Roblox Groups are more than social clubs — they’re organizational structures that allow developers and players to build communities, share game revenue, and create branded experiences with hierarchical management systems.
Creating and Structuring a Group
Any Roblox player with a Premium membership can create a group for 100 Robux. Groups support up to 100 custom ranks, each with granular permissions: who can post shouts, who can manage members, who can spend group funds. A well-structured rank system is essential for any group that expects to scale beyond a handful of members.
Group Games and Revenue Sharing
Games owned by a group (rather than an individual) route their revenue into the group’s funds rather than the developer’s personal account. Group owners can then manually pay out Robux to contributors. This system enables studios: a team of developers, artists, and scripters can all share in the revenue from a game they built together.
Building a Loyal Community
Active groups host regular events, maintain a group shout board, and reward loyal members with rank promotions and exclusive in-game items. Discord servers are almost always paired with major Roblox groups to provide richer communication tools. The combination of Roblox groups and Discord is the standard architecture for large Roblox communities.
The Group Store Economy
Groups can sell branded clothing (shirts, pants, t-shirts) through the group store. Clothing sales generate group funds directly. Some groups have built significant recurring revenue through popular branded clothing sets, particularly clan-style uniforms that members proudly wear across the platform.