The Piggy Bank is a passive spin-saving feature in Coin Master. As you play, some spins are automatically set aside into the Piggy Bank rather than added to your regular balance. Once the bank is full at 1,200 spins, you can break it open — but doing so requires a real-money purchase. The spins are yours only if you pay.
How the Piggy Bank works
Coin Master caps your regular spin balance at 50 spins. Any spins earned beyond that cap would normally be lost — the Piggy Bank changes this by capturing those overflow spins and storing them separately.
Specifically, when three capsule or specific symbols land in a row on the slot machine, spins are added to the Piggy Bank rather than your main balance. This happens automatically in the background as you play. You don’t need to do anything to fill it — just play normally and the bank accumulates over time.
The Piggy Bank holds a maximum of 1,200 spins. Once full, it stops accepting new spins until you break it. If you spin and land on a Piggy Bank symbol when the bank is already full, those spins are lost — so it’s worth breaking the bank once it fills rather than letting it sit full while you keep spinning.
How to break the Piggy Bank
When the bank reaches 1,200 spins, you’ll see a prompt to break it open. Breaking it is straightforward:
- Tap the Piggy Bank icon (it appears on your main screen when full)
- A pop-up shows the cost and the reward (1,200 spins)
- Confirm the purchase
- All 1,200 spins are added to your account immediately — the bank resets and begins filling again
Breaking the Piggy Bank is not free. The cost varies by region and over time; reported prices have ranged from around €2.99 to €9.99 depending on location and current promotions. The price shown to you is what you’ll pay.
Is the Piggy Bank worth it?
Compared to buying spins directly from the in-game shop at full price, the Piggy Bank generally offers competitive value — you’re essentially paying a discounted rate for spins you’ve already passively accumulated. The 2021 introduction of the feature was specifically designed as a lower-cost entry point for players willing to spend a small amount.
That said, it’s still a paid purchase. If you’re free-to-play, there’s no obligation to break it. The 1,200 spins remain locked in the Piggy Bank indefinitely — they don’t expire and don’t disappear if you choose not to pay. The bank simply won’t fill further until you break it.
The trade-off: if you’re at a point in the game where coins matter a lot (high-level villages costing trillions) and you need a spin infusion, breaking the Piggy Bank at a sale price can be one of the better-value real-money options available. For players not spending any money, free spin links and events are the alternative.
Timing the break
Break it before the bank fills. Once full, any Piggy Bank symbols that land during a spin award nothing — those spins are wasted. The practical rule is to break as soon as the bank fills so it can start accumulating again.
Wait for a discount. Moon Active occasionally discounts the Piggy Bank break cost. If you’re not in a hurry, holding off for a sale brings the cost down meaningfully. The game shows periodic promotions on the Piggy Bank popup.
Combine with an event. After breaking and collecting 1,200 spins, use them during an active Coin Craze, Attack Madness, or Raid Madness event to multiply what those spins earn. The timing of when you spin matters as much as how many spins you have.
FAQ
What is the Coin Master Piggy Bank?
A passive feature that stores overflow spins — spins earned beyond your 50-spin cap — up to a maximum of 1,200. Breaking it open with a real-money purchase releases all stored spins into your balance.
How do you fill the Piggy Bank in Coin Master?
It fills automatically as you play. When you earn spins beyond the 50-spin cap, some go into the Piggy Bank instead. You don’t need to do anything specific — just keep spinning.
How do you break the Piggy Bank in Coin Master?
Tap the Piggy Bank icon when it shows as full. A prompt appears with the cost; confirm the purchase and your 1,200 spins are added immediately.
Is it free to break the Piggy Bank?
No. Breaking the Piggy Bank always costs real money. The price varies by region and promotion. There is no free way to access the stored spins.
What happens if you don’t break the Piggy Bank?
The 1,200 spins remain stored indefinitely — they don’t expire. The bank just can’t accept any new spins until it’s broken, so Piggy Bank spin rewards are wasted while it sits full.
How much does it cost to break the Piggy Bank?
The price varies by region and periodic promotions. Reported prices range from around €2.99 to €9.99. The exact amount is shown in the pop-up before you confirm.
Is the Piggy Bank worth buying?
It offers reasonable value compared to other paid spin options — 1,200 spins at a relatively low per-spin cost. Whether it’s worth it depends on how much you’re willing to spend and where you are in the game. For free-to-play players, free spins offer a no-cost alternative.
