Roblox Tax Calculator

See how much Robux you actually receive after Roblox marketplace tax is applied.

This is the total Robux price other players see in the marketplace before Roblox takes its cut.

Most Roblox marketplace fees are around 30%, but this can vary by where and how the item is sold. You can adjust the percentage here.

Your results

Enter a listing price above to see how much Robux you keep after tax.

How this works

The calculator multiplies your listing price by the tax percent to estimate how much Robux goes to Roblox. It then subtracts that amount from the listing price to show what you actually keep. For example, if you list an item for 1,000 Robux with 30% tax, Roblox keeps 300 R$ and you receive 700 R$.

Always treat these numbers as estimates. Exact values can change based on where the sale happens and other Roblox rules.

Roblox Tax Calculator: How The Platform Fee Really Works

When players talk about Roblox tax, they are almost always talking about the platform fee. On most sales, Roblox takes a cut and you receive the rest. If you price items without that fee in mind, your earnings will always feel lower than expected.

This section explains how the fee works, shows simple formulas for price and net, and gives quick reference numbers so you can price Game Passes, Dev Products, clothing, and UGC items with your real earnings in mind.

What The Roblox Platform Fee Actually Is

On most creator sales, Roblox applies a platform fee of around 30 percent. Players pay the full price in Robux. Roblox takes its cut, and the remainder is credited to you or your group.

The key idea is simple. The fee is taken at the moment of purchase. By the time Robux reach your pending or available balance, that cut has already happened. Group payouts later are just transfers of already taxed Robux.

Because of that, a Roblox tax calculator always focuses on two directions:

  • Price to net: how many Robux you keep after the fee.
  • Net to price: what price you should set to receive a specific amount after the fee.

Roblox Tax Formulas: Price To Net And Net To Price

Most creators use a default fee of 30 percent, meaning you keep around 70 percent of the listed price. The calculator makes that math instant, but here is the logic behind it in case you want to do it by hand.

Net Robux after the platform fee

Net = Price × (1 − Fee%)

Example with 30 percent fee: Fee% = 0.30, you keep 0.70 Price 100 → Net = 100 × 0.70 = 70 Robux

Price needed to hit a net target

Price = Net ÷ (1 − Fee%)

Example with 30 percent fee: Want 1,000 Robux after fee → Price = 1,000 ÷ 0.70 ≈ 1,429 Robux Always round up so your net is not lower than planned.

The default fee in most Roblox tax calculators is 30 percent, but you can push that higher if you share revenue with partners, or lower if Roblox offers a better split in special cases.

How To Use A Roblox Tax Calculator In Real Games

Pricing new Game Passes and Dev Products

Start from the net you want, not the sticker price. Decide how many Robux you want to earn from a sale, plug that into the calculator, and let it tell you the price you need to list.

Adjusting old items that feel underpriced

If a pass or product is selling well but your earnings feel low, use the calculator to see what price would hit your target net after the fee. Then test small price bumps and watch how it affects both sales volume and total revenue.

Planning revenue splits with friends or co developers

If you split earnings with other developers or a group, treat that split as an extra layer of fee in the math. For example, 30 percent platform fee plus a 50 percent share means you only keep 35 percent of the original price. A custom fee field helps you plan around that.

Checking whether prices look fair to players

You still need to think about player value. Use the calculator to understand your net, then look at your game from the player side and ask if the result feels worth the price, especially for younger audiences with limited Robux.

Quick Roblox Tax Reference With 30 Percent Fee

These examples assume a 30 percent platform fee where you keep 70 percent of the price. They are not official values, just handy mental shortcuts when you are designing a new shop.

Price to net (what you receive)

  • 10 Robux price → 7 Robux net
  • 25 Robux price → 18 Robux net
  • 50 Robux price → 35 Robux net
  • 75 Robux price → 52 Robux net
  • 100 Robux price → 70 Robux net
  • 250 Robux price → 175 Robux net
  • 500 Robux price → 350 Robux net
  • 1,000 Robux price → 700 Robux net
  • 2,000 Robux price → 1,400 Robux net

Net target to required price

  • 50 Robux net → set price 72
  • 100 Robux net → set price 143
  • 250 Robux net → set price 358
  • 500 Robux net → set price 715
  • 1,000 Robux net → set price 1,429
  • 2,000 Robux net → set price 2,858
  • 5,000 Robux net → set price 7,143
  • 10,000 Robux net → set price 14,286

Tip: always round the price up to protect your net amount.

Common Roblox Tax Gotchas And Tips

  • Roblox rounds to whole Robux, so tiny differences from calculator outputs are normal.
  • Some sale channels, promos, or revenue share programs can change the effective fee slightly.
  • If you share revenue with partners, treat that as an extra fee layer in your planning.
  • Review your prices now and then. As your game grows, your pricing strategy can evolve too.

Roblox Tax FAQ For Creators

These are some of the most common questions developers ask when they first start using a Roblox tax calculator or notice that their earnings are lower than the sticker price.

It is not a real government tax. It is a platform fee that Roblox takes on most creator sales. Players pay the full price. You receive the net after Roblox takes its cut. People call it a tax because it feels like money disappearing before it hits your balance.

Disclaimer

This information is provided as a general guide only. Roblox fees, revenue splits, and rules can change at any time and may vary based on item type, sales channel, region, or promotional programs. Always verify current details using official Roblox documentation and dashboards before making pricing decisions or financial plans.