Where our Roblox codes come from & how we verify them
We think you deserve to know where a code list comes from before you trust it. This page explains exactly how we source, verify and maintain the codes on RobloxFree.codes — no black box.
Our sources
Codes originate from a small number of trustworthy places: the developers' own channels (in-game announcements, official Discord servers, and their social accounts) and established community trackers that have a track record of accuracy. When a milestone or update code drops, it usually appears in one of these places first.
How verification works
- We cross-check new codes against more than one source before publishing.
- A code that only one unverified account is sharing waits until we can confirm it.
- We watch reward wording carefully, because a fake code is often given a reward that is too good to be true.
- Codes are re-checked on a daily cycle so a code that has quietly stopped working does not linger on the active list.
How we handle expired codes
When a code stops working, we do not delete it — we move it to a clearly separated Expired section on that game's page. Keeping expired codes visible tells you at a glance which codes you may have already seen elsewhere are dead, so you do not waste time re-entering them. The active list above it only ever contains codes we believe are currently redeemable.
Who runs the site
RobloxFree.codes is an independent, fan-run project maintained by Marky and Hugosa — two players who got tired of digging through outdated videos for a code that expired weeks ago. We are not affiliated with Roblox Corporation or any game developer. If you spot a code that no longer works, or one we are missing, tell us on our Discord or by email and we will fix it fast.