Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- First, What Does “Verified” Mean on Roblox?
- Part 1: Do the Non-Negotiable Basics (Yes, Even If You Want the Blue Check)
- Part 2: Complete ID Verification (Because It’s Required for the Blue Check)
- Part 3: How to Get the Roblox Verified Badge (Blue Checkmark)
- How to Increase Your Chances (Without Doing Anything That Gets You Banned)
- Common Mistakes That Kill Verification Progress
- What If You Lost Your Verified Badge?
- FAQ: Fast Answers People Actually Want
- Real-World Verification Experiences (What People Learn the Hard Way)
- Experience #1: The developer who hits the “big number,” then realizes it’s the wrong big number
- Experience #2: The group-owned experience where “ownership” becomes a surprise boss fight
- Experience #3: The avatar item creator who learns that consistency beats randomness
- Experience #4: The influencer who discovers security is not optional
“How do I get verified on Roblox?” is one of those questions that sounds simple… until you realize Roblox uses the word
verification to mean a few different things. Kind of like how “I’m five minutes away” can mean “I’m in the parking lot”
or “I haven’t found my shoes yet.”
In this guide, you’ll learn the three types of Roblox verification, the exact requirements for the blue checkmark Verified Badge,
and the realistic steps creators take to qualifywithout falling for sketchy “verification services” that are basically scams wearing a tuxedo.
First, What Does “Verified” Mean on Roblox?
On Roblox, “verified” can refer to (1) account verification (email/phone + security),
(2) identity/age verification (ID checks and age checks for certain features), or
(3) the Roblox Verified Badge (the blue checkmark for notable, authentic accounts).
Quick comparison
- Email/Phone Verified: You confirm you own your email/number. Helps with account recovery, security alerts, and login tools.
- ID / Age Verification (Age Checks): Roblox confirms age-related info for feature access in certain contexts (like communication controls).
- Verified Badge (Blue Check): Roblox confirms an account is notable and authentic. This is the “celebrity/brand/major creator” checkmark.
If your goal is “I want the blue check next to my name,” you’re aiming for the Verified Badge.
If your goal is “I want my account safer and I want access to more secure features,” start with email, phone, and 2-step verification.
And if your goal is “Roblox says I need an age check,” that’s a separate lane.
Part 1: Do the Non-Negotiable Basics (Yes, Even If You Want the Blue Check)
Before we talk about notability and metrics, make sure your account is built like a house that can survive a stormbecause creators
who grow fast also attract impersonators, phishing attempts, and password-guessing goblins.
Step 1: Verify your email (and phone if you can)
- Add and verify a real email you can access every day.
- Add a phone number if available in your region (it can help with security and recovery).
- Double-check that your email is confirmeddon’t assume “I typed it in once” counts.
Pro tip: Use an email address you won’t lose. If your “main” email is tied to a school account that disappears after graduation,
future-you will have regrets. Bitter, bitter regrets.
Step 2: Turn on 2-Step Verification (Authenticator App is the gold standard)
Roblox supports multiple 2-step options, but an authenticator app is typically stronger than email-only codes.
You’ll usually need a verified email on the account before you can enable 2-step security settings.
- Authenticator app: Generates time-based codes on your phone.
- Email codes: Better than nothing, but your email security matters a lot.
- Security keys / device-based methods: Great if you’re comfortable with hardware or device prompts.
Safety note: Never share login codes with anyoneno “support agent,” no “verification helper,” not even your “best friend”
who says they just need it “for a second.” That’s how accounts disappear.
Part 2: Complete ID Verification (Because It’s Required for the Blue Check)
Roblox’s Verified Badge is not just “you’re popular.” Roblox also needs to confirm you’re authentic,
and their official documentation states that authenticity is satisfied through ID verification.
What ID verification is (and what it isn’t)
- It is: A process where you follow Roblox’s on-screen flow to confirm identity/age-related details using an ID document.
- It isn’t: Uploading your ID to a random person on Discord. (Please don’t.)
- It isn’t: A way to “force” a Verified Badge. It’s a requirement, not a magic wand.
Tips for a smooth ID verification run
- Use good lighting and a clean camera lens (your phone isn’t a fog machine, please).
- Match your real information. If your Roblox birthday is different, ID verification can correct it.
- Don’t rush: blurry photos are the #1 enemy of verification flows everywhere.
- Only do this inside Roblox’s official prompts. If you’re not in official settings, stop.
Roblox also publishes notices and privacy policy details describing how documents and facial media are used in verification processes.
If you’re cautious (good!), review those official privacy and capture notices before proceeding.
Part 3: How to Get the Roblox Verified Badge (Blue Checkmark)
Here’s the big truth: for most creators, there is no application form to “request” a Verified Badge.
Roblox states that qualifying creators are typically reviewed and issued the badge automatically on a periodic schedule.
What the Verified Badge actually means
The Verified Badge is a visual indicator that Roblox has confirmed an account is both notable (widely recognized)
and authentic (belongs to who it claims to represent).
Eligibility: the three main creator paths
1) Brands & public figures
Roblox’s criteria includes off-platform notabilitysuch as having at least 100,000 followers on a major social platform
(or a comparable threshold like monthly listeners on a major music platform). Another pathway mentioned is participation in Roblox’s Video Stars program.
2) Experience developers (game / experience creators)
Roblox’s published requirements focus on playtime hours and ownership/payout structure. In plain English:
you need to be the owner (or have a qualifying automatic payout share) of an experience that hit a major playtime threshold recently.
What “1M playtime hours in 90 days” looks like:
- If 10,000 players each spend 6 minutes/day, that’s 1,000 hours/day (10,000 × 6 minutes = 60,000 minutes = 1,000 hours).
- At that pace, 90 days ≈ 90,000 hours. You’d need much higher retention, more players, longer sessions, or multiple spikes.
- This requirement is designed for experiences with massive sustained engagementnot a one-week viral moment and then crickets.
Important nuance: Roblox has clarified that co-owners who don’t have a qualifying automatic payout arrangement may not count
for eligibility. If your experience is owned by a group, the group structure and payout configuration matter.
3) Avatar item creators (catalog / marketplace creators)
Roblox’s criteria for avatar item creators is based on high commercial performance over a recent periodthink substantial Robux revenue
and a large number of items sold. This is targeted at creators whose catalog items are widely used across Roblox.
Universal requirements after you meet a “notability” path
Meeting the notability threshold is only step one. Roblox also expects:
- Authenticity: Completed ID verification.
- Security: Authenticator-based security enabled (not just “I have a password”).
- Activity: The account has been active within a defined recent window (so the badge isn’t stuck on an abandoned account).
Does the blue check boost discoverability?
Roblox states that the Verified Badge does not impact search and recommendations for new or unverified creators.
In other words: don’t expect a blue check to be a cheat code for the algorithm. Make better games instead. (I know. Rude.)
How to Increase Your Chances (Without Doing Anything That Gets You Banned)
You can’t “grind” a Verified Badge directly like an in-game quest, but you can build toward the criteria in a way Roblox tends to reward:
real engagement, consistent identity, and strong security.
For experience developers: design for playtime hours the right way
- Retention loops that respect players: Daily quests, streak rewards, seasonal eventsfun, not exploitative.
- Session length boosters: Progression systems, meaningful upgrades, social gameplay, and varied content.
- Live operations: Weekly updates, limited-time modes, and community events to avoid the “launch then vanish” trap.
- Performance: Faster loading and fewer crashes = more minutes played. Every bug is a tiny playtime thief.
For avatar item creators: build a catalog people actually wear
- Release consistent styles (a “brand identity,” not random hats from random universes).
- Study seasonal demand: holidays, school breaks, trendsthen design within Roblox rules.
- Quality matters: clean meshes, good thumbnails, accurate fit. People don’t buy “almost fits.”
For brands/figures: connect off-platform credibility to Roblox presence
- Use the same name, branding, and verified social identities wherever possible.
- Collaborate with trusted Roblox partners and creators (authentic partnerships beat “buy followers” every time).
- Build experiences or items that make sense for your communitynot just a billboard with legs.
Whatever you do, skip the shady shortcuts: Buying accounts, selling “verification,” spoofing badges, or faking notability can
get the badge revokedor block you from eligibility altogether. Roblox has publicly stated that selling or spoofing the badge makes you ineligible.
Common Mistakes That Kill Verification Progress
1) Confusing “verified badge” with in-game badges
Roblox experiences can award badges for achievements. Those are fun and collectible.
The Verified Badge is different: it’s the blue check on profiles and across certain Roblox surfaces.
2) Changing your username or display name at the wrong time
Roblox’s documentation states that changing your username or display name can revoke the Verified Badge.
So if you’re close to qualifying, lock in your branding and stop name-hopping like it’s a hobby.
3) Turning off authenticator security
Disabling authenticator-based 2-step security can also remove the badge. If you get verified, keep your security settings stable.
Convenience is nice, but losing your badge is not a vibe.
4) Falling for “verification helpers”
No legitimate process requires you to hand over passwords, login codes, or private identity documents to a stranger.
The fastest way to become “verified” by a scammer is to become “verified as a victim.”
5) Expecting instant results
Roblox indicates that badge issuance happens on a schedule (not instantly). Even if you meet criteria today,
it can take time for the system to catch up. Think “monthly review cycle,” not “doorDash for verification.”
What If You Lost Your Verified Badge?
If your Verified Badge disappeared, Roblox’s guidance is to contact support, especially if you believe it was a mistake.
Before you do, check the usual triggers:
- Did you change your username or display name?
- Did you disable authenticator-based security?
- Did you change your group name or ownership (if the badge was tied to a group/experience)?
Roblox also notes that if a badge was removed for non-policy reasons, you may be able to request a re-grant through customer support
after restoring required security and identity verification settings.
FAQ: Fast Answers People Actually Want
Can regular players get the blue check?
Typically, the Verified Badge is designed for notable creators, developers, groups, and off-platform figures. If you’re not widely recognized
or you don’t meet the published metrics, the realistic path is: become notable through creation and community impact first.
Does verifying my email mean I’m “verified”?
Email/phone verification improves account safety and unlocks security featuresbut it’s not the same as the Verified Badge.
Think “seatbelt” vs “trophy.”
Do I need ID verification even if I’m famous?
Roblox’s published criteria includes authenticity checks via ID verification. Notability gets you considered; authenticity confirms it’s really you.
Can Roblox remove the badge?
Yes. Verified accounts still must follow Roblox rules. Repeated policy violations, serious enforcement actions, or attempts to spoof/sell the badge
can lead to revocation.
Real-World Verification Experiences (What People Learn the Hard Way)
The official requirements are the official requirementsbut the lived experience of chasing verification on Roblox tends to follow a few predictable storylines.
Here are realistic, experience-based patterns creators run into (and what they learn), written in a way that won’t put you to sleep.
Experience #1: The developer who hits the “big number,” then realizes it’s the wrong big number
A common scenario: a developer sees their game spike to a huge number of visits and assumes they’re basically one email away from the blue check.
Then they learn the hard difference between “visits” and “playtime hours.” Ten million visits can still produce disappointing playtime if players bounce
after 45 seconds because the tutorial is confusing, the loading screen is slow, or the first five minutes feel like homework.
The dev who eventually qualifies usually makes boring-but-powerful fixes: faster onboarding, clearer goals, fewer bugs, and better pacing. They add content
that rewards longer sessions (quests, progression, events) and improve retention without turning the experience into a grindy trap.
Their big lesson: verification is a byproduct of sustained player love, not a reward for a single viral moment.
Experience #2: The group-owned experience where “ownership” becomes a surprise boss fight
Another frequent reality: the experience is owned by a group, multiple people contributed, and everyone assumes eligibility will be shared like pizza.
Then the payout structure and ownership rules show up like a strict hall monitor with a clipboard. If the account that wants the Verified Badge isn’t set up
correctly (ownership, qualifying payout share, and other eligibility details), the creator may be “famous in the group chat” but not eligible on paper.
The creators who navigate this well get organized early: they document who owns what, align on group payouts, and make sure the account representing the
public-facing creator is the one structured to qualify. The lesson: treat your Roblox setup like a business system, not a casual friend groupbecause once
you’re big, “casual” gets expensive.
Experience #3: The avatar item creator who learns that consistency beats randomness
Many catalog creators start by making whatever seems fun that day: a cyber helmet today, cottagecore hair tomorrow, a meme face next week. Sometimes that works,
but the creators who reach major revenue and sales thresholds often build a recognizable stylesomething players can spot and say, “Oh, that’s from that creator.”
They iterate on what sells, polish their thumbnails, and keep quality consistent so players trust the brand.
The lesson here is sneaky: the most “creative” move can be building a repeatable identity, not reinventing yourself every upload.
Experience #4: The influencer who discovers security is not optional
As soon as someone’s Roblox identity becomes valuable, impersonators appear. Creators who gain off-platform attention often report the same pattern:
phishing links, fake “Roblox staff” messages, “verification offers,” and shady DMs that look professional until you read them with your brain turned on.
The creators who stay safe lock down their account early: verified email, strong passwords, authenticator-based 2-step verification, and a strict “I never share codes”
rule. They also stop changing their username/display name constantlybecause stability matters when your identity is your brand.
The lesson: you don’t “earn” verification and then get safeyou get safe first, so you can keep what you earn.