Tutorials/Trading

This tutorial will teach you about how to get the most out of villager trading.

Setting up a village
First, you will need to set up your village. Check out these tutorials to set up your village or villager trading hall.

Tutorials/Creating a village

Tutorials/Villager trading hall

Benefits of villager trading
Villager trading has many advantages. It allows you to:


 * Obtain exclusive resources like explorer maps and globe banner pattern
 * Obtain rare items like saddles and name tags
 * Obtain renewable diamond equipment without having to mine for diamonds
 * Obtain valuable enchantments through books, including treasure enchantments such as Mending
 * Make otherwise non-renewable resources renewable, like glass and lapis lazuli
 * Make otherwise useless items like rotten flesh useful because they can be traded for emeralds

Armorer
This profession is a must, as it allows you to obtain chain and diamond armor easily. In addition, you can buy bells if you plan on starting a new village. The best way to level it up is using iron. Iron is not too hard to get in large quantities after a large mining session, and it offers decent XP. Diamonds and lava buckets are too hard to obtain in large quantities to be ideal. In Java Edition, one villager is needed to get a full set, while in Bedrock Edition, at least two villagers are needed.

Armorers are also the only reliable source of renewable diamond armor, as the only other way is to kill extremely rare zombies and skeletons that spawn with diamond armor. The diamond armor is enchanted upon purchase, but can be easily disenchanted using grindstone if the player wishes to add better enchantments.

Butcher
This profession does not sell anything other than food. However, it is useful to sell raw meat if the player has an efficient animal farm. Chickens and hoglins can be farmed fully automatically, meaning raw chicken and raw porkchops can be sold to butchers in large quantities. Sweet berries and dried kelp blocks can also be easily farmed and sold to obtain emeralds.

Cartographer
The main reason to have a cartographer is to obtain explorer maps for an ocean monument or woodland mansion, in addition to unique banner patterns. Paper is sufficient to level it up, but if you have lots of sand, glass panes work fine, too. Once you have purchased the maps, the villager is still relatively useful, as paper can be continuously sold to it, as long as the player's sugar cane farm productivity is high enough.

Cleric
This profession is mainly useful for purchasing ender pearls, or by obtaining bottles o' enchanting to raise your experience level, or as a portable experience storage. In addition, it allows you to trade away rotten flesh that has probably been either accumulating in your chests or thrown out. It is a little hard to level up, as aside from the flesh, it buys hard to obtain items, but this profession is still useful nonetheless. They are also one of the only renewable source of lapis lazuli, but a 1:1 ratio of exchange makes it highly expensive.

Farmer
The main use of this profession is to obtain emeralds by trading away crops, although they sell golden carrots and glistering melon slices if you do not have a lot of gold. It is recommended to sell pumpkins, as these grow fast and are easy to mass farm. However, level them up with the melon trade, as it gives twice as much experience to the villager than the pumpkin trade.

The golden carrots obtained from these villagers can serve as a staple food for the player, thanks to their high nutritional value. The player can also buy cakes and apples relatively easily from them, so they do not need to craft the cakes manually, or chop down hundreds of oak trees for apples.

Fisherman
One of the less useful professions, it is really only useful for selling fish that you obtain from fishing sessions. While it buys string and coal, it asks for relatively high quantities, and you can sell these items to other professions. Level them up with the fish trades.

A few advantages about fishermen still exists: First, they have the cheapest coal trade compared to other coal-trading professions (10:1 instead of 15:1), so it can be useful if the player has a lot of coal from mining or wither skeleton farms. Second, all four types of fish they buy can be farmed in large quantities, with tropical fish and pufferfish having the better deals among the four.

Nothing useful or unique can be bought from fishermen; the offers can all be easily obtained by other means.

Fletcher
This profession is very useful in obtaining emeralds, as they buy sticks, which are easy to get. In addition, if you do not have Infinity on your bow, you can buy lots of arrows for a relatively cheap price. If you max them out, you can get hard-to-obtain tipped arrows, as well. If you want them, level the villager up with sticks or buy a bunch of bows/crossbows unless you can afford the other trades.

If you encounter a village or igloo with basement in early game, one of the most beneficial things you can do is to convert a villager to a fletcher, sell it sticks, and buy bow and arrows from it. this allows you to perform ranged attacks frequently, without the worry of running out of arrows. To achieve the same results, you either have to meticulously set up a chicken farm, get really lucky to find a skeleton spawner, or wait until you can get Infinity on your bow.

Leatherworker
This profession is really only useful for obtaining saddles, since leather armor is weak, and the player is likely going to keep most of theier leather for themselves. It is recommended to level it up with leather unless you can afford the later trades. However, since saddles are not stackable, and the player does not usually need a large quantity of saddles, It can be argued whether this profession is really worth it.

Librarian
This is one of the most important professions late-game, as it allows you to obtain almost every enchantment, including treasure enchantments, with the exception of Soul Speed. In addition, it can buy paper and books, giving a good source of emeralds. This allows you to get perfect enchanted gear, although it will require a lot of XP to add the enchantments on an anvil. In addition, having every enchantment will take up a lot of space in a village, and it takes a while until you get the enchantment you need for each villager. There is no need to level them up unless you need name tags, in which case level them up with the latest available trade.

Stone Mason
This villager is very useful for obtaining emeralds, as you can trade it stone (not cobblestone), especially if you have a stone generator and a Silk Touch pickaxe. Otherwise, you can sell them extra andesite, granite and diorite that you picked up from a mining session, or buy Quartz Blocks for a large build. Level them up with the stone trade unless you have a lot of the stone variant to trade away. Note that you will need three masons to trade away each type of stone.

Shephard
This profession does not sell anything valuable, but it can buy wool as a good source of emeralds. There is no need to level it up. The player can have automatic wool farms and flower farms to allow for trading with shepherds.

Toolsmith
This profession is also a must, since you can obtain diamond tools, as well as buying bells. Also, if you plan on using a diamond hoe, try to get a villager that sells you one, too. Like the armorer, level it up using iron. The toolsmith's workstation is a smithing table which makes a noise similar to an anvil when used.

Weaponsmith
This profession is also very important, since you can obtain diamond axes and diamond swords easily, in addition to buying bells. Level it up with iron, as well.

Zombifying and Curing
If you zombify a villager and cure it, preferably multiple times, you can reduce the prices and make the trades easier to do. If you cure the villager enough times, you can make all the trades cost one emerald or one item. This table shows the # of times you need to cure the villager to max out all the trades (1 emerald or 1 item). Works for both Java and Bedrock.

Crazy Villager Exploits
This video is in Bedrock edition, but most of it works in Java edition. The first part describes a bug in zombie villagers, which is bedrock edition only. Skip to 4:28 for the actual villager exploits that work for both editions.

Below are a few broken villager trade loops.


 * If a librarian has a maxed out bookshelf trade and a book trade, buy a bookshelf and break it without silk touch. Sell the books back to the librarian. You get 3 emeralds, subtract the cost of the bookshelf, and you get 2 free emeralds.
 * If a fletcher has the maxed out gravel to flint trade and flint to emerald trade, start with as many emeralds and the same gravel amount as the emerald amount. Give the villager an emerald and a piece of gravel for 10 flint, and sell the flint back to the villager. You get 9 emeralds each time you do this, but it will cost you one gravel, which you can easily get from under the ocean, mining, or in gravelly mountains. You can also sell the flint to leatherworkers, toolsmiths, and weaponsmiths, as long as you maxed them out.
 * If a fisherman has the maxed out bucket of cod trade and the cod to emerald trade, start with 1 emerald. Buy a bucket of cod, pour it, and kill the cod. Sell the cod back to the villager. You don't get free emeralds, but you get a free bucket each time, which you can reuse for dripstone lava farms in 1.17 or for storing lots of powder snow, water, milk, fish, axolotl, and lava.
 * This trade loop requires a cartographer with the maxed out glass pane trade and a librarian with the maxed out glass trade. Start with 3 emeralds and buy 12 glass from the librarian. Convert the glass to glass panes. You should get 32. Sell them to the cartographer for 32 emeralds. Subtract the 3 emeralds to buy the glass and you get 29 free emeralds.
 * This trade loop is similar to the one above but uses a cleric with the maxed out glass bottles trade. You still need a librarian with the maxed out glass trade. Start with 3 emeralds and buy 12 glass from the librarian. Convert the glass to glass bottles. You should have 12. Sell them for 12 emeralds. Subtract the 3 emeralds and you get 9 free emeralds. This works better than the cartographer because the cartographer will lock the trades before you finish selling the glass panes. If you have many cartographers, use the glass pane trade loop. If you don't have many cartographers, use the cleric trade loop.
 * This trade loop doesn't give you extra emeralds, but cooks your food for you and you get more cooked food than you would get by smelting it. You need a maxed out butcher with a raw meat trade and the corresponding cooked meat trade. You can only use porkchop or chicken. You need a piece of meat of your choice. Sell the meat to the butcher and use the emerald to buy the corresponding cooked meat. If you used porkchop, you will get 5 cooked porkchop, which is 4 more than you would get from smelting. If you used chicken, you will get 8 cooked chicken, which is 7 more than you would get from smelting. You do not get any free emeralds, but you get 4 extra cooked porkchop or 7 extra cooked chicken. This doesn't work with fisherman because you need to pay an extra fish to get cooked fish.
 * This trade loop requires a wandering trader with a two tall flower trade and a shepherd with the maxed out corresponding dye trade. Buy a two tall flower and craft it into two dye. Sell the two dye for 2 emeralds. You get one extra emerald. Another similar trade loop is to buy the dye directly from the wandering trader and sell it to the shepherd. You will get 3 emeralds, minus the cost of the dye, and it is 2 extra emeralds. You can also buy 3 ink sacs and sell them to a librarian for 3 emeralds, minus the cost of the ink, and it is 2 extra emeralds.