One of the most common questions from FiveM server owners is whether premium scripts are worth the cost over free alternatives. The honest answer: it depends on the script and your server's needs. Free scripts from trusted developers can be excellent, while some premium scripts aren't worth their price. This comparison helps you understand what you're actually paying for and when each option makes sense.
| Factor | Free Scripts | Premium Scripts |
|---|---|---|
| Code quality | Variable (check GitHub activity) | Generally higher (reputation at stake) |
| Support | Community forums / Discord (slow) | Direct developer support (usually faster) |
| Updates | Irregular (depends on developer) | Regular (incentivized) |
| Security | Review code before use | Usually audited, escrow protected |
| Documentation | Often minimal | Usually comprehensive |
| Customization | Full access (open source) | Varies (escrow may limit access) |
| Feature depth | Basic to moderate | Advanced features common |
| Obfuscated code | Rare | Sometimes (Tebex escrow) |
| Cost | Free | $5–$200+ per script |
| Risk | Abandoned scripts, malware risk | Low (reputable platforms) |
Many excellent free scripts exist — ox_lib, ox_inventory, and ox_target are free, open-source, and power thousands of top-tier servers. For common functionality with established open-source alternatives, paying for a premium version is often unnecessary. GitHub is full of quality free scripts for basic jobs, HUDs, and utilities. The key is verifying the script's activity, code quality, and community reputation before installing it on your server.
Premium scripts from reputable developers usually provide more features, better performance optimization, and ongoing support. A premium police script might include evidence systems, MDT integration, body camera mechanics, and 24/7 developer support — features that would take months to build from free scripts. The real value is in the time saved and the polish of the final product.
Free scripts from untrusted sources are a real security risk — malicious scripts have been distributed on unofficial Discord servers that log player data or grant backdoor access. Always download free scripts from GitHub repositories with verifiable history, or from vetted platforms. Premium scripts on trusted marketplaces like VertexMods are reviewed before listing, reducing (but not eliminating) security risk.
Many premium FiveM scripts use Tebex escrow, which obfuscates the code and ties the license to your server. This protects developers but limits your ability to customize or inspect the code. When evaluating a premium script, check if it uses escrow and what customization is possible through config files. Open-source premium scripts (licensed, not escrowed) offer the best of both worlds — quality code you can fully modify.
Use free scripts for foundational, open-source resources with strong community backing (ox_lib, ox_inventory, etc.). Invest in premium scripts for features where quality, support, and regular updates matter — complex systems like police jobs, housing, or custom frameworks where poor code quality has visible impact on players. The best servers typically use a mix: free frameworks and utilities, premium scripts for flagship features.
Free scripts from reputable GitHub repositories and trusted community developers are generally safe. Avoid scripts shared on unofficial Discord servers without a public GitHub, as malicious scripts do exist. Always review the code or use a trusted platform.
Premium FiveM scripts typically range from $5 for simple scripts to $200+ for complex systems like full police job overhauls or premium MLOs. Most quality scripts fall in the $15–$60 range.
Generally yes. Premium script developers are financially motivated to maintain their scripts and push updates for new FiveM versions. Free scripts depend entirely on the developer's time and interest, which can be inconsistent.
Tebex escrow obfuscates a script's code and ties the license to your server's IP or key. You can run the script but cannot read or modify the protected code. Config files remain accessible. Scripts sold on VertexMods are clearly labeled with their license type.