Best Cash Out Multiplier in Tower Rush — Strategy Guide
Strategy

At What Multiplier to Press Cash Out in Tower Rush

Updated: June 2026 · 4 min read

The central decision in Tower Rush is: when do you press Cash Out? Too early and you leave money on the table. Too late and the tower collapses before you act. This guide breaks down the math behind each target multiplier and explains how to pick the right exit point for your play style.

How Cash Out Works

Tower Rush has two buttons: "Build" and "Cash Out." After a round starts, a crane stacks floors one by one while the multiplier climbs. At any moment you press Cash Out and lock in your winnings at the current multiplier.

There is no auto-cashout feature in the game. Every exit is manual — you press the button yourself. This is exactly why having a target decided before the round starts matters so much: it removes the emotional element from the decision entirely.

If the tower collapses before you press — the bet is lost (x0). The challenge: get out at the right time, every time.

The professional approach

Set your target multiplier before the round begins — not while you are watching the multiplier climb. Once the round is live, your only job is to execute the plan you already made. No thinking, no adjusting. Just wait for your number and press.

Comparing Exit Multipliers

TargetApprox. win rateNet per $1 betBest for
x1.3~80%+$0.04Ultra-conservative, learning sessions
x1.5~72%+$0.08Beginners, stable bankroll sessions
x2.0~55%+$0.10Experienced players, moderate risk
x3.0~38%+$0.14Medium-high risk, larger bankroll
x5.0~22%+$0.10High variance, long losing runs expected

What the numbers actually mean

All these targets produce roughly similar expected value over a long session — the game takes its share through RTP (96.17%). The real difference is variance. Low multiplier = small consistent wins. High multiplier = rare big payouts separated by long losing streaks. Choose based on how much swing you can emotionally and financially handle.

The Best Starting Target: x1.5

x1.5 is the recommended starting point for most players. A ~72% win rate means you win roughly 3 out of 4 rounds — psychologically comfortable enough that you don't feel like you are constantly losing.

Example with a $1 bet: over 100 rounds you stake $100 total. You win 72 rounds at +$0.50 each = $36, and lose 28 rounds at $1 each = $28. Net: +$8. Small but positive on a $100 volume. Combined with the 30% weekly cashback, even negative sessions partially recover.

When to Raise Your Target

During Frozen Floor

When Frozen Floor activates, the current multiplier is locked as a guaranteed minimum — even if the tower crashes, you receive that amount. If Frozen Floor locked x1.3 and you normally exit at x1.5, you can safely extend your target to x2–x2.5. The downside is already capped. This is the one situation where revising your plan mid-round is actually rational.

After several short rounds in a row

If multiple consecutive rounds crashed below x1.3, some players shift their target slightly higher on the next round. Statistically each round is independent — this is not a guarantee of a longer round coming. But it is not a completely irrational adjustment either, if done in moderation.

Combining a Target with Fixed Bet Size

The most stable approach: fixed bet size (1–2% of bankroll) + the same exit multiplier every round. Martingale — doubling your bet after a loss — destroys bankrolls during losing streaks. A fixed $1 bet with a x1.5 target keeps you in the game for hundreds of rounds. Read the bankroll management guide for exact sizing rules.

The Psychology of Cashing Out — Why It's Hard

This is not about willpower — it is neuroscience. When you see the multiplier climbing, your brain activates reward-anticipation circuits. The tower feels like it "can hold just a bit longer." That exact moment is when most players miss their exit and lose the bet.

The fix: do not make the exit decision during the round. Make it before. This removes the emotional trigger — you are simply executing a pre-made decision, like following a rule, rather than reacting to adrenaline.

Practical tip

Before each round, say your target multiplier out loud or in your head: "This round I exit at x2.0." Simple, but effective. It anchors the intention and makes it harder to abandon in the moment when greed kicks in.

How Frozen Floor Changes the Exit Decision

When Frozen Floor activates mid-round — say it locks x1.3 and your original plan was x1.5 — you now have a protected floor at x1.3. You can move your target to x2–x3 without risking a total loss. If the tower crashes, you still receive x1.3 minimum.

This is the only in-round situation where adjusting your target is strategically sound. Everything else — "the tower feels strong," "I'm on a winning streak," "it's been a while since a big round" — is emotion, not information. Frozen Floor objectively changes the risk profile of the round. Everything else does not.

Recommended Exit Points by Play Style

Play StyleTarget MultiplierNotes
Conservativex1.3–x1.5High win rate, stable small profits, minimal variance
Balancedx2.0–x3.0Good risk/reward ratio, manageable swings
Aggressivex5.0+Rare big wins, long losing runs between them — requires large bankroll
Frozen Floor roundx2.0–x3.0Shift target up when downside is already locked in

Pick Your Multiplier and Test It

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there an auto cash-out button in Tower Rush?

No. Tower Rush has only two buttons: Build and Cash Out. Cashing out is always manual — you press it yourself at the right moment. There is no auto-withdrawal feature in the game.

Which multiplier is best to target?

Depends on your play style. Conservative: x1.3–x1.5 — high win rate, stable returns. Moderate risk: x2–x3. The key is to decide your target before the round starts and hold to it.

What happens if I do not press Cash Out in time?

If the tower collapses before you press Cash Out, the bet is lost (x0). Exception: if Frozen Floor activated during that round, you receive the frozen multiplier instead — your bet is not lost.

How does Frozen Floor change the cash-out decision?

Frozen Floor locks the current multiplier as a guaranteed minimum payout. If it locked x1.2, you can safely wait for x3–x5 — even if the tower crashes you receive at least x1.2. This is the optimal moment to target a higher exit point.