Last checked: May 29, 2026
Bloxburg has racked up nearly 9.88 billion visits and an 88% positive rating for good reason — the job system is actually fun to grind. But not every job is worth your time, and after update 0.12.6 tied pay to your overall work level (capped at 100), the gap between top and bottom earners got even wider. This tier list covers every job available in 2026, ranked on how much they pay, how fast tasks complete, and how practical they are for real grinding sessions.
Since update 0.12.6, your per-task pay scales with your overall work level rather than a job-specific level. That means every hour you put into any job pushes your pay upward, all the way to level 100. It also means the early grind is slower than it used to be — don't expect to walk into Pizza Planet and pull $3,000 per delivery on day one.
Your mood is the other big variable. Keep every mood stat above 81% and you earn 100% of base pay. Let anything drop to 50–81% and you're working at 85%. Below 51% and you're down to 70%. Those cuts add up fast over a long session. A basic mood station — a cooler plus a shower — costs somewhere between 10,000 and 15,000 in-game dollars to build and pays for itself quickly.
The Excellent Employee gamepass costs 300 Robux and gives you 50% more cash per task plus faster promotion gains. It's the most impactful single purchase in the game, especially if you're going to grind Pizza Delivery seriously. The Marvelous Mood gamepass at 180 Robux halves mood decay, which matters most for players who don't want to micromanage moods between tasks.
There's one job at the top and it isn't close. Pizza Delivery at Pizza Planet is the fastest earner in Bloxburg by a significant margin. At work level 1 you're making $25 per delivery ($44 with Excellent Employee). By level 50 that climbs to $3,000–$4,000 per delivery. The ceiling is what makes this job stand apart from everything else on the list.
The mechanics are straightforward. You pick up a pizza, mount your moped, and follow the yellow arrow on your screen to the delivery address. Drop off, collect your pay, repeat. Each completed delivery also awards double promo points compared to most other jobs, so your work level climbs faster here too — which feeds back into higher pay per delivery sooner.
Speed is the core advantage. Most other jobs have you standing still or walking slowly through a task animation. Pizza Delivery has you moving across the map constantly. The faster you ride, the more deliveries per session. With Excellent Employee active and all moods above 81%, no other job comes within range of what Pizza Delivery earns per hour at high levels.
Cashier at Bloxburg Fresh Food is one of the most consistent jobs in the game. At level 1 you're earning $15 per customer ($40 with Excellent Employee). The task loop is simple: scan items as they appear on your station and bag them when done. There's no movement required beyond standing at your register.
The appeal here is the low mental load. You don't need to navigate anywhere, learn a complex system, or chase timers. It's a good choice when you want to grind and watch something on a second screen. The income ceiling is lower than Pizza Delivery, but the consistency is excellent and the tasks complete at a steady pace.
The Mechanic role is probably the most underrated job in Bloxburg. At level 1 you earn $49 per fix — the highest base rate of any job at that level. Tasks are stationary, which means you're not dealing with navigation at all. You work at a medium task speed, fix the vehicle, collect pay, and wait for the next one.
It doesn't scale as dramatically as Pizza Delivery at high levels, but the solid base pay makes it genuinely useful early in a playthrough. If you're new to the game and haven't built your work level yet, Mechanic will earn you more per task than almost anything else available.
The Bloxy Burgers Cashier role adds a layer of complexity that the Fresh Food Cashier doesn't have. You're taking fast food orders from a menu system, which means you need to read and process each order correctly before it counts. Pay ranges from $8 to $16 per order, with Excellent Employee pushing that higher.
The order system keeps you mentally engaged, which some players prefer over repetitive scanning. If you get into a rhythm with it, the income is comparable to the Fresh Food Cashier. Mistakes cost you time though, so it rewards players who pay attention.
The Janitor role has a surprisingly strong income ceiling — over $1,000 per minute at work level 40. The catch is task speed. Cleaning animations are noticeably slower than delivery or cashier tasks, so you're completing fewer tasks per session. At lower levels the pay feels sluggish compared to other options.
It lands in B tier rather than A because of that slow early period. Once you're at level 40 or above, the numbers get genuinely competitive, but you'll grind through an underwhelming stretch to get there. If you're patient and already have a decent work level, it's worth considering.
Fishing starts at $13 per catch at level 1, climbing to $44 with Excellent Employee. The pace is intentionally relaxed — you cast, wait, reel in. It's a genuinely enjoyable job if you want a low-pressure session, and the fishing spots in Bloxburg look great.
The trade-off is straightforward: you're spending time waiting between catches that you could be spending on Pizza Delivery. For pure earning efficiency it's a step down. For actually enjoying your session, it's one of the better picks on the list.
The Pizza Chef role at Pizza Planet is essentially the kitchen side of the delivery operation. You're cooking and assembling pizzas rather than delivering them. The pay is decent and the tasks are straightforward, but the bottleneck is speed. Cooking animations take longer than driving a delivery route at a high level.
It shares the same workplace as Pizza Delivery, so switching between the two is easy. Most players who want to work at Pizza Planet pick Delivery because of the speed advantage, but the Chef role is a perfectly solid B-tier fallback if delivery spots are crowded or you want variety.
Mining in the Bloxburg Cave has the most variable income of any job on this list. You tap blocks with an axe and the payout depends on the type of block you hit. Common stone pays less; rarer materials pay more. A good mining run can be surprisingly profitable. A run where you mostly hit low-value blocks is disappointing.
The inconsistency is what keeps it out of A tier. You can't plan your earnings around it the way you can with Cashier or Mechanic. It's also a solo experience away from the main town, which some players enjoy and others find isolating.
The Hairdresser job at Stylez Hair Studio is one of the more creative roles in Bloxburg. You style and color customer hair using an in-game tool set. It's genuinely fun to play around with, and the roleplay potential is high if you're playing with friends.
The pay rate doesn't match the time investment for pure grinding purposes. Task completion is slower than most jobs and the per-task income is on the lower end. It's a C-tier earner that earns its place because the experience itself has value — just not the Robux-making kind.
Serving ice cream orders is one of the simpler task loops in the game. You fulfill order requests from customers at the ice cream stand. The problem is pay per task is consistently low, and the task speed isn't fast enough to compensate through volume.
It's a good job for very new players who want to learn the work system without being overwhelmed, but once you understand the game, you'll move on quickly. There's no scenario where Ice Cream Worker outpaces any B or A tier option.
Woodcutting is the slowest earner in Bloxburg. You chop trees at the Lumberyard and collect wood, which pays out a modest amount per tree. The animation is long, the pay is low, and there's no version of this job that becomes competitive at higher work levels.
The Woodcutter role exists for players who want a calm, repetitive experience in a nice outdoor setting. If that's what you're after, there's nothing wrong with it. If you're trying to save up for a house upgrade, pick anything above it on this list.
Stocking shelves as an Inventory Manager is the most tedious job in the game for the pay it offers. You walk items from a stockroom to designated shelf spots. The walking time between trips eats into your earnings per minute, and the base pay doesn't justify the movement overhead.
It's not a broken job — it works exactly as described. It just doesn't compete with the upper tiers on any metric that matters for progression.
| Tier | Job | Pay at Level 1 | Pay at Level 50+ | Task Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | Pizza Delivery | $25 ($44 w/ EE) | $3,000–$4,000/delivery | Very Fast |
| A | Cashier (Fresh Food) | $15 ($40 w/ EE) | High | Fast |
| A | Mechanic | $49/fix | Medium-High | Medium |
| A | Bloxy Burgers Cashier | $8–$16/order | Medium-High | Fast |
| B | Janitor | Low | >$1,000/min at lvl 40 | Slow |
| B | Fisherman | $13 ($44 w/ EE) | Medium | Slow |
| B | Pizza Chef | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| B | Miner | Variable | Variable | Medium |
| C | Hairdresser | Low | Low-Medium | Slow |
| C | Ice Cream Worker | Low | Low | Medium |
| C | Woodcutter | Very Low | Very Low | Very Slow |
| C | Inventory Manager | Low | Low | Slow |
Every job on this list was ranked on three criteria: pay per task at key work levels, task completion speed, and how manageable the job is over a sustained session. A job that pays well but takes three times as long to complete each task won't beat a moderate payer with quick task cycles.
We also factored in the mood multiplier system. Jobs that let you stay near an NPC station or at a fixed location are easier to maintain good moods on than jobs that send you across the map repeatedly. Pizza Delivery is an exception — the speed of deliveries means you're always earning at a high clip even accounting for the movement overhead.
Gamepasses were noted but not required. The rankings reflect vanilla gameplay. If you have Excellent Employee, every job moves up in absolute dollar terms, but the relative order stays roughly the same — Pizza Delivery still wins, Woodcutter still loses.
Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing tasks — no surveys, no catch. The Excellent Employee gamepass costs 300 Robux. That's well within reach with a few sessions on the platform.
If you want to go deeper on Bloxburg strategy, the Welcome to Bloxburg hub covers everything from starter tips to house building. The Bloxburg vs. Brookhaven RP comparison is worth reading if you're deciding where to spend your time. And if you want to try the game yourself, you can find it directly on Roblox.
Pizza Delivery is the best job for making money fast. At level 50 you earn $3,000–$4,000 per delivery, and with the Excellent Employee gamepass that climbs even higher. The speed of each task is what sets it apart from every other job.
Yes. At 300 Robux it gives you 50% more cash per task and faster promotions. On Pizza Delivery that 50% bonus compounds quickly because you're completing a high volume of deliveries per session.
Your pay scales with your moods. Keep all moods above 81% and you earn 100% of base pay. Drop to 50–81% and you only get 85%. Fall below 51% and you're down to 70%. Keeping moods topped up is just as important as picking the right job.
The work level cap is 100. Since update 0.12.6, pay scales with your overall work level, so grinding a single job to max level is the most efficient path to top earnings.
At 180 Robux, Marvelous Mood halves the rate at which your moods decay. It's a good buy if you grind long sessions without mood management. Paired with a mood station — a cooler plus shower for around 10,000–15,000 in-game dollars — it keeps you at full pay for much longer stretches.
They're fine if you want a relaxed session or you enjoy the aesthetic, but they're genuinely the slowest earners in the game. If money is your goal, skip them. If you just want to vibe, they're perfectly playable.