The Items Leaderboard is RBX Invest's market screener: every tracked Roblox Limited - Classic and UGC - in one sortable, filterable table. Used well, it answers questions like "what's about to sell out?", "what's the cheapest way into Limiteds?", and "what actually trades every week?" This guide explains every column, every control, and the screener setups experienced traders run.
Every column, explained
| Column | What it means |
|---|---|
| RAP | Recent Average Price - the rolling average of recent sale prices for one copy. The market's consensus price. Full explainer: what is RAP? |
| Total Value | RAP × copies in circulation - the item's total market weight. The default ranking. |
| Price | The cheapest way to buy right now: the lowest resale listing, or the original store price while in-stock copies sell for less. A dash means the item can't be bought at this moment. |
| Copies | Total copies in circulation. |
| Left | Copies still unsold from the original stock (UGC Limiteds). Shows "Sold out" at zero, or the remaining count with a "% sold" figure. A dash means stock isn't tracked for that item (typical for Classics). |
| Vol (1d/7d/30d) | Number of sales in the selected window. |
| Sales (1d/7d/30d) | Robux traded in the selected window - volume × prices, effectively. |
| Growth | Percent change of RAP versus the item's original sale price. A dash means the original price isn't known. |
Two details worth knowing. First, the % sold figure is deliberately capped at 99% - an item only reads "Sold out" when it truly is, so 99% means "closest thing to sold out that isn't." Second, Vol and Sales both respect the Window toggle (1d / 7d / 30d, default 7d), so switching the window changes those two columns. If you're sorted by Volume or Sales Total, the ranking follows the window too - which is exactly what the liquidity screen below takes advantage of.
Sorting and filtering
Every metric is a sort pill: Total Value (the default), RAP, Price, Growth, Copies, Left, % Sold, Volume, and Sales Total. Click an active pill again to flip the direction. Two sorts default to ascending because that's the useful direction: Price (cheapest buyable first) and Left (closest to selling out first).
Filters sit alongside: All / Limiteds / UGC narrows by item type, In Stock shows only items still buyable from original stock, and the search box matches item names. Results page at 20 per row set.
Screener setups that earn their keep
These are starting points for research, not buy signals - always open the item page and check the chart, volume, and holder concentration before spending Robux. None of this is financial advice.
The sellout watch
Filter: UGC + In Stock. Sort: Left (ascending) - or % Sold descending, same idea. UGC Limiteds behave differently before and after selling out: while stock remains, the resale price is anchored by the original price; once the last copy sells, resale supply is all there is. Items sitting at 97-99% sold are the ones where that transition is imminent. Cross-check the Vol column - an item at 98% sold with real weekly volume has demand behind the sellout; one at 98% with zero sales has just been sitting there.
The liquidity screen
Sort: Volume (descending), window 7d. RAP is only trustworthy when sales actually happen. This view shows you where the market is active - items you can enter and exit without waiting weeks for a buyer. If you plan to flip rather than hold, restrict your universe to items that appear high on this sort. Flip the window to 1d to see what's moving today, or 30d for the steadier picture.
The value screen
Sort: Price (ascending), filter In Stock or All. The cheapest buyable Limiteds. Useful for building a starter portfolio, but read the Growth column skeptically here - cheap items with deeply negative growth are cheap for a reason. Pair with volume: cheap and traded beats cheap and dead.
The momentum screen
Sort: Growth (descending). What has appreciated most against its original price. Two cautions: growth is measured from the original price, so old Classics with tiny issue prices dominate the top and that's history, not momentum - and a huge growth number on thin volume can be a projected item. Use this sort to find candidates, then verify the shape of the RAP curve on the item page. Smooth climbs are earned; vertical spikes are usually manufactured.
The blue-chip list
Sort: Total Value (descending) - the default view. The biggest items by market weight are the market's blue chips: deepest ownership, most price history, generally the most stable. When you want to park Robux somewhere boring, start at the top of this list.
From leaderboard to item page
The leaderboard finds candidates; the item page qualifies them. Click any row and check three things:
- The RAP trend - is the price history smooth or spiky? Does volume confirm the moves?
- Holder distribution - if the top 10 holders control most of the supply, a single whale decides the price, not the market.
- Related items - the "similar RAP" section shows what else your Robux buys at that price point; sometimes the better deal is one row over.
If you're hunting for listings below RAP rather than researching items, that's a different tool - the Snags feed does it live.
FAQ
Why does an item show a dash in the Price column?
The item can't be bought right now - no resale listing, and no original stock available. It still has a RAP from past sales, which also means a seller entering at any reasonable price becomes the floor.
What's the difference between Volume and Sales?
Volume counts transactions; Sales counts Robux. An item with volume 40 and small sales is trading cheap copies frequently; an item with volume 3 and huge sales moved a few expensive copies. Both matter: volume tells you liquidity, sales tells you where the money is.
Why is % sold capped at 99%?
So "Sold out" stays meaningful. An item at 499 of 500 copies sold displays 99%, and only flips to "Sold out" when the last copy goes.
Why do some items show no Growth?
Growth compares RAP to the item's original price, and for some items - especially older ones - the original price isn't on record. No original price, no growth figure.
How current is the leaderboard?
The table is served from a cache refreshed every few minutes. For second-by-second price action on specific listings, use Snags; for your own listings, the Reseller Terminal.