Robux Tax Calculator
You would get:
Uses the standard 30% marketplace fee with exact integer rounding like Roblox.
How it works and how to use it
The Robux Tax Calculator shows what you’ll actually keep after the Roblox marketplace takes its cut. If you sell a game pass, a developer product, a private server, or a UGC item, buyers see the full price, but you receive a smaller, after-fee amount. This tool does the math instantly so you can set prices with confidence and avoid guesswork.
What the calculator does?
- From price to payout: Enter a price and see the net Robux you keep after the standard 30% platform fee.
- From target to price: Start with the amount you want to receive and get the minimum price you should charge to still hit that net after the fee.
- Accurate rounding: Earnings on the platform settle in whole Robux. The calculator mirrors that behavior by applying the fee and then dropping any fraction, so results match real payouts.
How to use it (two simple modes)
1) Robux before fee → Net you keep
Choose “Robux before tax.” Type the price you plan to charge. The result shows:
- You would get: your net Robux after the 30% cut
- Fee: how much the marketplace takes
Example: Price 100 → You keep 70 (fee 30).
2) Robux after fee → Price to charge
Switch to “Robux after tax.” Type the amount you want to receive. The tool returns the smallest price that still nets at least that figure after the fee and rounding.
Example: Want to keep 1,000 → Charge 1,429 (after the cut and whole-number rounding, you’ll keep ≥ 1,000).
The math in plain language
When you sell something, the platform keeps 30% and you keep 70%. Because payouts are whole numbers, any fractional part is discarded. In practice:
- Net from a price: price × 0.70, then drop the decimals.
- Price from a net: find the smallest integer price where the dropped result is still at least your target.
That last part matters. If you aim for a clean net like 1,000, a simple “target ÷ 0.70” gives 1,428.57. But because decimals are dropped, 1,428 would net 999, not 1,000. The calculator bumps to 1,429 to protect your target.
Why this matters for creators
Pricing isn’t just about the sticker number it’s about what lands in your balance. A small mismatch can compound over hundreds or thousands of sales. With a quick check, you can:
- Protect margins: Know the net before you launch a bundle, boost, or cosmetic.
- Hit earnings goals: Back into a price that reliably meets your target after fees.
- Avoid support friction: Clear, consistent pricing reduces buyer confusion and refunds.
Practical tips for better pricing
- Test a few price points: Move in small steps (e.g., 49 → 59 → 69) and watch how the net changes.
- Mind the psychology: Round numbers are easy to read; charm pricing (…9) can improve conversion.
- Plan for scale: A 5–10 Robux difference per item becomes meaningful at volume.
- Separate premium payouts: Engagement-based payouts are a different system; use this tool for sales-based earnings only.
- Document your tiers: Keep a quick reference of “prices vs net” for your most common items so you can update a shop fast.
Common use cases
- UGC drops: Preview the net per sale at different price points before a limited release.
- Game economy tuning: Balance developer products (coins, boosts, skips) to support both player progression and revenue.
- Private server pricing: Pick a number that feels fair to buyers but still covers your target net.
Example scenarios you can copy
- You want to keep 250 Robux: Enter 250 in “after tax” mode → the tool returns the minimum price that nets ≥ 250.
- You priced an item at 399: Enter 399 in “before tax” mode → instantly see the net and decide if you should round up or down.
- You’re optimizing a store: Try 79, 89, 99 and check the net for each pick the point where conversion and margin both make sense.
Accuracy and transparency
This calculator is built to reflect how payouts are calculated on the platform: a fixed fee rate and whole-number results. It applies the fee first, then trims any fractional remainder. When you reverse the calculation to reach a target net, it searches for the smallest price that still clears that threshold after the same rounding. The goal is simple: what you see here should match what you see in your earnings.
What this tool is not
It doesn’t convert Robux to dollars or handle external payment fees. For cashout planning, use a DevEx conversion tool with the current rate and local payment details. Use this calculator specifically for pricing and after-fee Robux decisions inside the platform.
Final Thought
The Robux Tax Calculator takes the mystery out of pricing. Enter a price to see your take-home Robux, or enter the net you want and get a price that actually reaches it after fees and rounding. That helps you launch items with clarity, align prices to goals, and build trust with your audience.
FAQs
What does this calculator do?
It shows your net Robux after the 30% marketplace fee or the minimum price to charge to hit a target net. Results mirror real platform behavior so what you see matches what you earn.
What fee and rounding does it use?
A fixed 30% platform cut. Earnings settle in whole Robux, so after the fee any decimals are dropped (not rounded up). That’s why accuracy depends on integer math.
How do I see what I’ll keep from a price?
Use Robux before tax mode. Enter the listed price buyers will pay. The tool returns You would get (your take-home Robux) and shows the fee taken.
How do I find the right price to reach a target net?
Switch to Robux after tax mode. Enter the amount you want to receive. The calculator outputs the smallest price that still nets at least that figure after the 30% cut and whole-number rounding.
Why can results miss my target by 1 Robux?
Because payouts drop fractions. A price that looks mathematically close (e.g., 1,428 × 0.70 = 999.6) becomes 999 after truncation. The tool automatically bumps to the next whole price (1,429) to protect your target.