After looking around online, nobody quite seems to know exactly how Caravans work. People agree that Caravans generate Wealth, but even how they do it doesn’t seem to be universally understood, much less how the amount generated is calculated.

Well, since nobody else seems to have tested to figure it out how all of it works, I did. Here’s how Caravans work, in detail.

How Caravans Function

Caravans form trade routes between two of your cities, where they’ll move from one city to the other and then repeat the process until they can’t anymore (such as if one of the cities is captured by an enemy), or until you tell them otherwise. Caravans are hard workers like that.

Every route can only have a single Caravan on it, but there is no inherent limit to the number of routes that a single City can have beyond that – the limit comes from the number of available Caravans, and the number of other cities available for unique trade routes.

The maximum number of Caravans you can have at once is 1 + (1 x Commerce tech level). For nations with no specific Caravan-related bonuses, this means that unlocking the Market with Commerce 1 actually allows for a maximum of two Caravans to be produced, although you would need to have three cities in order to utilise the second Caravan because two cities allow for only one unique trade route to be created.

In order to calculate the number of Caravans required to saturate all available Caravan routes with Caravans, you take the number of cities you have and then add together the numbers below that figure. For example, with 5 cities it takes (4+3+2+1) caravans to fully saturate the available routes (which is more caravans than a single player can build). This can expressed more succinctly with the mathematical formula of:

N = 1 / 2 * (x2 – x)

Where N is the number of Caravans required for saturation, and x if the number of cities you have.

Some people seem to be under the impression that Caravans generate Wealth in large chunks (for example, 30 gold at once). This is.. not entirely incorrect but far from the whole picture.

The Wealth from Caravans comes in two stages, kind of like it does with a Farm or Woodcutter’s Camp. You get a bonus chunk of Wealth (twice, see below) for initially setting up a trade route, after which you get constant Wealth production for as long as that Caravan continues to use that trade route.

Forming Trade Routes, Wealth Bonuses

Caravans will automatically use the highest-income route available to them given your directions or lack thereof. For example, if you select a Caravan and right click on a specific city, it will select whichever available route from that city which is most profitable. If you were to leave the Caravan to its own devices, it might select a route that doesn’t involve that city at all.

Routes can be manually selected by selecting a Caravan and right-click-dragging between two valid cities – this can also be done on the minimap. This may be helpful if the most profitable trade routes are actually dangerous to travel along, in which case specifically choosing a safe route may be preferable to having your Caravans killed. This doesn’t occur too frequently in 1v1 matches, but does become a more common issue in larger ones involving more players. The most profitable route in these games will often take a Caravan just about to the other side of the map, potentially walking right into (or next to) danger along the way.

In order to create a new trade route, a Caravan must first go to City A, then to City B, and then return once again to City A. The trade route is formed only after it has finished an entire loop between two cities, and until this process is completed you will not receive a constant income from the Caravan.

On the second and third steps of this loop (i.e. arriving at City B, and returning afterwards to City A), the Caravan will provide a once-off Wealth bonus. This bonus is equal to 10 + (Commerce tech level x 10). For example, having Commerce level 2 provides a Wealth bonus of 30 (twice), whereas a Commerce level of 4 provides a Wealth bonus of 50 (twice).

Once a route is set up, the position of the Caravan has no influence on its income. It could theoretically be forced into an extremely slow path around the entire map in order to move between two cities, but this would not affect the route’s income so long as the trade route is already set up. Obviously a long travel time would increase the time it takes to initially set up a new route.

If a Caravan is no longer able to continue with its trade route (e.g. losing a city), it will once again automatically select the highest-income trade route available after a brief idle period. If no route is available, it will simply halt and await further instructions, probably while quietly crying.

Increasing Trade Route Income

Based on my testing, this is how the amount of income from a trade route is calculated:

Income = (2 + (2 x each Large City + 4 x each Major City) + (1 x each building in either city’s economic radius)) x Distance multiplier

Let’s break that down step by step.

The base income for a trade route is 2 Wealth. If you have two Small Cities directly next to each other with no additional structures at either of them, a trade route between them will generate an income of 2 Wealth.

Each step up from a Small City adds 2 additional Wealth. Small City <-> Large City = 4 (2 + 2) Wealth. Small City <-> Major City = 6 (2 + (1×4)) Wealth. Large City <-> Large City = 6 (2 + (2×2)) Wealth. Large City <-> Major City = 8 (2 + (1×2) + (1×4)) Wealth. Major City <-> Major City = 10 (2 + (2×4)) Wealth.

Each building within the economic radius of either city adds 1 additional Wealth. From my testing, this includes military buildings such as Stables, Towers, and Lookouts. Small City (+4 Farms) <-> Small City (+3 Farms) = 9 (2 + 4 + 3) Wealth.

The distance between the two cities multiplies the rest of the equation by a range between 100% (no increase) and 200% (double). The multiplier depends on the distance, and it scales smoothly from 100% to 200% as the distance between the two cities increases. Two cities built as close as possible to each other (or nearly as close as possible) will receive a 100% multiplier i.e. no bonus. Two cities built very far from each other will receive a 200% multiplier, doubling the income of that trade route. Cities with an “in between” amount of distance will receive a multiplier between 100% and 200% depending on the distance. You cannot exceed the 200% multiplier by going from “very far” to “other side of the map”; you will still only receive a 200% multiplier on the route. As best as I can tell, the distance calculation is based on a direct line between the two cities; if terrain is in the way this does not increase the multiplier even if the effective distance between the two cities increases.



Breaking down the +17 route in the picture above:

Base of 2 Wealth +4 Wealth due to 2x Large City on the route +9 Wealth due to 9x buildings in economic radius A minor multiplier of approximately 113% due to the distance between the two cities

(2 + 4 + 9) x ~1.13 = ~17 Wealth

Examining the +20 route instead:

Base of 2 Wealth +4 Wealth due to 2x Large City on the route +7 Wealth due to 7x buildings in economic radius A moderate multiplier of approximately 154% due to the distance between the two cities

(2 + 4 + 7) x ~1.54 = ~20 Wealth

Trade Routes with Allied Cities

Once you reach Commerce 3, your Caravans are able to create trade routes with other nations so long as you’re not at war with them. This usually implies that the other nation is your ally, but you could also simply be in a state of peace, without an alliance.

Trade routes work the same way whether the other nation is an ally or not. The caveat is that Caravans don’t automatically select trade routes involving other non-allied players, but will do so with allied players. If you want a trade route with a non-allied player used, you’ll need to explicitly instruct a Caravan to set one up.

Trade routes with other nations are typically extremely lucrative for both parties. The calculation for the route’s passive income is the same as normal, except that the full income is given to both parties, without splitting it. In other words, each nation gains income from the trade route as if they owned both cities, which effectively doubles the total Wealth the route produces, since both nations get the full amount. Given that the cities of different nations are likely to be further apart than cities of the same nation, route income is usually higher when the trade route involves international travel.

As for the once-off Wealth bonus for setting up a trade route, this bonus alternates between the two nations. When setting up a trade route with an ally, your Caravan will provide double the normal bonus to you upon reaching City B (typically the other player’s city). Once it completes the loop and returns to city A, the other player receives the second Wealth bonus, which is also double the normal amount.

The once-off bonus in this situation is still based on the Commerce level of the player receiving the bonus, not the Commerce level of the player that owns the Caravan.

Final Words

You will probably rarely if ever use the information in this article to change your Caravan routes, given that Caravans already figure out the highest income routes by themselves and there’s few reasons to deviate from them. It’s also rarely worth changing a Caravan’s existing route except due to danger, because swapping from a medium-income route to a high-income route introduces downtime where the Caravan is no longer generating Wealth while setting up its new route.

Regardless of that, I trust this article is informative nonetheless, and that the notes I’ve made are helpful to have available. If nothing else, you can rest easy knowing that your Caravans have got it all figured out for you.

One practical use for all of this info is to wait on a Caravan’s once-off bonus to get enough Wealth to build or research something important. Being able to know the incoming Wealth bonus ahead of time allows you to make more efficient use of said Wealth, particularly in the early game.

For a default-dangerous Caravan route you could also eyeball your cities to estimate which actually-safe route would be most profitable when re-routing your Caravan. If you regularly play games with higher player counts you may need to get used to doing this to avoid providing “Caravan donations” to your opponents.

“Building a Strong Economy” series: