The Cfx Marketplace Is Live: Rockstar's Official Store for FiveM and RedM Mods
by 6Charts Team Category: news 4 min readCfx.re has launched the Cfx Marketplace, an official curated storefront where FiveM and RedM creators can sell props, scripts, and maps. Here is what it means for GTA server owners.
Modding for Grand Theft Auto's community servers just gained an official sales channel. According to an official Cfx.re forum announcement dated January 12, 2026, the Cfx Marketplace is now live, and it moves the buying and selling of FiveM and RedM creations into a Rockstar-sanctioned storefront for the first time.
What the marketplace actually is
The official Cfx.re announcement describes the Marketplace as a curated digital storefront where talented FiveM and RedM creators can share and sell their work, featuring purchasable props, scripts, maps, and much more. RockstarINTEL, citing Cfx.re, frames it as the official Rockstar-sanctioned modding storefront for the two platforms, and reports that it launched with 16 initial creator partners, with 7 more joining soon.
Access is deliberately gated. The official announcement states that the rollout is phased and curated, meaning creators have to register their interest and be approved before they can list anything for sale. This is a managed storefront rather than an open upload free-for-all.
Pricing and the revenue split
Here it is worth separating official facts from secondary reporting. The pricing and revenue details do not come from Cfx.re directly. As reported by secondary outlets fivemx.com and ingamenews.com, listed prices span roughly $5 for basic utility scripts up to $389.99 for premium MLO and framework bundles. Those same outlets report that Rockstar and Cfx.re take a revenue split on sales, and that the cut has pushed some creators to raise their prices to compensate. Treat those figures as secondary reporting rather than official numbers.
What the shift changes is where money moves. As fivemx.com notes, the Marketplace pulls mod sales off third-party platforms like Tebex and Patreon and into an official sanctioned channel. For creators who have relied on outside storefronts for years, that is a meaningful change in how their work gets distributed and paid for.
How we got here
The launch did not come out of nowhere. As background, Rockstar Newswire confirmed that Rockstar acquired Cfx.re, the team behind FiveM and RedM, back in August 2023. The Marketplace is the clearest sign yet of what that acquisition was building toward, an official pathway for the community modding economy that Rockstar once kept at arm's length.
Why it matters for server owners
For anyone running or building a GTA community server, this is a structural change. The official announcement and RockstarINTEL both make clear this is a curated, sanctioned system, which suggests Rockstar wants a stable and monetizable creator economy around its games rather than an unofficial one it merely tolerates. That has obvious implications for how a future GTA 6 modding and server ecosystem might be monetized from day one.
Server operators listed on 6Charts are exactly the people buying scripts, maps, and MLOs to build their worlds, and often the people selling them too. An official marketplace signals that server monetization is becoming a first-class part of the ecosystem, and 6Charts is where those communities get found. As the FiveM, RedM, and eventual GTA 6 server scenes grow around this official storefront, 6Charts is where players can discover those servers, vote for the best-built ones, and leave reviews that help creators reach the right audience.