How to sell contraband in Starfield

Don't get caught with these items.

Image of a night club with large, bright neon font that reads 'Astral Lounge'
Screenshot by Dot Esports

There’s plenty to pick up and loot in the vast galaxy that Starfield takes place in, but some of the most interesting and valuable items will be contraband. These items are worth more than your basic miscellaneous loot, but only a select few will even purchase them, and you have to avoid interest from the authorities.

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To kick start your contraband empire in Starfield, you will need to know who will buy it from you, and you will need to know how to avoid getting caught with it.

What are contraband items in Starfield?

Contraband items are goods considered illegal by most of the major factions, primarily the United Colonies and Freestar Collective. Most contraband you run across in Starfield is drugs, though there are other notable goods that are not permitted on some planets, such as mech parts.

Image of a shopping menu screen in Starfield, showing the contraband item dubbed 'Aurora'.
Aurora is a common item found around Neon, though it is considered contraband elsewhere. Screenshot by Dot Esports

The best example of contraband is Aurora. While legal on Neon, a planet existing outside of the UC and Freestar Collective, it is illegal to bring into the major faction’s airspace. Thankfully, it is easy to identify contraband items in Starfield as they are tagged by a yellow mark, as seen above.

Related: Starfield Lockpicking Guide – how to pick locks and steal items

How to sell contraband items in Starfield

The easiest way to sell contraband items in Starfield is simply to sell the item to the Trade Authority. If you manage to smuggle contraband into major cities, such as Akila City or New Atlantis, you won’t find many merchants willing to take the items off your hands, except for those working at the aforementioned Trade Authority.

Image of a space ship being scanned, preparing to land on a vibrant planet.
You are scanned every time you enter either UC or Freestar space. Screenshot by Dot Esports

When orbiting a planet in a settled system in UC or Freestar space, you will be scanned for contraband. If contraband is discovered, you have three options:

  1. Pay the fine and surrender the contraband goods. You will be teleported to the jail of the nearest settlement, but you will not serve any jail time. Depending on the jail layout and your stealth system, you might be able to steal back your contraband goods, but there’s no way to get the fine back.
  2. Surrender the contraband goods and go to jail. You will not lose any credits, but several days of game time will pass, and you will lose experience for that.
  3. Fight. You will pick up a bounty with the local faction, and you will have to survive space combat.

So what’s the best method for selling contraband? There are two pretty simple solutions.

  1. Take your contraband to The Den, located in orbit around Chthonia in the Wolf system. The Wolf system is one of the few places you can fly into without being scanned, and you can sell contraband at the small Trade Authority desk inside the station.
  2. Purchase shielded cargo holds. Shielded cargo holds will hide contraband up to a certain amount if you don’t want to go to The Den every time you want to sell. Speak to Lon Anderssen at the Red Mile on Proxima III in the Proxima system, and he will sell you shielded cargo holds that you can equip with your ship builder.

Additionally, given the seediness of the Red Mile, you also might find a local vendor there willing to buy contraband from you.

Author
Image of Blaine Polhamus
Blaine Polhamus
Staff Writer for Dot Esports. Avid gamer for two decades and gaming writer for three years. I'm a lover of anything Souls-like since 2011. I cover everything from single-player RPGs to MMOs.
Author
Image of Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson
VALORANT lead staff writer, also covering CS:GO, FPS games, other titles, and the wider esports industry. Watching and writing esports since 2014. Previously wrote for Dexerto, Upcomer, Splyce, and somehow MySpace. Jack of all games, master of none.