How to Earn Free Robux in 2026
A straight answer on what actually works, what's a scam, and where to put your time if you don't want to spend a dollar.
Look, if you searched "free Robux" you already know the internet is a minefield on this topic. Fake generators, sketchy Discord invites, browser extensions that steal your password, half the videos on YouTube are bait. We're going to skip all of that and walk through the ways people actually pile up Robux in 2026 without paying for them.
Quick disclaimer before we start. Roblox doesn't hand out free Robux. Anything that promises to give you 10,000 Robux for entering your username and a captcha is lying. There is no glitch, no inspect-element hack, no secret code. What does exist is a handful of legit ways to earn Robux through real effort, plus a couple of partner programs and rewards platforms that pay out in small amounts. We'll cover all of them in order of how much you can realistically earn.
1. Microsoft Rewards (the easiest one)
This is the closest thing to genuinely free Robux that exists. Microsoft runs a points program where you earn points for using Bing to search, completing daily quizzes, and a few other tasks. Those points cash out for Robux gift cards. We've actually done this. A reasonably active week (the daily searches plus the bonus quizzes) gets you around 250-300 points a day. The 100 Robux gift card sits at roughly 1,500 points right now, so you're looking at about a week of casual effort per card.
Catch is, it's tedious. You have to actually do the searches. The mobile Bing app counts too, which speeds things up. If you treat it like a slow drip you'll have a few hundred Robux a month for almost zero money outlay. Not life-changing. But it's real.
Honest take: if you're under 13 you need a parent's Microsoft account. The rewards program has age restrictions and a Family Safety setup. Don't lie about your age, you'll get the account locked.
2. The Roblox Affiliate Program
Most players forget this one exists. Every Roblox URL you share has an affiliate parameter baked in. When a logged-out user clicks your link, signs up, and spends money on Robux, you get a small cut. It's nothing huge per signup, but if you have any kind of audience, even a small Discord server or a TikTok with 500 followers, it adds up over a month.
The catch here is volume. If you're only sharing your game with five friends who already have accounts, you'll earn nothing. If you're posting clips on TikTok and getting 20,000 views with your game link in the bio, you'll see actual deposits. The honest math is roughly 1 in every 500 click-throughs ends in a purchase, and your cut is small. So this method scales with your reach, not your effort.
3. Sell UGC items
If you've been on Roblox since 2024 you've seen UGC creators take over. Hats, accessories, hair, faces. People build these in Blender, upload them, and price them anywhere from 5 Robux to 1,000 Robux a pop. The good news is the UGC program opened up to nearly everyone in 2024. The not-so-good news is the market is now saturated, so a generic anime sword isn't going to move many units.
What does work in 2026: niche themes (specific anime collabs, current TikTok trends, brainrot accessories), animated items, and items priced under 10 Robux that get bought on impulse. If you can't model in Blender yet, that's the first thing to learn. There are dozens of free YouTube tutorials specifically aimed at Roblox UGC. Plan on a couple of weeks of practice before your first listing.
4. Make a game (and use DevEx)
This is the highest-ceiling option by a mile. People earn six figures a year doing this. The path is the same: build something, get players, monetize with game passes and developer products, then cash out through Roblox's DevEx program. Right now DevEx pays roughly $0.0035 per Robux, so 100,000 Robux comes out around $350. You need a minimum of 30,000 Robux in your account before you can request a cashout.
It's also the slowest. Making a game that earns is hard. Most don't. If you're going this route the smartest move is to copy what works (simulators and tycoons still dominate revenue charts) and then differentiate inside that genre. We wrote a longer breakdown of this in our guide on growing a Roblox game if you're seriously considering it.
5. Rewards sites that actually pay out
This is the category where 95% of options are scams. There are a few legit ones though. The pattern is the same across all of them: you complete surveys, watch videos, install apps, or play other games, and you get points that convert to Robux. The legitimate ones pay because they get paid by the advertiser running the offer. They take a cut, you take the rest.
The one we've had the cleanest experience with is EzBux. We're going to spend a minute on this one because it answers most of the worries that come up in this category, and the model itself is worth understanding even if you decide to use a different platform.
What EzBux actually is
EzBux is a Robux rewards platform built specifically for Roblox players. You sign up with just your Roblox username. No password, no email required, no app to download. The platform drops 5 Robux into your account on signup so you can see the cashout flow work end-to-end before doing any real tasks. From there you grind small offers and accumulate Robux you can withdraw any time past the 10 Robux minimum.
Setup takes about ten seconds. The UI is built around Roblox players specifically, not generic rewards-site users, which actually matters more than it sounds. Most rewards platforms are designed for adults filling out market-research surveys, which is a confusing experience if you're 12 and just want to earn for a UGC bundle. EzBux skips that whole problem.
The six ways to earn on EzBux
The dashboard splits earning into six categories. You can mix and match or go all-in on whichever path fits your free time.
- Surveys. Share your opinion on apps, games, and brands. Payouts range from 5 to 200 Robux per survey, time investment is 5 to 15 minutes. This is the most popular path for new accounts and the easiest way to hit your first cashout in a single sitting.
- App trials. Install a partner app, use it for a bit, get paid. These are the highest-paying tasks on the platform, anywhere from 10 to 500 Robux per offer, but each one can take up to an hour. Worth stacking on a Saturday afternoon.
- Watch videos. Passive earnings, 1 to 5 Robux per 30-second clip. Useful as a background grind while you do something else.
- Daily bonus. Log in every day, click once, get 5 Robux. Streak bonuses stack so the longer you stay consistent the more it pays. Basically free for showing up.
- Refer friends. Drop your referral link in your Discord or wherever your Roblox friends hang out. You keep 10% of every Robux your referrals earn, for as long as their accounts stay active. Probably the single highest long-term earner on the platform if you have any kind of network.
- Mini games. Quick browser games for cash prizes. Newer category, payouts 1 to 50 Robux per win, 2 to 10 minutes per round.
The smartest first move is to claim the welcome bonus, take one short survey for the experience, then immediately hit cashout. Watching the Robux actually land in your account is the moment the whole thing stops feeling like every other shady free-Robux site you've been burned by.
Where the Robux actually comes from
This is the part worth understanding because it's also the part that helps you spot scams elsewhere.
EzBux runs on what they call a Robux Faucet. Advertisers (mobile game studios, app developers, market-research firms) pay EzBux to get real human users trying their products. EzBux takes that money, buys a stack of real Robux from Roblox, and parks it in a shared pool that's visible on the site in real time. When you complete a task you're not generating fake Robux out of thin air. You're claiming your share of a pool that's already been bought and paid for. The Robux then moves to you through a Roblox Group payout, which is the only legitimate way for Robux to transfer between accounts.
This is the same model that powers Mistplay, Swagbucks, and FreeCash. Those platforms have been around for years and pay out in actual cash. EzBux is the same business, just paying in Robux because the audience is Roblox players.
The reason this matters: any "free Robux" site that doesn't have a visible offer wall, doesn't disclose its payment partners, or doesn't pay through Roblox Groups is almost certainly scamming you. EzBux works with named offerwall partners like BitLabs, Lootably, Torox, and TimeWall, and named survey partners like CPX Research, Prime Surveys, TheoremReach, and Cherries. You can look any of those up independently. That kind of transparency is what separates a legit rewards platform from a generator site that vanishes in six months.
What cashout actually looks like
Minimum withdrawal is 10 Robux. Payouts usually land within a couple of minutes of being requested. They come through a Roblox Group payout straight to your account, which is the same mechanism every Roblox game uses to pay its developers. Because the payout is on-platform and Group-driven, it's safe (you never give EzBux your password) and it's traceable (you see the Robux hit your balance the same way you'd see any other Roblox transaction).
Over 100,000 players have cashed out through the platform so far. Most reviews are people pulling their first 50 Robux in under an hour. Not life-changing money. But it's real, it's in your account, and it cost you nothing but time. For the kid trying to scrape together enough for a 400 Robux UGC bundle without bothering their parents, that's the whole point.
Quick rule: any rewards site that pays through Roblox Groups, has named partner offerwalls, and never asks for your password is at least worth trying. Any site that promises to deposit Robux directly into your account without any of that infrastructure is a scam. Roblox doesn't allow third parties to deposit Robux. The Group-payout route is the only legitimate path. That's the whole game.
Free signup. Earn through surveys + offers. Cash out in Roblox gift cards.
The scams to skip
You're going to see all of these. Don't fall for any of them.
- Robux generators. These don't exist. The website is just a redirect machine that makes the operator money every time you complete a "human verification" survey. You'll never see a single Robux. Worse, some of them ask for your account password "to deposit" the Robux, then steal everything you own.
- YouTube videos with a comment pinned saying "use code XXXX for 10k Robux". Always fake. Sometimes it's a redirect to a phishing site, sometimes it's an old Adopt Me trade scam in disguise. Roblox promo codes give cosmetics, not currency.
- Discord bots that promise to verify and award Robux. The bot is almost always set up by a scammer to harvest tokens. Don't authorize anything you don't recognize.
- Roblox "tester" programs. Roblox does not run a beta tester program that pays in Robux. Anyone claiming to recruit testers is lying.
- Trading off-platform. If someone in a Roblox game says "send me your password and I'll log in and give you Robux," that is the literal definition of an account theft. Same goes for "cookie" trades and browser extensions claiming to give free Robux.
Putting it together
If you want a realistic monthly target without spending money, here's a workable stack. Spend ten minutes a day on Microsoft Rewards. Run a couple of surveys a week on a legit rewards site like the one above. If you've got any audience at all, drop your Roblox affiliate links into your bios. That combination, with no upfront skill investment, lands somewhere between 500 and 1,200 Robux a month for most people.
If you're willing to learn Blender, UGC can scale that up by an order of magnitude. If you're willing to learn Roblox Studio, game development can scale it up by two. The pattern is the same as anywhere else online: small money for small effort, real money for real effort.
And the most important thing to remember, the one we'd shout in your ear if we could: never give your Roblox password to anyone, anywhere, for any reason. Not for a deposit, not for verification, not for a trade. Roblox staff will never ask for it. If anyone else does, you already know the answer.