PlayStation Stars: July 2026 Campaigns and Rewards
How PlayStation's free loyalty programme works, this month's campaigns, and whether the points are worth chasing.
How PlayStation's free loyalty programme works, this month's campaigns, and whether the points are worth chasing.

If you already spend time on PS5, PlayStation Stars is the rare loyalty programme that costs nothing to join and quietly pays you back for things you were going to do anyway. It runs alongside — but is entirely separate from — a PlayStation Plus subscription: you opt into monthly campaigns, earn points and digital collectibles for completing them, and cash the points in toward PSN wallet funds or more collectibles. This explainer covers how the mechanics work, a plausible set of July 2026 campaigns, and how to enrol from the PlayStation App or the PlayStation Store.
PlayStation Stars is Sony's free rewards programme, open in supported regions to anyone with a PlayStation Network account. The core loop is straightforward: you complete campaigns to earn loyalty points, and you collect digital collectibles — themed 3D items tied to PlayStation games and history that live in a virtual display case. Points have redemption value; collectibles are largely for show, though some are rarer than others.
The key thing to grasp up front is that Stars sits outside your PS Plus tier. You do not need Plus to use Stars, and paying for Premium does not automatically boost your Stars earnings — they are two different programmes that happen to share your account. If you are still untangling the subscription side, our guide to the PlayStation Plus tiers keeps the two clearly separated.
Everything in Stars revolves around campaigns: time-limited challenges — some lasting a few days, others a full month — that you must opt into before your activity counts. This is the detail that trips people up most. Simply playing a game earns nothing unless you have enrolled in the relevant campaign first, so it pays to open Stars at the start of each month and tap into everything on offer.
Campaigns generally fall into a few recurring shapes:
Alongside campaigns, members earn a small number of points on eligible PlayStation Store purchases, and enrolling itself typically comes with a welcome reward. Points sit in your balance until you redeem them, but they can expire if your account stays inactive for an extended period, so log in periodically.
Sony refreshes the campaign slate every month, and exact objectives vary by region. The lineup below is an illustrative example of what a July 2026 slate could look like, based on how Stars has historically been structured — treat it as a representative picture rather than a confirmed list, and always check the app for the campaigns live in your country.
Note what is not here: nothing tied to games that have not launched. Big autumn arrivals such as Marvel's Wolverine (September 15) and GTA VI (November 19) are still months away, so any Stars campaign built around them would land later in the year, not now.
Earned points are only useful once you spend them, and Stars offers two main paths. The first is PSN wallet funds: convert a points balance into store credit for games, add-ons or a subscription. The conversion rate is set by Sony and varies by region, so we won't quote a fixed figure — check the current rate in the app before redeeming. The second is digital collectibles and other in-programme rewards, where points unlock items for your virtual display case.
A few practical notes on collectibles:
For most people, the sensible move is to bank points from the easy campaigns all year and periodically cash them out as wallet funds toward something you actually want — treating Stars as a slow, free discount rather than a collectible chase.
Joining takes a couple of minutes and is free. There are two routes:
Once enrolled, build a simple monthly routine: open Stars, opt into every campaign that looks achievable, and check back before the month ends so nothing lapses unclaimed. For the official terms, regional availability and the live rate card, see Sony's PlayStation Stars page. If you are also kitting out your setup this summer, our PS5 hardware and accessories guide pairs well with any wallet credit you bank.
For an active PS5 owner, yes — the maths is hard to argue with, because it costs nothing. You are already playing games and earning trophies; Stars simply pays a small dividend on top, and over a year of easy check-ins that quietly adds up to real wallet credit. The catch is engagement: points only accrue on campaigns you remembered to opt into, and they can expire if you disappear for months. Check in monthly and Stars is a free, low-effort perk that slowly funds your next purchase. Never open the app and it does nothing at all — so the single most valuable habit is simply enrolling and opting in.
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