Last Updated: February 13, 2026
Microsoft Rewards Robux: I’m going to be straight with you – if someone tells you they earned 10,000 Robux in a week through Microsoft Rewards, they’re lying. But here’s what actually happened when I spent two months testing this method myself, and why I still think it’s worth doing if you meet certain conditions.
Table of Contents
Why I Even Bothered Testing This
Three months ago, I caught myself about to buy $25 worth of Robux for the third time that month. I play Adopt Me with my younger sister, and between pet updates and trading, the Robux just… disappears.
That’s when I remembered seeing something about Microsoft Rewards years ago. I’d dismissed it back then because it sounded tedious. But paying $75 a month for virtual currency also felt ridiculous, so I figured I’d give it one honest try.
My goal was simple: Could I offset even half of what I usually spend?
Spoiler: Yes, but it required changing how I thought about the whole thing.
Microsoft Rewards Robux (Took Me 8 Minutes)
Step 1: Join Microsoft Rewards
I went to the Microsoft Rewards website and signed in with my regular Microsoft account. The same one I use for Windows and my old Outlook email.
Important note: Don’t create a new account just for this. Microsoft’s system flags new accounts, and your points can get delayed or reviewed. Use your actual account.
Step 2: Download Bing as Default (Optional But Helpful)
I didn’t do this at first, and it made things harder. After week one, I switched my PC’s default search to Bing and installed the mobile app. The difference in consistency was noticeable.
Step 3: Link Your Xbox Account (If You Have One)
I have an old Xbox One that mostly collects dust. Linking it added a whole separate points stream I hadn’t expected. More on that later.
Step 4: Enable Notifications
This felt annoying, but the daily reminder actually kept me consistent. Without it, I’d forget for 3-4 days straight and lose streak bonuses.
Daily Activities That Actually Earn Points
Here’s what my routine looked like after I figured out the optimal flow:
Morning Routine (5 Minutes on PC)
Right after checking Discord, I’d open Bing and do my searches. Not spam searches – actual searches.
I searched things I’d normally Google anyway:
- “Lakers score last night”
- “weather today”
- “how to evolve Eevee Pokémon”
The system needs about 30-35 searches to max out daily PC points. I spread them naturally over the morning.
PC Search Points: 90 points per day
Phone Searches During Lunch (3 Minutes)
Mobile searches count separately, which I didn’t realize for the first two weeks. Huge mistake.
I’d do 20-25 mobile searches during my lunch break. Same approach – real searches about stuff I actually cared about.
Mobile Search Points: 60 points per day
Daily Quiz Set (2-3 Minutes)
This is where it gets weirdly addictive. Every day there’s a “Daily Set” with usually three activities:
- A poll (one click)
- A quiz (8 questions, takes 90 seconds)
- A “this or that” game (usually 10 rounds)
The quiz topics are random. Yesterday it was about European capitals. Today it was ’90s movies. I got maybe 60% right, but points don’t depend on correct answers.
Daily Set Points: 30-50 points per day
Weekly Treasure Hunts and Bonus Activities
Every Tuesday, new weekly activities appear. These are higher-effort but worth it:
- 100-point quizzes (take 5 minutes)
- 50-point challenges (click through a series)
- Streak bonuses (extra points for consecutive days)
I usually knocked these out Tuesday evening while watching YouTube.
Weekly Bonus Points: 200-500 points per week
Xbox Rewards App (Passive Points for Gamers)
If you have an Xbox and play even occasionally, this is free money.
I earned points for:
- Unlocking any achievement (50 points each)
- Playing Game Pass games (weekly bonuses)
- Completing monthly challenges
One Saturday I was playing Halo and unlocked three achievements in two hours. That’s 150 points I’d have earned anyway just by gaming.
Xbox Points: 100-300 points per week (varies wildly)
The Real Numbers: Points, Time, and Robux
Let me kill the suspense with actual data from my account.
My 8-Week Tracking Results
Week 1: 890 points | Time: ~70 minutes | Notes: Learning curve, missed 2 days
Week 2: 1,240 points | Time: ~65 minutes | Notes: Got into rhythm
Week 3: 1,180 points | Time: ~60 minutes | Notes: Skipped weekend
Week 4: 1,510 points | Time: ~75 minutes | Notes: Hit weekly bonuses
Week 5: 1,320 points | Time: ~55 minutes | Notes: Most efficient week
Week 6: 1,405 points | Time: ~60 minutes | Notes: Consistent
Week 7: 1,670 points | Time: ~80 minutes | Notes: Xbox achievements helped
Week 8: 1,290 points | Time: ~55 minutes | Notes: Standard week
Total After 2 Months: 10,505 points in roughly 520 minutes (about 8.6 hours total)
What That Actually Translates To
Here’s the Microsoft gift card redemption rates as of February 2026:
$1.25 gift card = 1,500 points
$3 gift card = 3,650 points
$5 gift card = 6,500 points
$10 gift card = 13,000 points
$25 gift card = 33,000 points
With my 10,505 points, I redeemed:
- One $5 gift card (6,500 points)
- One $3 gift card (3,650 points)
- Total: $8 in Microsoft credit
Converting Gift Cards to Robux
This is the part that confuses people. You can’t directly redeem “Robux” in most regions.
Instead, here’s the process:
- Redeem points for Microsoft or Xbox gift cards
- Those cards add credit to your Microsoft account
- Use that credit to buy Robux inside the Roblox app or website
I used my $8 credit to buy the 800 Robux package (which normally costs $9.99). I paid the $1.99 difference out of pocket.
So in 8 weeks, I earned 800 Robux for about 8.6 hours of effort.
Is that good? Depends entirely on how you value your time.
How Redemption Actually Works (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Check Your Points Balance
Log into the Microsoft Rewards website and click “Redeem” at the top.
Step 2: Choose Microsoft or Xbox Gift Card
Don’t look for a “Robux” option – it doesn’t exist in most regions.
Pick the denomination you can afford. I went with $5 since I had 6,500 points saved up.
Step 3: Confirm and Wait
After confirming, the gift card code appeared in my email within 10 minutes. Some people report up to 24 hours, but mine was fast.
Step 4: Add to Microsoft Account
I went to my Microsoft account billing page and clicked “Add a payment method.” Then I entered the gift card code.
The balance updated immediately.
Step 5: Buy Robux Through Roblox
I logged into Roblox on my PC, clicked the Robux icon in the top corner, and chose a Robux package.
At checkout, it automatically used my Microsoft account balance first before asking for any other payment.
Done. The Robux appeared in my account within seconds.
Platform Breakdown: What Works Where
PC (Best Overall Experience)
Pros:
- Most reliable point tracking
- Daily searches register consistently
- Can leave Bing open in a background tab
- Easy to type searches quickly
Cons:
- Requires discipline to remember daily
- No passive earning while doing other things
My Rating: 9 out of 10 – This is your main workhorse for earning points.
Xbox (Best for Passive Earning)
Pros:
- Achievements count automatically without extra effort
- Weekly Game Pass quests add up fast
- Feels like bonus points for gaming you’d do anyway
- Monthly challenges give big point boosts
Cons:
- Need active Xbox Live or Game Pass for best results
- Can’t do regular Bing searches on the console
My Rating: 7 out of 10 – Great supplement if you already game on Xbox.
Mobile (Essential for Max Points)
Pros:
- Separate point pool from PC searches
- Can do searches anywhere – waiting in line, on the bus, etc.
- Edge mobile app integrates smoothly
- Quick searches add up over time
Cons:
- Sometimes slower to sync points to your account
- Typing searches on phone keyboard is annoying
- Easy to forget if you’re not in the habit
My Rating: 8 out of 10 – Don’t skip this. Mobile represents about 40% of your daily earning potential.
Nintendo Switch
There’s no direct Microsoft Rewards integration with Nintendo Switch. However, you can still use Microsoft gift cards to buy Robux through the Roblox website or app, then access that Robux on Switch.
My Rating: Not Applicable – Works for redemption only, not for earning points.
Every Mistake I Made (So You Don’t Have To)
Mistake #1: Expecting Immediate Results
Week one was brutal. I earned 890 points and thought “this is going to take forever to get anywhere meaningful.”
I almost quit on day 10.
The Fix: I stopped checking my daily point totals and started checking weekly totals instead. That mental shift made it feel progressive instead of stagnant. Suddenly I was seeing 1,200+ points per week, which felt substantial.
Mistake #2: Ignoring Mobile Searches for 2 Weeks
I cost myself roughly 840 points (60 points × 14 days) by not realizing mobile searches counted separately from PC searches.
I just assumed “searches are searches” and only did them on my computer.
The Fix: Set a phone reminder for lunch break. I created an alert that says “Do Bing searches” at 12:30 PM daily. Takes 3 minutes while I’m eating anyway.
Mistake #3: Breaking My Streak
Around week 3, I forgot to do searches for 3 days straight while I was visiting family. I lost a 150-point streak bonus that I’d been building up.
That hurt.
The Fix: Streak bonuses are huge. Even if you only have 2 minutes and can barely touch your phone, do the absolute bare minimum to keep the streak alive. Those bonus points compound over time.
Mistake #4: Spam Searching
Early on, I tried searching single letters like “a,” “b,” “c,” etc. just to hit my daily search count as fast as possible.
Points didn’t register for about half of them. Microsoft’s system is smarter than that and detects spam behavior.
The Fix: Search real things that you’d actually search anyway. It takes roughly the same amount of time and actually registers properly. I now search sports scores, weather, gaming tips, whatever I’m genuinely curious about.
Mistake #5: Believing “Instant Robux” Clickbait
Before I even started Microsoft Rewards, I wasted an entire evening trying three different “free Robux generator” websites.
Shocker: None of them worked. One of them tried to phish my Roblox account login.
The Fix: Microsoft Rewards is slow specifically because it’s legitimate. Anything promising fast, instant, or unlimited Robux is lying to you. Accept the slow grind or just buy Robux normally.
Is This Actually Worth Your Time?
Let’s do the brutally honest math here.
Time Investment:
- About 10 minutes per day on average
- Roughly 70 minutes per week
- Approximately 280 minutes (4.6 hours) per month
Return:
- Around 5,000 points per month at consistent daily activity
- That’s one $5 gift card, which translates to roughly 400-500 Robux after purchasing
Effective Hourly Rate:
- You’re earning about $1.08 per hour of effort
That’s… objectively not great if you’re thinking of this as a “side hustle” or job.
But here’s why I personally still do it:
When Microsoft Rewards Actually Makes Sense:
You already use Bing or Edge regularly
If you’re on a Windows PC and genuinely don’t have a strong preference between Google and Bing, this becomes almost passive. You’re searching anyway – might as well get points.
You game on Xbox frequently
Achievement points add up without any extra time investment. You’re playing games regardless – the points are just a bonus.
You’re a student or young person with more time than money
When you’re already sitting at your computer for hours daily, 10 extra minutes feels trivial. If you can’t easily work a regular job yet, this is legitimate free money.
You’d spend money on Robux anyway
Offsetting $5-10 per month feels psychologically better than spending $50-60 per month out of pocket. Even small savings add up.
You enjoy the routine and gamification
Some people (myself included) find the daily quest aspect satisfying. It scratches the same itch as login bonuses in games.
When Microsoft Rewards Doesn’t Make Sense:
You value your time highly
If you make $15+ per hour at a job, you’re better off just working one extra hour per month and buying Robux directly. The math is clear.
You want fast results for a specific purchase
This takes literal months to fund any meaningful Robux purchase. If you need 2,000 Robux next week for a limited item, this won’t help you.
You’re not on PC or Xbox regularly
Mobile-only earning is possible but painfully slow and tedious. You’ll burn out fast.
You don’t have the discipline for daily habits
If you can’t stick to a routine, you’ll miss too many days and the earning rate plummets. Consistency is everything here.
Troubleshooting Common Problems
“My points aren’t showing up after searches”
Wait 24-48 hours first. Points sometimes batch process rather than updating instantly.
If they’re still missing after 48 hours:
- Check your activity dashboard to see what registered
- Make absolutely sure you’re logged into the same Microsoft account
- Contact Microsoft Rewards support through their help page
“I can’t find the Robux redemption option”
You won’t find it – direct Robux redemption is region-specific and extremely rare.
The Solution: Redeem Microsoft or Xbox gift cards instead, then use that credit to purchase Robux normally through Roblox. It’s one extra step but works everywhere.
“My account got suspended or banned”
This usually happens if you:
- Used a VPN to fake your location
- Created multiple accounts to earn points faster
- Used automated clicking tools or bots
- Shared your account with others
- Searched too quickly in obvious spam patterns
The Fix: Contact Microsoft support directly. If you were genuinely violating their terms of service, they likely won’t reinstate your account. Learn from it and start fresh with one legitimate account.
“My searches aren’t counting toward the daily total”
Common causes I’ve experienced:
- Searching way too fast (the system flags it as robotic)
- Using the exact same search term repeatedly
- Not actually clicking into any search results
- Being logged out without realizing it
The Fix: Slow down deliberately. Click at least one search result per search to simulate real browsing. Vary your searches naturally. Double-check you’re logged in.
“Can I use Microsoft Rewards in my country?”
Microsoft Rewards is currently available in these countries:
United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Brazil, Mexico, Japan, India, and several others.
The specific gift card redemption options vary significantly by region. Some countries have more options than others.
Check the Microsoft Rewards website directly to see if your region is supported and what redemption options you’ll have access to.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Microsoft Rewards really give me Robux?
Yes, but indirectly. You earn points through searches and activities, redeem those points for Microsoft or Xbox gift cards, then use that gift card credit to buy Robux through Roblox normally. It’s completely legitimate but definitely slow.
Is this safe for my Roblox account?
Completely safe. You’re not connecting your Roblox account to any third-party service. You’re simply buying Robux through official channels using Microsoft account credit instead of a credit card. Roblox doesn’t even know you used Rewards points.
How long does it take to earn 400 Robux?
At average consistent earning rates of about 1,200-1,500 points per week, expect roughly 4-6 weeks to earn enough points for 400 Robux.
How long does it take to earn 800 Robux?
At the same consistent daily activity level, you’re looking at approximately 2-3 months for 800 Robux.
Can I get banned from Bing for doing this?
No, not as long as you search naturally like a real person. Don’t use bots, don’t use VPNs to fake your location, and don’t spam single-character searches. Just use Bing normally.
Do I need Xbox Game Pass to earn points?
No, Game Pass is not required. However, Game Pass subscribers do get access to bonus weekly quests worth an extra 100-500 points, so it definitely helps if you already have it.
Can I do this on iPhone or Android?
Yes, absolutely. Download the Bing app or Microsoft Edge app on your phone and do your mobile searches there. Points count exactly the same as on PC.
Can I stack multiple gift cards before buying Robux?
Yes. Your Microsoft account balance accumulates over time. I’ve personally stacked two $5 gift cards before buying a larger Robux package. The credit just sits there until you use it.
Does my region matter?
Yes, unfortunately. Redemption options vary significantly by country. US users typically have the most options available. Some countries only offer local store gift cards rather than Microsoft credit.
Check your regional Microsoft Rewards redemption page to see what’s available where you live.
What happens if I miss a day of searches?
You’ll lose that specific day’s potential points and you might break your streak bonus. However, nothing resets permanently – you can resume the next day and start rebuilding your streak.
Can kids under 18 use Microsoft Rewards?
Yes, but they need a Microsoft account (which requires parental permission for minors) and a way to redeem and use gift cards. Usually parents handle the actual redemption and Robux purchase part.
What’s better – Microsoft Rewards or Roblox Premium subscription?
They serve different purposes. Roblox Premium costs $4.99 monthly and gives you 450 Robux every month, plus trading abilities and a Premium discount on purchases.
Microsoft Rewards is completely free but much slower and requires daily effort.
I personally use both – Premium for consistent monthly Robux, and Rewards as a slow bonus on top.
Is there any way to earn points faster?
Not really, no. The daily point limits exist specifically to prevent system abuse. Your best strategy is focusing on consistency rather than trying to game the system for speed.
Do Microsoft Rewards points expire?
Points don’t expire as long as your Microsoft account remains active and you earn or redeem at least once every 18 months. I’ve had points sitting unused for several months without issues.
Can I gift Robux that I earned this way to friends?
Once you purchase Robux using Microsoft account credit, it becomes normal Robux in your account. You can gift it, trade with it, or spend it however you want – there’s zero difference from Robux bought any other way.
What if the gift card redemption fails?
Contact Microsoft Rewards support immediately with your redemption confirmation. They’re usually pretty responsive about fixing redemption issues, though it might take a few days.
Regional Availability and Redemption Options
Microsoft Rewards availability and redemption options vary significantly depending on where you live. Here’s what you need to know:
Fully Supported Regions with Microsoft/Xbox Gift Cards:
United States – Widest selection of redemption options including direct Xbox and Microsoft gift cards in multiple denominations.
United Kingdom – Full access to Microsoft and Xbox gift cards, slightly fewer redemption tier options than US.
Canada – Complete Microsoft gift card access, points-to-value ratio may vary slightly from US rates.
Australia – Full program access with local currency gift card options.
European Countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, etc.) – Available with regional gift cards in local currencies.
Limited or Alternative Redemption Regions:
Some countries have Microsoft Rewards available but don’t offer direct Microsoft or Xbox gift cards. Instead, you might see:
- Local retailer gift cards
- Charity donation options
- Sweepstakes entries
- Different digital store credits
Not Yet Available:
If you visit the Microsoft Rewards site and it redirects you or shows “not available in your region,” the program hasn’t launched there yet.
Important: Even in limited redemption regions, you can often find workarounds:
- Redeem points for other valuable gift cards
- Sell or trade those cards for cash or Microsoft credit
- Use that to purchase Robux
It’s extra steps, but technically possible in most cases.
Alternative Methods to Consider Alongside Microsoft Rewards
While you’re slowly earning through Microsoft Rewards, here are other legitimate methods to get Robux that I’ve tested:
Roblox Premium Subscription
Cost: $4.99, $9.99, or $19.99 monthly
Robux Received: 450, 1,000, or 2,200 monthly
This is honestly the best value if you play Roblox regularly. You get monthly Robux, trading abilities, and 10% bonus on all Robux purchases.
I combine Premium with Microsoft Rewards – Premium for consistent income, Rewards as a slow bonus.
Roblox Affiliate Program
If you have a YouTube channel, blog, or social media following, you can share Roblox links and earn Robux when people sign up or make purchases through your links.
This isn’t viable for most players, but if you already create content, it’s worth exploring.
Creating and Selling Items or Games
If you have development skills, you can:
- Create clothing items and sell them
- Build popular games and monetize with game passes
- Design accessories (requires Roblox Premium)
This requires actual skill and time investment, but successful creators earn substantial Robux.
Legitimate Giveaways
Occasionally, verified Roblox YouTubers or the official Roblox social media accounts run real giveaways.
Warning: 95% of “giveaways” are scams. Only trust official Roblox accounts or verified creators with established reputations.
What Doesn’t Work (And You Should Avoid):
Robux generators – 100% scams, will steal your account
“Free Robux” apps – Scams or malware
Survey sites promising Robux – Waste of time, often steal data
Third-party Robux sellers – Violates Roblox TOS, risks permanent ban
“Robux codes” from random websites – Fake, often phishing attempts
Microsoft Rewards is slow, but it’s one of the very few methods that’s actually legitimate and safe.
My Final Honest Take After 2 Months
Here’s where I’ve landed after testing this extensively:
Microsoft Rewards isn’t a replacement for buying Robux when you need it. It’s a supplement.
I still buy Robux directly when I need it immediately for a limited-time item or event. But knowing I’m earning $5-10 worth per month passively in the background makes those purchases feel less wasteful.
The critical mental shift that made this sustainable for me: Don’t treat Microsoft Rewards like a job or grind. Treat it exactly like a daily login bonus in a game you’re already playing.
If you’re on your PC anyway, if you use Edge or Bing already, if you genuinely have 10 spare minutes in your daily routine – it’s absolutely worth doing.
If you’re trying to “grind” your way to thousands of Robux quickly, you’ll burn out hard around week two and quit frustrated.
Set genuinely realistic expectations, stay consistent without stressing about it, and after a few months you’ll have funded a decent chunk of Robux without spending actual money.
That’s the real win here – not getting rich in Robux, but offsetting costs you’d pay anyway.
After 8 weeks, I’ve earned $8 in Microsoft credit (about 800 Robux) for roughly 8.6 hours of extremely low-effort activity spread across two months.
Is it life-changing? No.
Is it worth 10 minutes a day while I’m already on my computer? For me, yes.
Your mileage will vary based on your situation, but now you have the real data to decide for yourself.
FAQ
Q1: Can Microsoft Rewards really give me Robux?
A1: Yes, indirectly. You earn points through searches and activities, redeem those points for Microsoft or Xbox gift cards, then use that gift card credit to buy Robux through Roblox normally.
Q2: How long does it take to earn 400 Robux?
A2: At average consistent earning rates of about 1,200-1,500 points per week, expect roughly 4-6 weeks to earn enough points for 400 Robux.
Q3: Is this safe for my Roblox account?
A3: Completely safe. You’re not connecting your Roblox account to any third-party service. You’re simply buying Robux through official channels using Microsoft account credit.
Q4: How long does it take to earn 800 Robux?
A4: At consistent daily activity level, you’re looking at approximately 2-3 months for 800 Robux.
Q5: Can I do this on iPhone or Android?
A5: Yes, absolutely. Download the Bing app or Microsoft Edge app on your phone and do your mobile searches there.
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Written by John – Been gaming since the PS2 era, currently rotating between Roblox, Valorant, and whatever’s free on Epic this week. Still convinced the best games are the ones you play with friends, even if it’s just trading pets in Adopt Me with my little sister.






