POE 2 0.5 How To Farm Currency Fast Expedition Abyss And Crafting
Patch 0.5 made specialization on the Atlas tree the single most important economic decision for endgame players. The most profitable approaches now reward commitment to a small set of mechanics rather than broad, unfocused mapping. The top two currency engines after the rework are Expedition farming and Abyss farming. Expedition offers the highest burst potential, while Abyss provides the most consistent per‑hour returns. Crafting loops remain essential for converting spikes into reliable income. If you want to maximize Divines per hour, pick a primary mechanic, invest Atlas points into its multipliers, and run focused sessions with a fast clear build and tight stash organization.
How to use this guide
Read the tier list and the Atlas strategy sections first to choose your primary mechanic. Then follow the session plans and conversion strategies to turn loot into Divines. The FAQ at the end answers common tactical questions. This guide minimizes long bullet lists and focuses on clear paragraphs and compact tables for quick reference.
Why the Atlas rework matters for currency
The 0.5 rework shifted the Atlas from a broad, incremental bonus system to one that rewards specialization. Nodes that directly multiply a mechanic’s output—remnant tier for Expedition, chest frequency for Abyss, or crafting bench efficiency for crafting loops—now provide outsized returns compared to generic rarity/quantity nodes. That means players who concentrate points and map choices into one or two mechanics see exponential gains in loot quality and frequency. The practical implication is simple: commit, optimize, and run focused sessions.
Currency tier list after 0.5
This tier list ranks farming methods by value per hour, consistency, and scalability in the current meta.
Top tier Expedition farming — very high value per hour, medium consistency, low to medium entry cost. When you hit high‑tier remnants and long logbook chains, a single session can produce multiple Divines’ worth of value. The Atlas multipliers for remnant tier and logbook chain length make this the highest ceiling method.
Abyss farming — high value per hour, high consistency, low entry cost. Abyssal chests and abyss jewels are steady sellers. Abyss scales well with pack size and chest frequency nodes and benefits from builds with excellent area clear and mobility.
Mid tier Crafting loops — medium value per hour, medium consistency, medium entry cost. Crafting loops convert raw drops into predictable, sellable goods. They require market knowledge and time but are the backbone of a stable income stream.
Situational and niche Breach, Delirium, and other off‑Atlas mechanics — medium to low value, situational consistency. These can spike in value depending on league meta and demand for specific uniques or mods. Use them as secondary income or when you have a market read.
Lower tier Generic map running without mechanic focus — low value per hour. Unless you heavily invest in quantity/rarity or run very high tiers, unfocused mapping is the least efficient way to make Divines.
Why Expedition and Abyss dominate
Expedition and Abyss both create concentrated opportunities to drop high‑value items. Expedition remnant mechanics can produce multiple high‑tier rewards in a single encounter, and the logbook system allows chaining that multiplies returns. Abyss provides frequent chests and jewels that are consistently in demand. The Atlas rework amplifies these mechanics with nodes that increase remnant tier, chest frequency, pack size, and drop quality. Because these multipliers stack multiplicatively with map modifiers and consumables, a focused Atlas investment yields far greater returns than spreading points across many mechanics.
Atlas strategy: how to commit without wasting points
Choose one primary mechanic and one secondary fallback. Early Atlas points should buy universal quality-of-life nodes (pack size, monster rarity) and then funnel into your mechanic’s tree. Use temporary consumables—scarabs, tablets, catalysts—to add mechanics you haven’t permanently invested in. This lets you test markets and run hybrid sessions without diluting your long-term Atlas investment.
When you plan your Atlas path, prioritize nodes that:
Directly increase the mechanic’s output (remnant tier, chest frequency, logbook chain chance).
Improve encounter density and pack size for faster clear and more loot per minute.
Reduce travel time or increase map device efficiency to maximize time spent in encounters.
Avoid spreading points across many mechanics. The rework penalizes diversification by reducing the marginal benefit of each node when you don’t commit.
Expedition farming deep dive
What makes Expedition powerful is the remnant and logbook system. High‑tier remnants can drop multiple valuable items, and logbook chains increase the number of high‑value outcomes per run. After 0.5, nodes that increase remnant tier and logbook chain chance are the most valuable Atlas investments for Expedition runners.
How to run Expedition effectively Run fast clear builds that can handle both dense packs and single-target remnant bosses. Scout remnants visually and with your loot filter before detonating to avoid wasting time on low-value outcomes. Use scarabs and map devices to add Expedition encounters to maps that already have high density. Keep a stash tab dedicated to Expedition loot and a second tab for items you intend to craft or flip.
Session structure Start with a short prep phase to apply scarabs and confirm logbook tiers. Run maps aggressively, skipping low-value remnants. End with a tidy phase to sort loot, vendor trash, and craft or list flips.
Inventory priorities Keep a small set of crafting materials and currency for on-the-fly conversions. Use a stash tab for raw remnants and logbooks, and another for items you will craft into sellable goods. A tight filter that highlights high-tier remnants and logbook rewards saves time.
Risk management Expedition has high variance. You will have dry runs. The Atlas multipliers reduce variance by increasing the frequency of high-tier remnants, but you must accept that bursts and droughts are part of the method.
Abyss farming deep dive
Abyss is the most consistent per-hour method because abyssal chests and jewels are frequent and reliably valuable. After 0.5, nodes that increase chest frequency and pack size are the most effective investments for Abyss runners.
How to run Abyss effectively Choose maps with high monster density and abyssal-friendly layouts. Use scarabs or map devices to add abyssal depth. Run a build with excellent area clear and mobility to reach many chests per minute. Avoid maps that split packs into many small groups; you want large, dense packs that spawn multiple chests.
Inventory priorities Abyss jewels and unique drops are often the best flips. Keep a stash tab for abyss jewels and a simple price list for quick vendor or trade decisions. Use a filter that highlights abyss chests and jewels.
Risk management Abyss is lower variance than Expedition. It scales well with map investment and is a reliable way to accumulate Divines over time.
Crafting loops and loot conversion
Crafting loops are the predictable way to convert raw loot into stable currency. After 0.5, crafting rules and bench options changed in ways that reward targeted, repeatable loops. The core idea is to take items with good base potential, apply a small set of reliable crafts, and sell them at a margin.
Common loops to prioritize Essence and fossil crafting for high-demand mods; jewel and belt crafting for narrow, high-value stat windows; vendor recipe flips when supply is low. The most profitable loops are those you can repeat quickly with predictable outcomes.
How to optimize crafting loops Track market prices and set buy/sell thresholds. Use a dedicated crafting stash tab and a bench layout that speeds repetitive actions. Start small and scale once you confirm margins. Time your crafting to league cycles: early scarcity often creates the best margins.
Conversion tactics Flip high-demand jewels and uniques quickly. Use bench crafts to add desirable mods and then finish with exalted or divine currency when the market supports it. When in doubt, sell in smaller chunks to avoid saturating the market.
Session plans that maximize value per hour
Two‑hour Expedition session First 10 minutes: prepare maps, apply scarabs, confirm logbook tiers. Next 90 minutes: run fast maps with Expedition encounters, skip low-tier remnants. Final 20 minutes: sort stash, vendor low-value items, craft or list flips.
Two‑hour Abyss session First 10 minutes: prepare maps and add abyss scarabs or modifiers. Next 90 minutes: run maps focusing on chest-heavy layouts. Final 20 minutes: sort abyss jewels, price-check, and list on trade.
Two‑hour crafting loop session First 20 minutes: buy materials and set up bench. Next 80 minutes: craft targeted items and price-check. Final 20 minutes: list items and tidy stash.
These session plans are templates; adapt them to your playstyle and market conditions.
Build priorities and playstyle
For Expedition and Abyss, clear speed and mobility are the two most important attributes. Survivability matters, but speed multiplies your hourly yield. Prioritize movement speed, area clear, and a reliable way to kill bosses quickly. Use a loot filter that highlights high-value drops and hides trash to reduce time spent picking up worthless items.
For crafting loops, you don’t need a special build; you need a fast map runner to farm raw materials. Keep your crafting bench organized and your market list short.
Market behavior and timing
Early league: scarcity drives prices. Flip early if you can. Mid league: stable demand for jewels, belts, and high-tier crafting mats. Late league: prices normalize; focus on efficient conversion and low-risk flips. Watch for meta shifts: a popular build can spike demand for certain mods or uniques.
Practical market actions Keep a short list of 8–12 items you understand well. Master those before expanding. Use small, frequent trades rather than waiting for huge flips. Price-check before crafting; a crafted item is only valuable if it sells.
Comparison tables and quick stats
Strategy comparison
| Strategy | Value per hour | Consistency | Entry cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expedition | Very High | Medium | Low–Medium | Burst Divines |
| Abyss | High | High | Low | Steady income |
| Crafting loops | Medium | Medium | Medium | Traders and flippers |
| Generic mapping | Low | Low | Low | XP and casual play |
Mechanic scaling
| Mechanic | Atlas nodes to prioritize | Best map mods | Why it scales |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expedition | Remnant tier; logbook chain chance | Increased monster density; logbook-friendly mods | Remnant tier multiplies high-value drops |
| Abyss | Chest frequency; pack size | Increased rarity/quantity; abyssal depth | More chests = more jewels and uniques |
| Crafting | Bench efficiency; vendor recipe nodes | Increased item quantity; currency drop | More raw materials and better bench options |
These tables give a compact view of where to invest time and Atlas points.
Common mistakes and how to avoid them
Over-diversifying your Atlas reduces returns. Fix this by choosing one primary mechanic and one secondary. Running slow builds for “safety” reduces your hourly yield; optimize for speed and add defensive layers only as needed. Poor stash organization wastes time; dedicate tabs and use a consistent naming scheme. Crafting without market knowledge leads to unsellable items; price-check before you craft and start small.
Quality of life and tools
Use stash tabs with clear labels for each mechanic. Keep a small set of Divines and high-value currency for quick trades. Use a simple spreadsheet or note app to track price thresholds. Learn to recognize high-value mods at a glance; speed matters.
How to measure success
Track your hourly yield in currency per hour and in Divines per week. Keep a simple log of sessions: mechanic run, maps run, time spent, and currency gained. Over time you’ll see which sessions and map tiers produce the best ROI. Adjust your Atlas and session plans based on those metrics.
Burnout management and play balance
Rotate mechanics to avoid boredom but keep your Atlas commitment. Set session goals: number of maps, number of logbook chains, or a target currency amount. Take breaks and track your hourly yield to see what’s working. Farming efficiently is about sustainable routines, not marathon sessions that burn you out.
Advanced tips and micro-optimizations
When running Expedition, learn which remnant tiers flip best on your server and prioritize those. For Abyss, learn chest spawn patterns and how to funnel packs into chest-rich areas. For crafting loops, automate repetitive vendor recipes where allowed and use macros for bench placement to save seconds that add up across sessions. Time your market actions around peak trading hours for your region to maximize sale speed.
FAQ
Which method prints Divines fastest Expedition produces the fastest bursts of high-tier currency when you hit good remnants and logbook chains. Abyss is steadier and more predictable per hour.
Do I need to fully invest in the Atlas to make money No. You can start with minimal Atlas investment and use scarabs/tablets to add mechanics. However, targeted Atlas nodes amplify returns significantly and are worth investing in as you scale.
Are crafting loops still profitable Yes. They require market knowledge and time but are a reliable way to convert raw loot into stable currency.
How many mechanics should I invest in One primary and one secondary. The Atlas now rewards specialization; spreading points too thin reduces returns.
What’s the best way to learn market prices Start with a short list of items, track their prices for a few days, and set buy/sell thresholds. Use small trades to learn the rhythm.
Should I play solo or group for farming Solo is usually faster for consistent loot per player. Group play can increase total loot but splits drops and requires coordination.
How do I avoid wasting Atlas points Plan a path that buys universal nodes first and then funnels into your mechanic tree. Use temporary consumables to test mechanics before committing.
Final checklist before you go
Pick your primary mechanic: Expedition farming or Abyss farming. Set up Atlas nodes to amplify that mechanic. Optimize a fast clear build and movement. Organize stash tabs and filters. Run focused sessions with clear goals and track your hourly yield.







