Forza Horizon 6 Skill Points & Wheelspin Farm Guide
Turn Skill Points into Super Wheelspins in Forza Horizon 6: the Revuelto and Subaru 22B trick, chaining skills for points fast, and how to make it free.
Wheelspins are scarce in Forza Horizon 6 on purpose. Playground cut the supply way down compared to past games, so you no longer drown in spins from leveling up. That makes the Skill Point to Super Wheelspin conversion the single best way to keep the prizes coming. Done right, it is also free, because you sell the car afterward and get your Credits back.
Here is how the loop works and how to feed it.
The Core Trick: Buy a Car, Dump Skill Points, Get Spins
Every car has its own Car Mastery tree, and you fill it with Skill Points. Some cars have a tree built around handing you Wheelspins and Super Wheelspins as Mastery rewards. Buy one of those cars, pour your Skill Points into the tree, and the spins drop instantly.
The two go-to cars for this:
2024 Lamborghini Revuelto. This is the heavy hitter. Invest 39 Skill Points into its Car Mastery tree and you pull three regular Wheelspins plus one Super Wheelspin out of it. The car costs around 365,000 Credits up front, but you list it back on the Auction House afterward and recover most of that. Net cost is tiny, and you walk away with four spins worth of prizes.
1998 Subaru Impreza 22B STI Version. This one is the budget engine of the operation. It is cheap to buy and its Mastery tree carries a strong Skill multiplier, so it makes earning the next batch of Skill Points faster. Use it the same way — buy, fill the tree, claim the spins, resell.
The pattern is always the same:
- Buy the conversion car.
- Open Car Mastery and spend your Skill Points until the spins unlock.
- Claim your Wheelspins and Super Wheelspins.
- Relist the car on the Auction House to get your Credits back.
You are essentially renting the car for the price of an auction fee, and getting paid in prizes.
Where the Skill Points Come From
Conversion only works if you have Skill Points to spend, so the other half of this is farming them fast. Skill Points come from banking Skill Score, and Skill Score comes from chaining skills without crashing.
A skill chain is a string of stunts — drifts, near misses, air, smashes — strung together with a multiplier that climbs the longer you go. Bank the chain before you crash and that score converts to Skill Score, which rolls into Skill Points.
The fastest way to rack them up:
- Build long chains, not big single hits. A 30-second drift that links five different skills beats one clean jump. Keep the multiplier alive.
- Use a car with a Skill multiplier perk. The Subaru 22B is popular here precisely because its Mastery tree boosts your Skill multiplier, so every chain banks more points.
- Pick the right ground. Open coastal roads and PR Stunt zones let you keep a chain going without traffic killing it.
Run skill chains until you have stacked around 40 Skill Points, then go spend them on a conversion car. That is the rhythm: farm points in the world, cash them in for spins.
Why This Beats Waiting for Spins
In older Forza games you got Wheelspins handed to you constantly. Forza Horizon 6 deliberately restricts them. The legit sources are now:
- Level-up rewards at certain milestones
- Collection Book milestones
- Specific Explore Japan area routes
- The Tokyo City House daily spin, capped at seven per week
- Community drops
That is not a lot. If you want a steady stream of Super Wheelspins for the cars and Credits inside them, the Skill Point conversion is the only method you fully control. Everything else is on the game’s schedule. This is on yours.
Making It Cost Nothing
The whole loop is close to free if you respect the resell step. The Revuelto and the 22B both hold value, so when you relist them after draining the Mastery tree, you recover most of the purchase price. The only real cost is the Auction House fee and the few minutes it takes to sell.
Some players keep a Revuelto permanently and just refill the unspent corners of its tree over time, but buying and reselling is cleaner if you want your Credits back between runs. If you are also chasing Credits, the same Auction House skills carry straight over — see our credit farm guide for the sniping side of it.
Quick Reference
| Step | What to do | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Farm | Run skill chains in a 22B until ~40 SP | Skill Points to spend |
| Convert | Buy Revuelto, sink 39 SP into Mastery | 3 Wheelspins + 1 Super |
| Recover | Relist the car on the Auction House | Most Credits back |
| Repeat | Chain again, cash in again | Endless spins |
The first time you do this it feels fiddly. After two cycles it is muscle memory. Keep a 22B for farming, a Revuelto for converting, and you will never be short on Super Wheelspins again.
A Few Things That Trip People Up
Spend points in the right car. It sounds obvious, but plenty of players sink Skill Points into a car with no Wheelspin nodes and wonder why no spins dropped. Check the Mastery tree before you buy. If it has no spin rewards, it is not a conversion car.
Do not sell before you claim. Drain the entire Mastery tree of its spins first, then relist. Sell early and you leave free prizes on the table.
The spins are worth real Credits. A Super Wheelspin can roll a high-value car or a six-figure Credit prize. That is why the conversion loop pays for itself many times over — you are spending points you earned for free and pulling cars and cash out the other end.
For which Mastery perks to prioritize beyond the conversion cars, read our Car Mastery guide next. And once your garage fills with spin prizes you do not need, the Auction House skills in our credit farm guide turn the duplicates straight into Credits.