Profile Perfect Level 519 Answer & Walkthrough Solution

Guide By Liam Stone
Published on July 11, 2026
Below is the complete final answer for Level 519. Once you've checked it, continue to the step-by-step guide. Spoilers ahead.

Profile Perfect Level 519 Answer
I’ve placed the full solved grid at the top so you can see the final answer right away. After that, I’ll walk you through each clue chain so you can follow how everything locks into place.
| Subject | Blossom Color | Soil Type | Feature | Farmer | Fruit Carried | Export Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orchard A | White | Clay | Beehive | Hugo | Pear | Japan |
| Orchard B | Pink | Sand | Scarecrow | Selma | Peach | Germany |
| Orchard C | Yellow | Grass | Windmill | Ryan | Apple / Banana | Canada |
| Orchard D | Purple | Silt | Watch Tower | James | Orange | Singapore / Brazil |
| Orchard E | Purple | Loam | Shed | Clark | Cherry | Thailand / France |
Profile Perfect Level 519 Hints And Walkthrough
Profile Perfect Level 519 gives you three initial answers right away, which is a huge help. You know Orchard B’s blossom color is Pink, Orchard E’s soil type is Loam, and Orchard C’s export country is Canada. The rest of the grid fills in quickly once you start linking the clues that connect farmers, blossom colors, and the special fruit values that share a cell.
Step 1: Lock Orchard B’s farmer and export country with the first clues
The clue about the Pink orchard says it belongs to a female farmer. That farmer is Selma, so you can immediately place Selma as Orchard B’s farmer. The same clue also confirms the pink blossom color (which you already have as an initial answer). Next, the clue about the Sand orchard exports only to Germany tells you Orchard B’s soil type is Sand and its export country is Germany. Because Orchard B is already pink, it must be the Sand orchard. That gives you three more filled cells for Orchard B.
Step 2: Place Orchard A’s soil and export country from the direct clues
The clue that says Orchard A grows on Clay and exports to Japan is very straightforward. You can fill Orchard A’s soil type as Clay and its export country as Japan right away. This clue also mentions the rising sun nation, which is Japan.
Step 3: Use the grass and loam distance clue to set Orchard C’s soil
You already know Orchard E’s soil is Loam from the initial answers. The clue says Grass is either 2 or 3 columns away from Loam. Counting from Orchard E (position 5), the only position that is 2 columns away is Orchard C (position 3). So Orchard C’s soil type must be Grass. This also means Orchard C is the Grass orchard, which several later clues refer to.
Step 4: Identify Ryan as the Grass orchard farmer and find the Windmill
The clue about Ryan cutting grass ties everything together. Ryan is the farmer of the Grass orchard, so Orchard C’s farmer is Ryan. The same clue also mentions that Ryan cuts the wild Grass, which confirms Orchard C’s soil type is Grass (already set) and links Orchard B’s farmer as Selma (already set) and Orchard A’s soil as Clay (already set). Then the clue about a purposeful building inside the Grass orchard tells you that Orchard C’s feature is a Windmill.
Step 5: Match the Scarecrow to the Sand orchard and confirm the export pattern
The clue says the Scarecrow orchard exports to one European country. You know the Sand orchard exports to Germany, so Orchard B’s feature must be Scarecrow. This is reinforced by another clue that places the Scarecrow in the list of features among Orchards A through C, but the Scarecrow is actually at Orchard B.
Step 6: Use the Beehive and Windmill clue to reveal Orchard D’s soil
The clue that mentions Beehive and Windmill among Orchards A through C confirms that Orchard A’s feature is Beehive and Orchard C’s feature is Windmill (which you already have). It also reveals that Orchard D’s soil type is Silt. This is a big help because it means Orchard D is the Silt orchard.
Step 7: Assign James as the Silt orchard farmer and his export destination
The clue about James being a 5th generation caretaker of the Silt orchard locks in Orchard D’s farmer as James. Then the next clue says thanks to James’s network, his exports reach South America. That means Orchard D’s export country includes Brazil. The solved grid shows Orchard D exports to Singapore as well, but Brazil is the direct result of this clue.
Step 8: Place the blossom colors and the fruit that goes with White blossoms
Now the flower clues kick in. The Jacaranda tree is to the right of the Golden Trumpet tree. Jacaranda has purple blossoms, Golden Trumpet has yellow blossoms. So the orchard with Purple blossom is to the right of the orchard with Yellow blossom. Orchard C’s blossom color is Yellow from an earlier clue (the white blossom orchard clue mentions it), so Orchard D must be Purple. That same clue also sets Orchard A’s farmer as Hugo.
The fruit beside the White blossoms is linked to Momotaro, the Japanese peach boy story. The fruit beside White blossoms is Peach. White blossoms belong to Orchard A, so the orchard next to it must have Peach. That orchard is Orchard B, confirming its fruit is Peach. This clue also reveals that Orchard E’s blossom color is Purple, so both Orchard D and Orchard E have Purple blossoms.
Step 9: Determine the fruit for Orchard A, Orchard C, and Orchard E
The clue about the White blossoms orchard growing Apple’s cousin tells you that Orchard A’s fruit is Pear (the cousin of Apple). It also confirms Orchard C’s blossom is Yellow and its feature is Windmill (already set). The next clue says Hugo and Ryan’s fruits belong to the same family. Hugo farms Orchard A (Pear), Ryan farms Orchard C, so Orchard C’s fruit must be Apple (also pome family). This sets one of Orchard C’s fruit values.
But there’s another clue about the fruit that does not grow on a tree. That fruit is Banana (bananas grow on plants, not trees). The clue says Orange is to the right of that fruit. So the fruit that doesn’t grow on a tree must be to the left of Orange. The only position that works is Orchard C with Banana, and Orchard D with Orange. This adds Banana to Orchard C’s fruit cell, giving it both Apple and Banana.
The last fruit clue says that before heading to Thailand, the Cherry is stored in the Shed. The Shed is a feature, and it belongs to Orchard E. So Orchard E’s feature is Shed, its fruit is Cherry, and its export country includes Thailand. This is the second export value for Orchard E (the first was France from an earlier clue about not being next to Canada).
Step 10: Place Clark and handle the neighbor clue
The clue about Clark says he tends neither of Selma’s neighboring orchards. Selma is at Orchard B, whose neighbors are Orchard A and Orchard C. So Clark cannot be at A or C. That leaves Orchard D or Orchard E. Since Orchard D’s farmer is already James, Clark must go to Orchard E. That fits perfectly.
Solution: Finish the remaining matches
By now, almost every cell is filled. The only remaining values are the features for Orchard D (Watch Tower) and Orchard E (Shed, which you already set), and the export countries for Orchard D (Brazil plus Singapore from the grid) and Orchard E (Thailand and France). The final grid matches the table at the top of this article. Each orchard now has a complete set of traits.
Trickiest Clues In Profile Perfect Level 519
The “Not Next To” Clue
Clue 1 says the France bound orchard is not next to the Canada bound one. This can be confusing because it’s a negative clue. You need to look at the positions. Orchard C is Canada bound. Its immediate neighbors are Orchard B and Orchard D. France cannot be at B or D, so it could be at A or E. The clue directly links Orchard E to France, which narrows it down. If you misinterpret “not next to” as “not adjacent at all,” you might think France could be anywhere except B and D, but the linked cell confirms it’s E.
The Jacaranda and Golden Trumpet Trees
Clue 14 uses tree names instead of blossom colors. You need to know that Jacaranda has purple flowers and Golden Trumpet has yellow flowers. If you aren’t familiar with these trees, you might miss the connection. Once you realize it’s a color clue, it becomes straightforward. The phrase “to the right of” also sets the order, which is important for blossom color placement.
The Fruit That Doesn’t Grow On A Tree
Clue 17 asks you to identify a fruit that does not grow on a tree. Most players know that oranges, apples, pears, peaches, and cherries all grow on trees. Bananas grow on plants that look like trees but are technically herbs. This clue effectively rules out all fruits except Banana, so you know Banana must be the fruit to the left of Orange. This leads to Orchard C having Banana alongside Apple.
The Shed and Thailand Connection
Clue 18 says “Before heading to Thailand, the Cherry is stored in the Shed.” This links three things: the feature Shed, the fruit Cherry, and the export country Thailand. It also mentions that Orchard C’s fruit includes Apple, which you already deduced. The phrasing “before heading to Thailand” might imply an order, but it’s actually just indicating that the Cherry is in the Shed before being exported to Thailand. Pay attention to the linked cells to see all three assignments at once.
Final Thoughts
Profile Perfect Level 519 relies heavily on a few initial answers and then builds outward with color and fruit clues. The toughest part is remembering that some cells can hold multiple values, like Orchard C’s fruit (Apple and Banana) and Orchard D’s export (Singapore and Brazil). Once you accept that, the rest falls into place. The clue about the fruit that doesn’t grow on a tree is the key to unlocking Banana, and the Jacaranda clue ties the blossom colors together. Take it one step at a time, and you’ll have the full grid in no time.
Stuck on a future level? Bookmark the full Profile Perfect guide and come back anytime for the answer. And if you have thoughts or suggestions, drop them in the comments, we’d love to hear from you. Good luck and have fun!
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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