ARC Raiders Looting Strategy — How to Fill Your Bag Fast & Smart

Container Type Quick Reference
| Container Type | Primary Loot | Location | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Industrial Crates | Mechanical parts, processed components, scrap | Factories, warehouses, maintenance bays | High for crafters |
| Residential Containers | Food, chemicals, basic tools, wire scraps | Apartments, shops, homes | Medium — consumable value |
| Military Caches | Weapons, ammo, tactical gear, high-grade parts | Guard posts, ARC facilities, armories | High — gear and combat value |
| Electronic Cabinets | Circuit boards, sensors, advanced electronics | Control rooms, admin buildings, towers | Very High for endgame crafting |
| Medical Supply Boxes | Medkits, stims, bandages, medicine | Medical facilities, residential | High — consumable value |
| Tool Chests | Precision tools, spring cushions, small parts | Maintenance areas, workshops | Medium-High for crafting |
| Storage Lockers | Mixed personal items, ammo, occasional gear | Various — residential and military | Variable |
| Shipping Containers | Bulk industrial materials, large component caches | Ports, depots, staging areas | High quantity, medium-tier quality |
The Foundation of Smart Looting — Know Your Target
The most common looting mistake in ARC Raiders is arriving at a raid without a clear material target. Unfocused looting — grabbing everything that looks potentially useful — fills your bag quickly with low-value items and leaves no room for high-value finds you encounter later. Before every deployment, spend thirty seconds reviewing your crafting queue and identifying the two or three materials you need most. These become your priority picks in every container you open.
Target-focused looting has a compounding benefit: it reduces the time you spend hovering over containers and accelerates your pace through each zone. When you know exactly what you're looking for, container inspection becomes a quick yes-or-no decision rather than an extended evaluation. You loot faster, cover more ground per raid, and extract with more purpose-built materials than a player who picks up everything and then sorts at Stella Montis.
Maintaining a mental (or written) wishlist of crafting bottleneck materials and syncing it with your loot decisions transforms your raid efficiency. A player who extracts with 20 units of a specific needed component accomplishes more progression in one raid than a player who extracts with 60 units of mixed materials they don't immediately need.
Loot Triage — What to Take and What to Leave
Loot triage is the real-time decision process of determining what enters your bag and what stays in the container. The core question is: does this item move my current goals forward? Common junk items — bent metal, broken tools, basic food with no crafting value — are near-zero priority unless they directly feed a specific active recipe or quest requirement. Leaving them saves bag space for higher-value items you'll find as the run continues.
Rare components — anything labeled uncommon or above, electronics, advanced materials — always go in the bag. These are the items that create tangible progression, and their spawn frequency is low enough that leaving one behind has meaningful costs. If you're considering whether a rare component is worth picking up, the answer is almost always yes. The only exception is if your bag is already at high capacity with items of equal or greater value, in which case you're making a hard choice rather than an easy skip.
Quest items are a special category that bypasses your normal value assessment. If an active quest requires a specific item and you find it, pick it up regardless of your current looting priorities. Quest completion unlocks progression rewards — blueprints, Credits, Seeds, or gear — that are worth disrupting your normal loot routine. Keep an active quest item in a dedicated bag slot if your inventory system allows it.
Container Opening Efficiency
- Approach containers from the direction that gives you the most cover while looting — never stand fully exposed during container inspection
- Open containers in sequence without backtracking — plan your room-clearing path to loop naturally through all container positions
- Electronic cabinets and tool chests take priority over generic storage in any room — hit high-value container types first
- In residential zones, kitchen and bathroom containers often have medical and chemical components — don't skip them assuming residential means only food
- Shipping containers have variable loot table rolls — if the first container in a stack has poor loot, the next may have better; check all containers in a cluster
- Military caches inside ARC-controlled buildings often have locked or harder-to-access states — bring appropriate tools if available
Inventory Management — Room for the Good Stuff
Inventory management during a raid is an active skill, not a passive one. You should be mentally tracking your bag's fill level throughout every raid, not just checking at the point where it's already overloaded. A general rule: when you hit 60 to 70 percent capacity, begin evaluating whether earlier picks were correct. If your bag is half-full of low-value items, this is the time to drop them rather than deep into a zone when you can't leave easily.
Weight and slot management differ depending on the game's inventory system, but the principle is the same: every slot carries an opportunity cost. If a low-value item occupies a slot, that slot is unavailable for a higher-value item you find later. Think of empty bag slots as pre-allocated potential — the more you maintain, the more flexibility you have for high-value finds that appear unexpectedly late in a run.
Know when to drop items for better picks. If you find a high-tier rare component late in a run and your bag is full, identify the lowest-value item in your current inventory and make a swap. This requires real-time judgment of relative value, which comes with experience. Early on, use a simple hierarchy: rare materials beat processed components beat common materials beat junk. Apply this hierarchy whenever you need to make a swap decision.
Generic Efficient Loot Loop — Industrial Zone
- Location
- Any Industrial Map Zone
Steps
- Enter zone from the lowest ARC density access point identified in pre-raid planning
- Clear or evade ARC patrol on the entry path before committing to looting
- Hit tool chests and industrial crates in the first building — fastest high-value loot per room
- Move systematically through each room, looting containers that match your target material list
- Skip rooms with exclusively common-junk containers unless your target materials are on the common loot table
- Check for electronic cabinets in any control room or management office — always high priority
- After completing the first building, evaluate bag capacity and route plan
- If under 50% full, move to adjacent building; if over 60% full, begin extracting unless a known high-value cluster remains
- On exit path, grab any containers you missed on entry that you now have space for
- Extract via pre-planned route — don't improvise extraction when carrying significant loot
Tips
- Tool chests in workshop areas yield spring cushions and precision parts at higher rates than generic industrial crates
- If a building has been recently looted by another squad, the containers will be empty — move to the next building immediately rather than checking every container
- Don't loot what you can't carry; leave intentional space for opportunistic high-value finds
Time-vs-Value Heat Map by Zone
| Zone Type | Loot Time Cost | Avg Value Per Container | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Industrial core (Spaceport Vehicle Maintenance) | High — multi-floor traversal | Very high — rare to epic spawns | High |
| Industrial perimeter (admin, fuel depot) | Low — single-room loot | Moderate — common to rare | Low-Medium |
| Electronic cabinets (control rooms) | Low — single container | Very high — best electronics | High when accessing |
| Military caches (guard posts) | Moderate — locked variants | High — combat gear and ammo | Medium-High |
| Residential blocks | Low — quick room sweeps | Moderate — consumables and basic mats | Medium |
| Tool chests (workshops) | Low — single container | High — specialized mechanical parts | Medium |
| Shipping containers (depots) | Moderate — multiple per cluster | Variable — depends on roll | Medium |
| Open exterior caches | High — exposure to ranged fire | Variable — supply drops spike value | High |
Container Priority Order
- Electronic cabinets — highest-value loot tables; always hit these first in any room where they appear.
- Military caches — combat gear and ammunition; second-priority when accessible (some are locked).
- Tool chests in workshop areas — specialized mechanical parts at higher rates than generic crates.
- Industrial crates (high-density zones) — bulk mechanical and electronic components.
- Shipping containers in clusters — variable rolls, check all in a stack rather than just one.
- Medical supply boxes — consumables that directly extend your survivability.
- Storage lockers (mixed contents) — opportunistic; loot only if your route passes them.
- Residential containers — lowest priority unless on a residential-focused run for consumables.
Safe Looting vs Greedy Looting
| Decision Point | Safe Looting | Greedy Looting |
|---|---|---|
| Bag fill threshold to extract | 40–60% | 70%+ |
| Time spent per container | Quick scan, take priorities only | Full inventory inspection, grab everything |
| Routes through high-risk zones | Perimeter only | Industrial core every run |
| Reaction to nearby gunfire | Pivot route immediately | Continue current looting |
| Bag space buffer | Keep 20–30% free for finds | Fill to capacity |
| Run profitability profile | Smaller hauls, fewer wipes | Larger hauls when extracted, frequent wipes |
| Insurance cost tolerance | Low — match gear to confidence | High — willing to wipe premium gear chasing finds |
Verdict: Safe looting produces more total currency across a wipe than greedy looting because the wipe variance hits greedy players hardest. Greedy looting only outperforms safe looting in optimal sessions where everything goes right — which is a small minority of sessions. Default to safe looting and reserve greedy decisions for runs where you've already scouted the route and confirmed low contest pressure.
Frequently asked questions
What is the most valuable loot to prioritize in ARC Raiders?
Rare crafting components and advanced electronics are the most universally valuable items. In terms of container priority, electronic cabinets and military caches produce the highest-value loot on average. Tool chests in industrial areas are the best source of specialized mechanical components.
How much bag space should you keep free in a raid?
Keep at least 20 to 30 percent of your bag capacity free throughout the early and mid portions of a raid. This buffer accommodates unexpected high-value finds and gives you the flexibility to swap out lower-value items without being forced to drop important materials. Fill the remaining capacity near the end of your route before extraction.
Should you always loot everything you can carry?
No. Looting without purpose leads to carrying low-value items that prevent you from picking up higher-value items later. Always triage — only pick up items that serve your current crafting goals, active quests, or have high sell value. Discipline in skipping low-value items makes you a more efficient Raider.
Do container locations change between raids?
Container locations are generally consistent across raids — certain rooms and areas reliably spawn certain container types. However, the specific items inside containers are randomized within their loot table each session. This means the same route can produce different specific materials while reliably providing the same container categories.
What should you do if you find loot you don't have space for?
Make a value comparison between the new item and the lowest-value item currently in your bag. If the new item is more valuable, swap them. If the current bag contents are all more valuable, accept that you can't carry everything and move on — returning for more is rarely possible in the same raid session.
Which containers should I always hit first in any room?
Electronic cabinets and tool chests are the highest-value container types in most rooms — hit them before generic industrial crates or storage lockers. Electronic cabinets produce circuit boards, sensors, and advanced electronics that feed endgame crafting; tool chests produce specialized mechanical parts (spring cushions, precision parts) at higher rates than generic crates. In military zones, prioritize military caches above all other container types. The priority order rarely changes — learn the visual identification of each container type so you can scan a room and hit priorities first without inspecting every container.
Is greedy looting ever the right strategy?
Only on confirmed safe runs where you've already scouted the route and verified low contest pressure. Greedy looting (filling bag to 70%+ before extraction) produces larger hauls when extracted, but it gets wiped more often than safe looting because the extended time on map invites engagement. Across many runs, safe looting (extracting at 40–60% fill) produces more total currency because fewer wipes preserve more session value. Reserve greedy decisions for the rare confirmed-safe scenarios; default to safe looting otherwise.
Sources & verification
Coloured pills follow our four-tier source policy.
- ARC Raiders Community Wiki — Loot Tables
- ARC Raiders editorial cross-check — guide step verified in-game
Continue this guide path
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