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How to Find the Best Time to Grab Amazon Flex Blocks

The best time to tap for blocks depends entirely on your market. If you ask ten drivers, you might get ten different answers. Sometimes, it feels completely random—like a lottery where the odds are never in your favor.

But here is the truth: once you tap long enough, you’ll start to notice patterns.

We’ve all been there. You are staring at your phone, refreshing furiously for hours, only to see a surge block pop up and vanish instantly with that dreaded red error message: “Sorry, this block has been taken by someone else.”

It is incredibly frustrating. But instead of tapping mindlessly until your thumb goes numb, there should be a method to your madness.

Don’t Get Mad—Get Analytical

Let’s look at a specific scenario. Say you are hunting for a high-tip Whole Foods block. You tap endlessly, finally see one pop up, and miss it.

Instead of throwing your phone on the passenger seat, take note of the exact time that block dropped.

If that block showed up at 1:30 PM, stop tapping randomly. Wait and watch the app closely as the clock approaches 2:30 PM.

Why? Because Amazon’s algorithm often runs on a schedule. If they released a batch of offers at half-past the hour, there is a strong chance the next wave of offers will follow a similar timing pattern (e.g., dropping at :15, :30, or :45 past the hour).

Identifying Your Market’s Rhythm

Every region is different, but here are a few patterns to look for:

  • The “45-Minute” Rule: Drivers can forfeit a block without penalty up to 45 minutes before the start time. If there is a 5:00 PM block you want, start tapping heavily around 4:14 PM to 4:16 PM. This is when other drivers are panic-canceling their shifts.
  • The Grocery Pattern: As mentioned above, Whole Foods and Fresh blocks often drop closer to the actual start time and frequently follow specific minute-intervals (:00 or :30).

Automate the Hunt: Using Flex Utility Block Log

If trying to tap while scribbling down timestamps on a notepad sounds like a hassle (or dangerous while in the car), there is a better way. This is where the Flex Utility app comes in handy—specifically the Block Log feature.

Check Out Flex Utility Here

While many drivers use accessibility apps just for the tapping overlay, the real power lies in the data.

  • It Sees What You Miss: Sometimes a surge block flashes on the screen for a millisecond—too fast for your brain to register the price, let alone the time. The Block Log records every single offer that hits your screen, even the ones you miss.
  • Review Your History: Instead of guessing, open your Block Log at the end of the day. Scroll through the history. You aren’t looking for what you caught; you are looking for what you missed.
  • Spot the “Surge Windows”: You might notice a trend that you missed in the heat of the moment. For example, the logs might show that your local station consistently drops your favorite Wholefoods blocks between 1:30 PM and 2:45 PM, without fail always 30+ minutes on the hour. Now you know not to waste time tapping at inopportune times.

How to use this data:
Once you have a few days of data from the Block Log, you can stop tapping blindly at 1:00 PM. Instead you’ll be ready with your thumb hovering right at 1:25 PM, when the blocks historically are about to drop. You are using the app’s history to predict the future.

The Bottom Line

The “Block Taken” screen will always be part of the game. It is the nature of the beast. But there is a difference between bad luck and bad timing.

By learning the “45-minute rule” and using tools like the Flex Utility Block Log to track exactly when your station releases work, you stop relying on the lottery and start relying on data.

Stop tapping harder. Start tapping smarter.

Happy Flexing!

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