Using dealers is the best way to expand your business in Schedule 1. You don’t have to think about distribution; you’ll triple your money by focusing on production. Here’s how to unlock more dealers for your growing empire in Schedule 1.
How to Get More Dealers in Schedule 1

When you follow the main questline, you’ll eventually get your first dealer, Benji. You can get more dealers, but the game doesn’t teach you where to get the others or how to hire more.
To hire more, go to your phone and investigate the potential dealers in your area. Open the “Contacts” app and look at each town. In Northtown, you have Benji unlocked here, but at Westville, you’ll have an unknown dealer waiting to be recruited. You’ll automatically see the potential dealers as they have a dealer tag, but you won’t know their names yet.
Try to go around the map and talk to everyone you see. Bring some of your products and start selling or offering them to random people while you are at it. Once you get them as potential customers, you’ll unlock the “???” tags on your contacts list. Do this until you discover the dealer for the area. Since they roam around, it is hard to pinpoint exactly where they reside.
Each town has a dealer, so you must work your way to meeting everyone in the town once you unlock a new area by leveling up.
Related: How to Pick Up Objects in Schedule 1
Are Dealers Worth It in Schedule 1?

Dealers are always worth it, even if you are playing with other friends who could potentially fill the role of a dealer. Even if dealers charge a 20% fee for selling your products, you still end up with a massive profit because each seed grown is roughly 8-9x profit already. Even if you have your seeds delivered with a $200 delivery fee, you’ll still get a profit.
Once you start unlocking more towns, you’ll need the dealers because you cannot move that many products without producing on a large scale. You’ll need help and even hire some botanists and chemists to help you create your products, too.
I highly suggest working with your dealers non-stop as they actively work on curfew hours, too. Give them a large stockpile of your product, assign all the customers to them, and restock them as often as possible. If your production cannot handle their sales, you should increase production as soon as possible.
Published: Mar 26, 2025 4:11 PM UTC