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Selling Dofus Kamas: How Much Does It Pay in 2026?

27/06/2026 · By the Botify editorial team · 7 min read
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Selling Dofus kamas can pay a few dozen euros per million depending on the server, but it's neither illegal nor risk-free: no French law bans it, while Ankama's terms of use prohibit it, which exposes your account to a ban. If you're wondering how much selling kamas pays in 2026 and whether it's worth it, this guide gives you the real math: price per million, legality, ban risk, and the alternative that generates income with no terms to break.

How does selling kamas work?

The principle is simple: you stack kamas (the currency of Dofus) by playing or farming, then resell them to other players for real money. The transaction goes through:

  • a buyback platform (specialized sites that buy then resell),
  • or a direct sale to another player (riskier: scams are frequent).

The in-game transfer happens via a trade, a marketplace sale or an agreed drop. You get a "price per million kamas" that depends on the server, the game version and current demand.

Selling kamas: how much per million in 2026?

That's the real question. The price per million kamas isn't fixed: it moves with supply and demand, the server and the version (Unity, Retro, Touch). Here are orders of magnitude observed in 2026, for reference:

FactorEffect on price
Heavily populated serverLower price per million (abundant supply)
Niche / Retro serverOften higher price (scarcity)
Event / update periodDemand climbs, price rises
Bulk salePrice per million drops (volume discount)
The price per million at buyback platforms is always lower than the resale price shown to buyers: the middleman's margin is your discount. You sell for less than the final buyer pays.

In practice, for an average player, selling your stock once brings a one-off top-up, not a salary. Intensive farming to live off it implies multi-accounting or bots — and that's where the trouble starts. For the detail of real farming gains, read how much a Dofus bot pays.

You have to separate two things: the law and the terms of use.

  • On the law side: there's no French law criminalizing the resale of game currency for real money. Selling kamas is therefore not a criminal offense in itself. It's a form of real-money trading, a widespread practice across many MMOs.
  • On the terms side: Ankama explicitly bans it. The penalty is therefore not judicial but contractual — the closure of your account.

In other words: you don't risk court, you risk your account. And a banned account means years of progress and purchases erased.

What are the risks of selling kamas?

Beyond the ban, selling kamas concentrates several risks:

  • Account ban: Ankama primarily targets professional farmers and mass resellers (dozens of accounts, bots), but a player can be caught too.
  • Scams: in a direct sale, the buyer may never pay, or the platform may vanish with your kamas.
  • Traceability: large, sudden transfers attract the attention of anti-fraud systems.
  • Discount: you always sell below market price, the middleman takes their margin.

To understand how detection works and what triggers ban waves, read Dofus bots and ban detection.

Selling kamas vs automating music income

Selling kamas means monetizing a currency you don't really own: Ankama keeps control and can erase everything. By contrast, a music catalog is an asset you own, paid officially on every stream. The comparison is stark:

CriterionSelling kamasAuto streaming (Botify)
FrameworkBanned by Ankama's termsRoyalties paid by contract
RiskAccount ban (total loss)Near zero
Recurring incomeNo (one-shot or risky farm)Yes (catalog that runs)
Asset ownedNo (publisher's currency)Yes (your catalog)
CeilingLimited by server / demandMulti-platform, global

The right-hand column is what Botify embodies: recurring income, near-zero risk, on a resource you own. Where selling kamas rests on a revocable gray market, streaming rests on income set by contract.

The alternative: automate income without breaking any terms

Music streaming solves exactly what selling kamas breaks. No revocable currency, no terms to break, no platform that can vanish with your stock. You produce (or commission) a catalog once, and it generates income as long as it runs — that's the principle of passive income through botting applied to a legitimate asset.

Above all, the resource is paid officially: every stream past 30 seconds triggers a royalty. Where selling kamas depends on a buyer, a platform and Ankama's tolerance, a streamed track pays a known amount, with no middleman taking a margin.

How to automate music income instead?

Here's the trap that sinks creators: they have the asset… and wait. Without traction, a catalog stays invisible — no algorithm, no playlists, no income. The catalog sleeps, exactly like an unsold kamas stock pays nothing.

The difference between a catalog earning €50/month and one earning €2,000/month isn't the gear: it's the stream volume you keep up. Algorithms reward consistency. But pushing dozens of tracks by hand, every day, is humanly impossible.

Botify is built to break that lock: turning a dormant catalog into a revenue machine. The tool runs all your tracks continuously, 24/7, with 100% human listening behavior — variable durations, dedicated proxies, gradual ramp-up — so each track keeps generating royalties without you spending your days on it. Where selling kamas exposes you to a ban and a discount, Botify works in the background on a resource paid by contract. The same "stay under the radar" reflex detailed in botting without getting banned, but applied to an asset no one can erase.

Selling kamas can get your Dofus account closed overnight. A maintained catalog keeps paying even while you sleep — as long as you keep the stream volume up.

Frequently asked questions

How much does selling kamas pay in 2026?

It depends on the server, the version and demand: the price per million moves constantly. For a player, selling your stock once brings a one-off top-up, not regular income. Living off kamas farming implies multi-accounting or bots, so a high ban risk.

Is selling kamas illegal?

Not in the criminal sense: no French law bans it. However, it's banned by Ankama's terms of use, which exposes your account to a ban. The risk is contractual, not judicial.

Do you risk a ban selling kamas?

Yes. Ankama mainly targets professional farmers and mass resellers, but a player can also be sanctioned, especially on large or repeated transfers. The penalty goes as far as permanent account closure.

Which platform sells kamas safely?

None eliminates the ban risk, since it comes from the game's terms, not the platform. Serious buyback sites limit payment-side scams, but always make you sell below market price (their margin).

Is there a way to make money without risking your account?

Yes: generate income on an officially paid resource, like a music catalog. You own the asset, it's paid by contract on every stream, and no game's terms can take it away.

In summary

Selling Dofus kamas in 2026 pays a variable top-up depending on the server and demand, but the real math includes a discount (the middleman's margin) and above all a ban risk: it's not illegal under the law, it's banned by Ankama's terms. You're monetizing a currency you don't own, on a revocable gray market. By contrast, a maintained music catalog is an asset you own, paid officially on every stream, with no terms to break. If the goal is genuine recurring income, automating a catalog's stream volume beats selling kamas on every metric that matters — that's exactly the role of Botify.

Join the Botify community

Hundreds of artists and creators already automate their streams with Botify. Join the Discord, ask your questions, and start with the right settings.

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