Create a Job - QBCore Guide for FiveM
Introduction
This tutorial turns Guide: Create a Job into a clean, developer-friendly guide for QBCore/FiveM. You will follow a step-by-step flow, copy the relevant code patterns, and learn the “why” behind the setup.
Requirements
- QBCore installed and running on a dev server
- Basic Lua knowledge and comfort reading FiveM patterns
- A test workflow for iterating safely (dev server, not production)
- Optional: a code editor with Lua/FiveM helpers (VS Code recommended)
Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1: Steps
In this step, you will apply the steps concept as a practical change: define the pieces, wire them together, then verify the behavior in your dev server.
Step 2: Verification
In this step, you will apply the verification concept as a practical change: define the pieces, wire them together, then verify the behavior in your dev server.
Step 3: Next Steps
In this step, you will apply the next steps concept as a practical change: define the pieces, wire them together, then verify the behavior in your dev server.
Step 4: Practical development implementation
In this step, you will apply the practical development implementation concept as a practical change: define the pieces, wire them together, then verify the behavior in your dev server.
Code Example
QBShared.Jobs['delivery'] = {
label = 'Delivery',
defaultDuty = true,
grades = {
['0'] = { name = 'rookie', payment = 200 },
}
}Tips & Best Practices
- Keep authority on the server: validate inputs before money/database operations.
- Start with one resource/module at a time, then refactor after you verify it works.
- Use callbacks for request/response flows and events for push/UX updates.
- When you run loops, avoid freezes: always yield with Wait() (client/server) and cache hot values.