

Yellow carpet is an Easy Garden habitat that uses 1 material types and 4 total pieces. It is best treated as a focused layout rather than a generic decoration cluster.
The full recipe for Yellow carpet is Dandy flowers ×4, totalling 4 stacked items across 1 distinct material. Dandy flowers is the largest single ask in the recipe at 4 units, so treat that one as the gating material when you plan farming routes — locking down a daily collection loop for Dandy flowers usually unblocks several adjacent habitat builds at once, not just this one.
Yellow carpet attracts Hoppip, Skiploom, and Jumpluff. Because Pokémon visits are habitat-bound, the moment this build is placed the entire roster above becomes eligible to drop in on the right time-of-day and weather windows. That cluster behaviour is what makes habitat investment pay off — one recipe, multiple Pokédex pages cleared.
Yellow carpet is rated Easy difficulty in the Garden category. Easy habitats are the first builds new players unlock. Material requirements stay inside the starter resource pool and the visit conditions tolerate broad time-of-day or weather windows. Garden habitats trade raw materials for cultivated ones — flowers, decorative shrubs, sometimes cooking ingredients — and lean toward Fairy, Grass, and Bug visits. They pair well with Nature habitats in the same plot, since the materials overlap by category.
Once Yellow carpet is up, the natural follow-ups in the same Garden category are Tree-shaded tall grass, Pretty flower bed, and Tree-shaded flower bed. They share the broad material family and the visiting Pokémon types overlap, so each successive build extends an existing farming route instead of starting a new one — that's how you compound habitat investment without spreading materials too thin across the map.
Build Yellow carpet when at least one Pokémon on its roster is already on your active Pokédex route, not just because the recipe is available. The practical test is simple: if you can farm the largest material in one daily loop and you have a second target that shares this category, the habitat is ready to build. If either condition is missing, park it in the planner and spend the day on cheaper habitats that unlock broader clusters first.
The common mistake is swapping materials until the scene looks right. Pokopia habitat checks are stricter than appearance: a visually similar object can move the build into a different attraction pool. Use the material checklist on this page as the source of truth, then verify success by watching whether any listed Pokémon enters the visit rotation. If a sibling habitat starts working first, keep both builds near the same route so the travel time stays low.
After the build is complete, use Yellow carpet as a verification loop rather than a one-time recipe card. Recheck the roster after each major town upgrade, because new region access can change which route is best for farming the materials even when the habitat itself stays the same. If the page lists no normal material or visitor data, treat it as a special-case habitat: follow the unlock guide first, keep screenshots or planner notes of the trigger you used, and avoid copying generic recipes from other sites onto this build.
Rebuild this setup by matching the exact material mix below. Tight material counts matter because many Pokopia habitats overlap visually but trigger different attraction pools.
Yellow carpet currently attracts Hoppip, Skiploom, Jumpluff. Use these linked Pokemon pages when you want to compare spawn conditions, evolution lines, or related habitat builds.
Browse other Garden habitats when you want nearby alternatives in the same biome family.
Best zone
Place Yellow carpet inside a Garden leaning part of your island so nearby props reinforce the habitat signal.
Scaling
Repeat the layout in clusters and pair it with matching support props to improve spawn consistency for the Pokémon listed above.
Yellow carpet's recipe calls for Dandy flowers ×4 — 4 stacked items across 1 distinct material. The biggest single ask is Dandy flowers at 4 units; lock down a daily route for that one and the rest of the recipe usually follows.
Yellow carpet attracts Hoppip, Skiploom, and Jumpluff. Building the habitat once opens visit windows for the entire roster, so plan around the cluster rather than chasing a single entry.
In the same Garden category, the natural follow-ups after Yellow carpet are Tree-shaded tall grass, Pretty flower bed, and Tree-shaded flower bed. They share the broad material family and overlap on visiting Pokémon types, so each successive build extends an existing farming route instead of starting a fresh one.