Profile Perfect Level 517 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on July 11, 2026
Here is the final solution for Level 517 before the walkthrough begins. Save it first, then follow the steps below. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 517 Answer
Here is the completed grid for this chicken coop puzzle. The walkthrough follows right after.
| Subject | Material | Nesting Material | Ground Type | Chicken Type | Daily Egg Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coop A | Steel | Hay | Grass | Rhode Island | 6 |
| Coop B | Brick | Leaves | Sand | Leghorn | 4 |
| Coop C | Wooden | None | Dirt | Silkie | 8 |
| Coop D | Bamboo | Moss | Gravel | Polish | 5 |
Profile Perfect Level 517 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 517 starts with two locked answers: Coop A uses Hay for nesting, and Coop D lays 5 eggs each day. That gives us an anchor, but the rest of the grid depends on understanding the coop order and how the clues talk about positions. Let’s work through the steps.
Step 1: Lock in the Leghorn and Hay relationship
The clue says the Leghorn chicken is next to Hay. Since Hay is already placed in Coop A, the Leghorn must be in a coop right beside Coop A. But which side? The only coop directly next to Coop A in a straight line is Coop B. That puts Leghorn in Coop B. So Coop B’s chicken type is Leghorn. That’s a solid starting point.
Step 2: Use the odd egg count to place Coop D’s material
The coop with an odd number of eggs is made of Bamboo. Coop D already has 5 eggs, which is odd, so Coop D must be Bamboo. That gives us Coop D’s material and confirms its egg count again. This clue also reinforces that Coop D’s material is Bamboo.
Step 3: The strongest coop and the furthest coop connect Coop A and Coop D
The clue about the coop farthest from the rest being the strongest but having bad insulation gives us two materials at once. Coop A gets Steel, and Coop D gets Bamboo. We already know Coop D is Bamboo, so this matches. Coop A is Steel, which becomes important for later clues.
Step 4: Place Rhode Island chicken using the Dirt ground position
Rhode Island chicken is 2 columns away from the coop with Dirt ground. The coops are in order A B C D. For a coop to be 2 columns away, the distance between them must be exactly two positions. If Coop A is Rhode Island, then the Dirt ground must be in Coop C (since A to C is two steps). That locks Coop C’s ground as Dirt. It also confirms Coop A’s chicken type is Rhode Island. And because Coop D’s egg count is 5, the clue also confirms that value.
Step 5: The beach coop gives Coop B’s ground and egg count
The coop at the beach contains the fewest eggs. Beach usually means Sand ground, so Coop B’s ground becomes Sand. And the fewest eggs among 4, 5, 6, 8 is 4, so Coop B lays 4 eggs. That sets Coop B’s egg count and links back to Coop A’s Steel material again.
Step 6: The Steel coop lays 6 eggs every day
This clue directly states that the Steel coop (Coop A) produces 6 eggs daily and houses Rhode Island chickens. That confirms Coop A’s egg count and chicken type. All of Coop A’s traits are now known except its ground type.
Step 7: The Wooden coop holds Silkie chicken
Silkie chicken lives inside the Wooden coop. Which coop is Wooden? We know Coop A is Steel, Coop D is Bamboo, so the only remaining possibilities are Coop B or Coop C. But Coop B already has Leghorn, so it can’t be Silkie. That means Coop C is Wooden and the chicken there is Silkie. This clue also reconfirms Coop A’s chicken as Rhode Island.
Step 8: The farthest coop has Moss nesting
The coop farthest from the others has Moss growing in it. Based on the order A B C D, the farthest from the others is likely Coop D (the far right). So Coop D’s nesting material is Moss. This also ties back to Coop A’s Rhode Island chicken.
Step 9: The nestless coop produces the most eggs
The coop without a nest (no nesting material) produces the most results. That means it lays the highest number of eggs. Among the egg counts 4, 5, 6, 8, the maximum is 8. So the nestless coop lays 8 eggs. That coop must be Coop C, because its nesting material is None. So Coop C gets 8 eggs and confirms its nesting material is None.
Step 10: The Bamboo coop holds a Polish chicken and leads to more nesting details
Inside the Bamboo coop (Coop D) is a chicken with a messy, large crest, which describes the Polish breed. So Coop D’s chicken is Polish. The same clue tells us Coop B’s nesting material is Leaves, and reconfirms Coop D’s nesting is Moss. Now Coop B’s nesting is set.
Step 11: The Grass is not beside the nestless coop
The nestless coop is Coop C. The Grass ground cannot be directly next to Coop C. The only coop left that could have Grass is Coop A (Coop B has Sand, Coop C has Dirt, Coop D unknown). Since Coop A and Coop C are separated by Coop B, they are not adjacent. So Coop A’s ground is Grass. This fits perfectly.
Step 12: Fill the remaining traits by elimination
After all these clues, we have one empty cell for Coop B’s material and one for Coop D’s ground. The materials used so far are Steel, Wooden, Bamboo. The only material left is Brick. So Coop B is Brick. For grounds, we have Grass, Sand, Dirt. The only ground left is Gravel. So Coop D’s ground is Gravel. That completes the grid.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 517
The “two columns away” clue
Clue 4 says Rhode Island chicken is 2 columns away from the Dirt ground. Many players might wonder if that means two columns apart in the table or if it refers to distance in the grid order. In this puzzle, the coops are arranged left to right as A, B, C, D. Two columns away means a gap of exactly one coop between them. That’s how we pinpointed Coop C as the Dirt ground and Coop A as Rhode Island. Pay attention to the order of subjects when you see positional language.
The “beach coop” clue
Clue 5 says the coop at the beach contains the fewest eggs. On first read, you might not connect “beach” to ground type. But the trait for ground includes Sand, and a beach is naturally sandy. So the coop with Sand ground must be the one with the fewest eggs. That gave us Coop B’s ground and egg count in one shot.
The “farthest from” clues
Clues 3 and 8 both use “farthest from.” In a lineup of four coops, the farthest from the others is whichever coop is at an extreme end. But which end? The clues use it differently. Clue 3 says the farthest coop is the strongest (Steel) but has bad insulation (Bamboo). That seems to point to two different coops. Actually the clue is saying the coop that is farthest from the rest is the strongest, and that same coop unfortunately has bad insulation. But it links to both Coop A and Coop D? In the data, the clue linked Coop A Material = Steel and Coop D Material = Bamboo. This is a bit ambiguous: maybe it means the coop farthest from the rest (Coop D) is the strongest (which would be Steel, not Bamboo). But the clue links both. The best interpretation is that the clue tells us the materials for both coops: Coop A is Steel and Coop D is Bamboo. Don’t overthink the wording; just use the linked cells as the true answer.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 517 is a straightforward logic grid once you lock in the coop order and treat every positional clue as about the natural left to right sequence. The initial answers gave a good foothold, and each clue either confirmed a hidden value like Sand ground or eliminated remaining possibilities until only Brick and Gravel were left. The key was reading “two columns away” correctly and understanding that “next to” means direct neighbors. After that, the puzzle solved itself quickly.
Keep the Profile Perfect walkthrough page saved if you want help with future levels. Comments, tips, and suggestions are always welcome below. Good luck on the next challenge!
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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