Roll d20, d100, and full polyhedral dice sets online.
Use this free 5e-compatible dice roller for ability checks, advantage, disadvantage, damage rolls, percentile dice, and quick RPG table sessions.
Build your roll.
Add dice, set a modifier, then roll. Remove any die from the tray before rolling again.
Quick rolls
This browser tool uses client-side random rolls. It does not submit roll history or personal data.
What can you roll with this DND dice roller?
This online polyhedral dice roller supports the standard 5e dice set: d20, d12, d10, percentile d10 or d100, d8, d6, and d4. Use the d20 for ability checks, saving throws, and attacks, then add damage dice such as d4, d6, d8, d10, or d12 as needed.
For physical table play, retail displays, or campaign launches, use this tool to teach dice types, then compare real resin, metal, liquid core, and custom polyhedral dice samples before bulk ordering.
Need real dice sets for stores, events, or custom projects?
Wholesale Dice Catalogs
Download catalog files and review resin, metal, hollow, and specialty dice options for B2B orders.
Custom DND Dice Sets
Plan custom polyhedral dice, custom d20 faces, private label packaging, and sample approval.
Bulk Polyhedral Dice
Build mixed dice assortments for game stores, distributors, events, and subscription boxes.

Common questions about rolling DND dice online.
What dice can this online DND dice roller roll?
The roller supports d4, d6, d8, d10, d12, d20, and d100 polyhedral dice. It also includes quick rolls for d20 ability checks, advantage, disadvantage, and 4d6 drop lowest.
Can I add modifiers to a DND dice roll?
Yes. Enter a positive or negative modifier before rolling. The roller shows the dice subtotal, modifier, and final total.
How do advantage and disadvantage work?
Advantage rolls two d20 dice and uses the higher result. Disadvantage rolls two d20 dice and uses the lower result. The modifier is added after choosing the d20 result.
Is this dice roller a replacement for physical dice?
It is useful for quick online rolls, teaching dice types, and checking 5e mechanics. For retail, events, campaigns, or product launches, physical polyhedral dice sets and sample kits are still recommended.