June 13, 2026
For Level 257, the final answer is shown below. After that, I'll explain the logic and steps behind it. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 257 Answer
The completed grid is below, and I'll walk through the logic that gets us there step by step.
| Subject | Tree Type | Person | Capacity | Flag Color |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tree House A | Pine | Martha | 2Person | Blue |
| Tree House B | Oak | Ben | 3Person | Red / Green |
| Tree House C | Maple | Doug | 1Person | Black / White |
| Tree House D | Sakura | Jane | 4Person | Purple |
Profile Perfect Level 257 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 257 starts with two locked answers: Tree House C’s tree type is Maple, and Tree House B’s capacity is 3Person. That gives us a solid anchor, but the flag colors get interesting because some cells hold two values at once — like Tree House B’s flag being both Red and Green, and Tree House C’s flag being both Black and White. Let’s work through the clues in order and see how everything falls into place.
Step 1: Use the initial answers to place Maple and the 3-person capacity
The very first thing the puzzle gives us is that Tree House C grows a Maple tree, and Tree House B can fit three people. I’ll keep these locked in and build from there. This is the starting point for every deduction that follows.
Step 2: Martha is to the left of the house that fits three people
Clue 1 tells us that Martha lives in the house to the left of the one that fits three people. Since Tree House B already has a 3Person capacity, the house to its left must be Tree House A. That makes Martha the person in Tree House A. The same clue also confirms Tree House B’s capacity as 3Person, which we already knew. So now we have: Tree House A’s person is Martha.
Step 3: Jane and Sakura go to the house farthest from Martha
Clue 2 gives us two things at once: Jane’s tree house sits on top of a Sakura tree, and that house is farthest from Martha. Martha is in Tree House A, so the farthest house from A is Tree House D (the other end of the lineup). That means Tree House D’s tree type is Sakura and its person is Jane. Two cells locked in one clue.
Step 4: The capacity for Tree House A and Tree House C become clear
Clue 3 says there are two colors between the houses that fit two people and one person. Looking at the lineup from left to right (A, B, C, D), the only way to have two colors between them is if the two-person house and the one-person house are at opposite ends. Tree House B already has 3Person, so that leaves Tree House A and Tree House C. Tree House A must be 2Person, and Tree House C must be 1Person. The “two colors between” refers to the flag colors that will sit between A and C later, but for now this locks the capacities.
Step 5: Oak is to the right of Pine, which fills the tree types
Clue 4 tells us the Oak tree is to the right of the Pine tree. Tree House C already has Maple, so Pine and Oak have to go somewhere else. Since Oak must be to the right of Pine, the only arrangement that works is Pine at Tree House A and Oak at Tree House B. That leaves Sakura for Tree House D, which matches what we already found. So now every tree type is set: A = Pine, B = Oak, C = Maple, D = Sakura.
Step 6: Doug ends up in Tree House C with a White flag
Clue 5 says that either Doug’s or Jane’s flag uses a White flag. Jane is at Tree House D, but clue 9 will later confirm her flag is Purple, so it can’t be White. That means Doug must be the one with the White flag. This places Doug in Tree House C and gives Tree House C a White flag. The same clue also confirms Tree House D’s tree type as Sakura, which we already have.
Step 7: The most spacious house points to the White flag
Clue 6 says the house next to the most spacious tree house has a White flag. The most spacious house is the one with the highest capacity — that’s Tree House D with 4Person. The house next to it is Tree House C, which we just confirmed has a White flag. This also locks Tree House D’s capacity as 4Person.
Step 8: The Blue flag and the White flag connect through the capacity house
Clue 7 is worded a bit oddly: “Outside of the capacity house is a full Blue color flag.” The capacity house is Tree House A with 2Person, so outside of it refers to Tree House A itself. That means Tree House A’s flag is Blue. It also reinforces that Tree House C’s flag is White. So now Tree House A = Blue, and Tree House C = White.
Step 9: Green goes to the left of the smallest house
Clue 8 says a Green color is used at the left of the smallest house. The smallest house is Tree House C, which fits only one person. The house to its left is Tree House B, so Tree House B’s flag must be Green. This locks one of the two flag values for Tree House B.
Step 10: Red and Purple are two columns apart, and Ben avoids Purple
Clue 9 says Red and Purple flag colors are two columns apart. The only two houses with a gap of two columns between them are Tree House B and Tree House D. Tree House B already has Green, so its other flag value must be Red. Tree House D’s flag is Purple. That works perfectly.
Clue 10 says Ben does not like Purple for the flag. Since Tree House D’s flag is Purple, Ben cannot be there. The only house left for Ben is Tree House B, which already has the 3Person capacity and the Oak tree. This also clarifies the remaining flag values: Tree House B’s flag has both Red and Green, and Tree House C’s flag has both Black and White (since White is already confirmed, Black fills in the second slot).
Solution: Finishing the remaining matches
At this point, everything is locked. Tree House A has Pine, Martha, 2Person, and Blue. Tree House B has Oak, Ben, 3Person, and Red / Green. Tree House C has Maple, Doug, 1Person, and Black / White. Tree House D has Sakura, Jane, 4Person, and Purple. The initial answers are all satisfied, and every clue has been used to confirm the full grid.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 257
Clues 5 and 6 together — the “either/or” and “next to” combo
These two clues trip players up because they seem independent at first. Clue 5 says Doug or Jane uses a White flag, but doesn’t say which. Clue 6 says the house next to the most spacious one has a White flag. Players might try to solve the White flag placement from clue 5 alone without realizing clue 6 is the key to breaking the tie. Once you know Tree House D is the most spacious (4Person), the house next to it is C, which forces Doug into C with the White flag. Jane at D then gets Purple from clue 9. The real trick is using both clues together rather than guessing.
Clue 8 — “Green is used at the left of the smallest house”
This one is easy to misinterpret. It doesn’t mean the smallest house has a Green flag — it means the house immediately to its left has a Green flag. The smallest house is Tree House C (1Person), so its left neighbor is Tree House B. That’s where the Green flag goes. If you misread it as the smallest house itself having Green, you’d place it wrong and break the later clues about Red and Purple.
Clue 10 — “Ben does not like Purple for the flag” with slash-separated values
This clue caused me a moment of hesitation because Tree House B has a two-value flag (Red / Green). At first, I thought maybe Ben could still be at B if the Purple was just on another house. But the clue confirms Ben is not at any house with Purple. The only house with Purple is Tree House D, so Ben can’t be there. That leaves Tree House B for Ben, and the clue also confirms the remaining flag values for Tree House C (Black and White) by eliminating them from other houses.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 257 is a satisfying logic grid puzzle where the initial answers for Maple and the 3-person capacity set the stage, and the position-based clues about left, right, and next to fill in the rest. The slash-separated flag colors add a nice twist — you have to remember that some cells hold two values at once. Once you connect Martha to Tree House A and work through the tree type order, everything else clicks into place. The most important takeaway is to read every position clue carefully and let the “next to” and “left of” relationships guide your placements rather than jumping ahead with guesses.
Before you move on, bookmark our all-level answer guide in case you need another answer later. Share your thoughts or suggestions in the comments, and have fun with the next level!
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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