Best OSRS flips under 10M
Ten million gives you room the 1M flipper does not have. You can hold bigger positions, absorb a slow fill without freezing, and reach items where the absolute margin per unit is worth the wait. It also opens more ways to lose, so item selection and discipline matter more than they did lower down.
How 10M changes item selection
At the bottom of the ladder you flip cheap staples because that is all your coins can cycle. With 10M you can step into mid-tier and some higher-tier items where a single unit carries a real margin: mid-level gear, popular supplies bought in bulk for raids and bossing, seasonal or update-driven equipment.
The bottleneck shifts. On cheap items the buy limit rarely constrains you; on pricier items the per-item 4-hour limit becomes the ceiling on how much a single flip can earn, no matter how wide the spread. That is why 10M flippers spread across several items rather than pouring everything into one.
Risk vs margin
A bigger margin usually comes with bigger swings. High-value items move more in absolute GP, and a spread that looks generous can evaporate if the price is trending down while your buy sits open. The widest margin on the board is often the riskiest, not the best.
A stable, repeatable margin beats a volatile one over a week, even when the volatile one looks larger in a single snapshot. Favour items whose price has been steady, and be cautious with anything spiking on a fresh update until it settles. See reading flip volatility and stability.
Slot allocation with 10M
Spread your coins across most of your 8 slots rather than concentrating them. A workable shape is a mix of steady earners you trust to fill and one or two larger opportunistic positions. Cap how much of your bankroll rides on any single flip so a bad fill is an inconvenience, not a setback.
Keep some cash in reserve. Dips and update-driven dislocations are where 10M can genuinely out-earn a smaller bankroll, but only if you have coins free to act. Stagger your buys across the 4-hour buy-limit timers so you always have a slot ready to move.
Avoiding slow-moving items
Ten million tempts you into high-value items that trade rarely. A 2M margin means nothing if the item fills once a day, or not at all. This is the most common way a mid-size bankroll stalls: coins tied up in a beautiful spread that simply will not clear.
Before you commit, check daily volume and typical fill time, not just the margin. If an item barely trades, skip it no matter how good the spread looks. See how to spot a profitable flip and why your offer is not filling.
Where GE IQ helps under 10M
GE IQ ranks items by a flip score built from post-tax margin, daily volume, and fill speed, so slow movers with tempting spreads sink down the list instead of luring you in. Filter to your bankroll, sort by score, and watch the volume and fill-time columns before committing a slot.
For a live, build-refreshed snapshot at this tier, see the Under 10M flips collection and the top flips today. Treat both as a starting point to verify, not a guarantee.