- What to know
- Why Terraria still doesn’t use classic item hoppers
- Conveyor belts now function as item transport hoppers
- Wired chests act as automatic item collectors
- Combining conveyor belts and wired chests creates true item hoppers
- Farming efficiency improvements that support hopper-style automation
- How Terraria’s hopper alternative compares to classic hoppers
- So, are there item hoppers in Terraria 1.4.5?
What to know
- There are no literal item hoppers in Terraria 1.4.5.
- Conveyor belts can now move items upward and across long distances.
- Wired chests automatically collect nearby dropped items.
- When combined, these systems function like true item hoppers for farms.
If you’re coming from games like Minecraft, it’s natural to ask whether Terraria finally has item hoppers in version 1.4.5. The short answer is no—but the long answer is far more interesting. Terraria 1.4.5 introduces powerful automation upgrades that collectively do what hoppers are meant to do: collect, move, and store items without player input.
Rather than adding a single block that handles everything, Terraria leans into its wiring and physics systems, giving you more flexibility and far more creative control.
Why Terraria still doesn’t use classic item hoppers
Terraria’s world is tile-based but physics-driven. Items exist as physical drops affected by gravity, slopes, and movement blocks. Because of this, a simple “vacuum + output” hopper block wouldn’t fit cleanly into the game’s design.
Instead, Terraria 1.4.5 expands systems that already interact with dropped items, allowing players to build custom hopper-like solutions that are often more powerful than a single-purpose block.
Conveyor belts now function as item transport hoppers
One of the biggest changes in 1.4.5 is how conveyor belts behave. Previously, conveyors were mostly horizontal tools. Now, they can move items upward, which is a massive shift for automation.

Items dropped onto a conveyor belt are automatically carried in the belt’s direction, including vertical lifts. This means loot from farms can be moved out of kill chambers, across floors, or even up into storage rooms without player interaction.
Conveyor belts also move critters and certain enemies, which indirectly improves item collection by streamlining farm layouts. Importantly, items do not despawn while riding conveyors, making them reliable for long-distance transport.
Conveyor belt behavior in 1.4.5
| Feature | Function |
|---|---|
| Horizontal transport | Moves items across floors |
| Vertical transport | Carries items upward |
| Automation role | Item movement and routing |
| Farm usage | Moves loot from kill zones |
Wired chests act as automatic item collectors
The second half of Terraria’s “hopper replacement” is the wired chest. In 1.4.5, chests connected to wiring can be activated to automatically collect items.
When triggered, a wired chest pulls in all dropped items within a five-block radius, instantly storing them. This happens regardless of item type, rarity, or stack size. While wired chests do not sort items intelligently, their raw collection power is extremely strong.

Placed beneath a farm or at the end of a conveyor line, a wired chest becomes a drop vacuum, ensuring no loot is lost or left behind.
Wired chest collection details
| Aspect | Behavior |
|---|---|
| Collection range | 5-block radius |
| Activation method | Wiring signal |
| Sorting ability | None (manual sorting later) |
| Best use case | Automated loot intake |
Combining conveyor belts and wired chests creates true item hoppers
Individually, conveyor belts move items and wired chests collect them. Together, they form fully automated item hopper systems.
In a typical farm setup, enemies are killed in a controlled chamber. Their drops fall onto conveyor belts, which move the loot away from the kill zone. Those belts route items—sometimes vertically—into a wired chest, which periodically activates and absorbs everything nearby.

This setup accomplishes everything a hopper would:
- Automatic item pickup
- Automatic transport
- Automatic storage
- Zero player interaction
And unlike a single hopper block, this system can be scaled across entire bases, moving loot from farms hundreds of blocks away.
Farming efficiency improvements that support hopper-style automation
Terraria 1.4.5 doesn’t stop at conveyors and chests. Several other changes reinforce AFK and automated farming, making hopper-style systems even more effective.
The Stress Ball accessory, dropped by Hoplights, allows your character to automatically use selected tools or weapons. This enables true AFK farms by keeping your character “active,” which is necessary for certain enemy spawns.

New unsafe dirt and living wood walls allow enemies like forest gnomes to be farmed more easily, feeding directly into automated loot systems built with conveyors and wired chests.
Together, these systems turn Terraria farms into hands-off production lines rather than manual grind spots.
How Terraria’s hopper alternative compares to classic hoppers
| Feature | Classic Hopper | Terraria 1.4.5 System |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic pickup | Yes | Yes (wired chests) |
| Item transport | Limited | Highly flexible (conveyors) |
| Vertical movement | Usually limited | Fully supported |
| Customization | Low | Extremely high |
So, are there item hoppers in Terraria 1.4.5?
No, Terraria 1.4.5 does not include a literal item hopper block.
But in practice, conveyor belts and wired chests together outperform traditional hoppers, offering more control, longer range, and deeper automation potential.
If your goal is fully automated item collection, Terraria 1.4.5 absolutely delivers—you just build it instead of crafting a single block.