15 ways to earn Diamonds in Free Fire for free

Honest methods to collect free Diamonds in Garena Free Fire — and which offers are best avoided

Wondering how to get Diamonds in Garena Free Fire without spending real money? It sounds too good to be true, but there are legitimate ways to build a small balance that you can turn into Diamonds. One thing up front: Free Fire is available worldwide on Google Play and the Apple App Store, so you can sign up and top up from pretty much anywhere.

Garena Free Fire is one of the most popular mobile battle-royale games in the world, and the chances are good that you play it too. Free-to-play, however, doesn't mean free of charge: if you want skins, characters and other extras, you usually have to buy Diamonds, the game's premium currency.

That's exactly why this guide exists. Below you'll find apps, sites and methods that let you, step by step, build a balance you can convert into Diamonds for Free Fire.

The basic pattern is almost always the same: install an app, create an account, complete a few tasks, collect points and turn that virtual money into real credit on Google Play, the App Store or another store, which you then spend on Diamonds. Many of these apps give you a starting bonus when you sign up, and reward you extra when you invite friends.

Garena Free Fire character selection screen and lobby before a battle-royale match
Contents 15

What are Diamonds in Free Fire?

Diamonds, affectionately nicknamed "dimas" by the community, are Free Fire's premium currency. You use them to buy skins, characters and other exclusive items. Diamonds can only be obtained with real money, and they don't change how the battle-royale mode itself plays out.

How much does a Diamond cost? In the original Brazilian pricing referenced in the source article, a pack of 100 to 200 Diamonds costs around R$ 9 (Brazilian reais, roughly a couple of US dollars at recent rates), while a smaller pack of 1 to 99 Diamonds costs about R$ 4.39 on Android. The exact prices in your local currency are shown inside the in-game shop and on the Google Play or App Store listing, and they change with every regional promotion.

As is common in free-to-play titles, the more Diamonds you buy in a single pack, the bigger the discount. Unfortunately, Diamonds are not cheap, which is the whole reason you're reading this: to learn how to earn them for free.

In-game Diamond recharge price list showing different pack sizes and their cost in Brazilian reais
Diamond recharge packs and their prices in the original Brazilian store.

Fake Diamond codes and 'generators'

Some of the most heavily advertised "free Diamond" tricks involve entering codes from shady websites or installing apps that claim to generate Diamonds out of thin air. Stay away from all of them.

Websites that share "working codes" or promise thousands of Diamonds in Free Fire usually fall into one of two traps: they want to phish your account, or they make you fill out a long questionnaire, watch ads, and complete offer after offer — only for you to end up with nothing in the game and a wasted afternoon.

Every app or program that claims to add high-value Diamonds to your account only modifies the numbers on your device. The real balance lives on the game's server, and Garena has no way of syncing with a third-party generator. Posts and videos that share "fresh codes" almost always invent fake strings just to drive traffic to ad-laden pages.

A few people do win small rewards on reward sites that list real promotions, but it's a matter of luck, not a reliable method. Treat every site that calls itself a "Free Fire Diamond generator" as a scam. There's no such thing as a working generator, and handing over your login or completing sketchy offers only exposes you to identity theft and malware.

Real codes from Garena

Genuine redemption codes do exist, and they can reward you with skins or small in-game items. Garena releases them on its official social channels and inside official events, and they expire fast. A few codes that circulated when this article was first written:

  • F29X030YXQ2U
  • TGJ2VD5P1EYC
  • 46NUM6AHQ2G0
  • RR69HFOX8075
  • ADD2BCL4KKE5

By now, most of them will be invalid. To redeem a current code, open Free Fire, go to the profile menu, tap the Diamond icon, choose "Redeem code," paste it in and confirm. If a code is expired, the game will simply tell you.

Garena Free Fire key art showing characters and the Free Fire logo on a dark background

Earn Diamonds with Kwai and TikTok

A few social networks pay users for inviting friends to sign up or for completing in-app goals. Convert that small balance into Google Play or App Store credit and you can spend it on Diamonds in Free Fire.

It looks slow on paper, but inviting a handful of friends and family takes a few minutes. Some creators make a decent side income this way. Most of these apps reward both the inviter and the person who joins through the link.

Download Kwai and TikTok, then enter a referral code in the app's earnings or "invite friends" panel (usually a small coin icon) before you complete the first task. The codes below were shared by the original article's author; they're optional, and the apps work the same way without them. They mainly exist so that, in a small way, the original writer is credited if you find the guide useful.

  • Kwai referral code: 343 591 162 (optional)
  • TikTok creator code: J9082637868 (optional)

Once you're set up, you can grab your own referral code from the same panel and invite other people, earning credit that you can top up into Google Play or the App Store and use to buy Diamonds.

Smartphone showing the TikTok app icon and the creator rewards screen on a purple background

Dreame: earn Diamonds by reading e-books

Most reward apps make you download other apps or answer surveys. Dreame takes a different route: you earn Diamonds — or, more precisely, the app's own currency, which you can later convert into gift cards — simply by reading chapters of e-books. If you actually enjoy reading, this one is hard to beat.

The library is full of novels, romance, horror and poetry, often from smaller and indie authors. You can also pick up extra balance by referring new users and by completing other in-app activities.

Dreame also has a roulette-style giveaway: you spend in-app coins to spin, and you can either multiply your earnings or lose them. Treat the wheel like a slot machine — only bet what you've already earned and can afford to lose. Otherwise, your Diamond fund can quickly turn into a deficit.

Earn Diamonds as a freelancer

If you're willing to put in actual work, signing up on freelance platforms is the most reliable way to build a real balance that you can later spend on Free Fire. People hire freelancers for everything from YouTube thumbnail design to blog writing, logo design and translation.

You'll find dozens of freelance platforms that pay in USD, EUR or local currency. If you've ever thought about earning money online, this is one of the most realistic ways to do it: you build a small portfolio, deliver a few jobs, and reinvest the first payouts into Diamonds or anything else you want.

Freelance platforms that pay in international currency

  • Upwork
  • Fiverr
  • Freelancer.com
  • Toptal
  • Guru
  • TaskRabbit
  • Simply Hired
  • Aquent
  • Designhill
  • PeoplePerHour
  • 99designs (international contests)

A few platforms that the original article listed — Workana, 99Freelas, ComunicaGeral, GetNinjas, Nexxt, Crowded, 20 Pila — are aimed at Latin American freelancers and require a Brazilian tax ID (CPF) or a Latin American bank account. If you live in Brazil, they're worth exploring; if you don't, skip them and stick to the international names above.

Aerial view of one of Free Fire's playable maps, showing buildings, terrain and landmarks
One of the playable maps in Free Fire.

Peoople: earn Diamonds by sharing recommendations

Peoople is one of the more original apps on this list: a recommendations platform where you suggest movies, books, restaurants, products and pretty much anything else, and your followers vote, like or comment. If you already share a lot of this on social media, you might as well get paid a little for it.

To start earning in Peoople, you level up by completing a few small tasks: 20 likes on your recommendations, 10 followers, 5 days of using the app, a profile picture, 5 invited friends and 2 collections. Once you reach level 2, your points start converting into real credit that you can withdraw.

Peoople app screen showing recommendation cards with titles, covers and like counts

Beyond the level-up tasks, you can keep earning by suggesting new books, places and products, by referring friends, and by promoting affiliate offers inside the app.

Google Opinion Rewards: earn Diamonds by completing surveys

Google Opinion Rewards is the safest survey app on this list because it's an official Google product. There's no risk of your data being sold to spammy third parties, and the surveys are short, usually under a minute.

Like other survey apps, it pays you in credit that you can spend in Google Play, which you can then use to top up Free Fire. The app is straightforward: there's a wallet icon that shows your current balance, and a button to take a new survey. Answer the first one well and Google tends to send you more.

On iOS, Google Opinion Rewards is also available in many regions and pays out in PayPal cash, which you can then move into the App Store balance or use anywhere else.

Foap: earn Diamonds by selling photos

Ever imagined earning Diamonds in Free Fire just by taking photos? Foap is a stock-photo marketplace for people who actually enjoy photography, and it's one of the few apps in this guide that can pay a meaningful amount for a single image.

Foap works on iOS and Android. You upload your photos, tag them, and other users or brands can buy them. Each accepted photo sells for at least $10, and Foap runs frequent "missions" where brands ask for specific kinds of shots (street style, food, lifestyle, product) and pay more for the winners.

You can upload photos from your travels, your city, your pets, food, fashion — anything that brands and small businesses might want to use on websites or social media. Good tags and a clean description help your photos surface in search. Payouts are usually via PayPal, which you can move into Google Play, the App Store or any prepaid card and then use to buy Diamonds.

Big Time and Hago: earn Diamonds by playing

Big Time is a mobile game that wraps several mini-games together. You collect points and can either exchange them for cash or use them in weekly raffles. Cashing out is the safer choice, because raffles are pure luck.

The minimum withdrawal is 10 USD, which costs 10,000 points. Payouts go through PayPal, so you can move the money into your store balance of choice and buy Diamonds from there.

Hago app screen showing a list of mini-games and reward points

Hago: grow a virtual tree

Hago's tree mini-game is the tamagotchi version of a money plant. You take care of a sapling — water it, fertilize it, log in regularly — and the tree grows, paying out small amounts as it does. It's oddly calming if you like idle games.

Water for your tree is earned by completing missions or playing Hago's other mini-games, so you don't need to spend money to keep it alive. The payouts are tiny but steady, and you can compound them by inviting friends, who then help fill the in-game wallet faster.

Hago app showing a growing virtual tree with water and fertilizer icons

Cashzine: earn Diamonds by reading news

Cashzine pays you small amounts for opening and reading news articles inside the app. The honest version of the trick: you don't actually have to read the article. You open it, let the timer run, and collect the coins. Skim the headlines if you want; if the topic interests you, the article is right there.

Cashzine also has a social layer where you can comment, like and follow other users, and you can pick up extra coins by inviting friends or completing small tasks. Payouts are usually through PayPal or gift cards, and the app is available on both Android and iOS — search for "Cashzine" on the Play Store or App Store.

Other ways to earn Diamonds for free

After going through the apps above, the honest takeaway is simple: nothing is instant. You'll need to spend real time — answering surveys, uploading photos, completing small jobs — to build a balance you can convert into Diamonds. Any site that promises to skip that work with a "Diamond generator" is a scam designed to make money from ads and shady offers.

Beyond the apps already covered, there are many more services that pay in USD or your local currency, including cashback, micro-investing, gig work and reading apps. Some of the names that come up most often:

  • Swagbucks
  • Toluna
  • iPoll
  • Userfeel
  • Slidejoy
  • ClipClaps
  • Rakuten (cashback)
  • eBay (reselling)
  • OfferUp
  • Bookscouter
  • Sweatcoin
  • Acorns
  • Money App
  • Fluid Market
  • S'more
  • Craigslist (gig listings)
  • Uber / Lyft (driving)

Some of these — Sweatcoin, Acorns, Craigslist and Uber, in particular — work fully or mostly only in the US and a handful of other countries, so check availability in your region before signing up.

A quick safety checklist

Before you install any of these apps, a few rules of thumb:

  • Never pay to join. Legit reward apps are free to download and free to use. If an app asks for a "registration fee" or "activation fee," close it.
  • Never share your Free Fire password. Garena will never ask for it outside the official app. If any third-party site asks for your login, it's a phishing attempt.
  • Be careful with apps that ask for a Brazilian CPF or Pix-only withdrawal. Those are region-locked to Brazil and won't pay out to international users.
  • Skip every "Free Fire Diamond generator." There is no such thing, and they only exist to make money from ads and stolen data.
  • Referral codes are optional. The apps in this guide (and the codes from the original author) work the same way with or without them.

Stick to that short list and you'll save yourself most of the headaches that usually come with this kind of side hustle. The Diamonds will arrive — just not as fast as the clickbait thumbnails promise.

Sources
Kevin Henrique

About the author: Kevin Henrique

Specialist with more than 10 years of experience in Asian culture, focused on Japan, Korea, anime and games. Self-taught writer and traveler focused on teaching Japanese, travel tips and deep, engaging curiosities.

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