I hit the Rockstar store at midnight and watched the pre-order button flicker from gray to hot. You feel a small jolt when special editions appear—like a door suddenly ajar on a locked garage. I paused, because pre-orders are a decision that carries tiny, real consequences.
I’ve covered game launches for years; you don’t need a hype checklist—just a clear read on price, what’s permanent, and what’s pure fan glitter. Below I break the Ultimate Edition down so you can decide fast and confidently.
GTA 6 Ultimate Edition Price
The store page already shows the numbers, plain and bright.
The GTA 6 Ultimate Edition is priced at $99.99 (€92) on official storefronts like the PlayStation Store, Xbox Store and Rockstar Games Launcher. The Standard Edition is listed at $79.99 (€74). Pre-orders go live at midnight on June 25 local time across regions, and yes—seeing the Ultimate Edition stay under $100 feels like a small win.
How much does the GTA 6 Ultimate Edition cost?
The short answer: $99.99 (€92) for the Ultimate Edition; $79.99 (€74) for Standard. Expect the usual platform availability—PlayStation, Xbox, and Rockstar Launcher—plus regional storefront pricing that may vary by tax.
All GTA 6 Ultimate Edition Rewards
Open any pre-order page and the list reads like a shopping list for obsessive players.
The Ultimate Edition bundles exclusive weapons, vehicles, cosmetics, mod shops, and social spaces that alter how you start the game. Below is everything Rockstar has attached to the Ultimate badge—clean, grouped, and easy to scan.
- ’95 Grotti Cheetah
- Hawk and Little Morgan Revolvers
- Personalized sidearms with detailed engravings: Jason’s Girardi ES9 and Lucia’s Klose K17
- Bonus costumes for Jason and Lucia
- Jason’s safehouse vehicles: Dinka Enduro motorcycle and Crest Kayak
- Vapid Ganado low-riding pickup with exclusive mods
- Rideout Customs and One-Eyed Willie’s mod shops
- Exclusive hairstyles at Sara’s Unisex Salon
- Shitzu Squalo watercraft
- Stock 305 streetwear store access
- ’67 Vapid Dominator Buggy plus Paradise Garage in Watson Bay
- 50 Signature Tattoos from Electric Fang Tattoo
- Goodtime Gear clothing inspired by in-world culture
- PTT Youngin$ Illegal Goods compound (raidable)
- Classic Car Collection Special Commissions (repair and customize)

What bonus rewards are included in GTA 6 Ultimate Edition?
Every reward has a role: some are practical (vehicles, mod shops), some cosmetic (tattoos, clothes), and some change your early-game options (safehouse items, the illegal goods compound). If you want a quick hit: you get exclusive vehicles, unique guns and engravings, access to extra mod shops and stores, and a pile of cosmetic content for both protagonists.
’95 Grotti Chetta
Scrolling past the car section, the Grotti stands out the way a show model does on a lot lot.

A mid‑’90s sports car with red racing stripes and an orange-tinted interior. It’s a personality piece early in the game: flashy, fast, and immediately distinguishable in traffic.
Hawk & Little Morgan Revolvers
Scan any weapon display and the revolvers jump out because of their scope and styling.
These are styled with a heavy scope and throwback Vice City cues—great for players who want a signature firearm that reads both classic and precise.
Personalized Sidearm Variants
You’ll notice character-tailored weapons when you examine inventory screens in trailers.

Jason’s Girardi ES9 and Lucia’s Klose K17 come with engraved finishes—small details that push character identity into your gear choice.
Vice City Style
If you watch trailers you’ll see the neon and pastel aesthetic repeated across costumes and tattoos.

Vice City Style cosmetics—costumes, tattoos—are available with any pre-order, not only the Ultimate Edition. If you want those neon-era looks, pre-ordering any edition gets them.
Jason’s Safehouse Vehicles
Trailers show safehouses as small hubs—vehicles parked, gear stashed, choices made.

The Dinka Enduro motorcycle (army-fatigue tint) and a Crest Kayak appear inside Jason’s safehouse—fast access to transport that can change how you tackle early objectives.
Ganado Retro Build
If you’ve watched car streams, the Ganado’s silhouette is already familiar.

You get the Vapid Ganado plus a mod kit for exclusive retro and low-rider modifications—useful if you care about street presence as much as speed.
Rideout Customs Vehicles
Mod shops in GTA have always been places to change a car’s personality.

Rideout Customs is included so you can apply donk and rim stylings to your garage—visual customization that keeps your vehicle collection feeling unique.
Sara’s Unisex Salon
Character shops are brief, high-impact stops in modern open worlds.

Exclusive hairstyles and facial options: facial hair tweaks for Jason, styling and makeup options for Lucia. Cosmetic variety matters for role-play and screenshots.
Shitzu Squalo
Watercraft add another layer to map movement and leisure activities.

The Shitzu Squalo arrives in gradient pink and blue and docks at Washington Beach—great for sightlines and short coastal runs.
Stock 305
If you like streetwear, you’ll notice branded racks in trailers.

Stock 305 is a clothing store that carries exclusive streetwear items—if style matters, this is one of the faster returns on a pre-order purchase.
’67 Vapid Dominator Buggy
Garages and storage define how long you keep a vehicle.

The buggy is yours plus access to the Paradise Garage in Watson Bay, complete with a weapon locker and secure storage—functional perks that affect gameplay flow.
Electric Fang Tattoo
Tattoo parlors in game worlds act like small personalization engines.
Electric Fang Tattoo grants over 50 signature designs for Jason and Lucia—ideal for players who want visual differentiation early.
One-Eyed Willie’s
Custom shops often take a basic vehicle and push it into a personality piece.

One-Eyed Willie’s adds off-road kits and hand-painted motifs—great for players who prefer their vehicles rougher or uniquely styled.
Good Time Gear
In-world brands give characters flavor and extra cosmetic options.

Goodtime Gear is a capsule collection inspired by in‑game culture—additional costumes and accessories for both protagonists.
PTT YOUNGIN$ Illegal Goods Store
Open-world loot spots often reward risk with items you can’t buy in regular shops.

The PTT Youngin$ compound on the Southside is a raidable location with exclusive loot—more of a gameplay zone than a cosmetic drop.
Classic Car Collection
Trailer scenes frequently tease broken classics—barn finds that beg for a wrench and a weekend.

Special Commissions lets you find broken classics, repair them, and add your own finishing touches—appeals to players who enjoy long-term collection work.
Is the Ultimate Edition worth buying?
If you value early-game options and exclusive cosmetics—yes, it’s worth consideration. The price sits where deluxe editions usually sit and offers concrete perks: extra vehicles, mod shops, safehouse items, and a handful of persistent conveniences (like garage storage and exclusive stores). If you’re purely after gameplay advantage, remember most content is cosmetic or early-access convenience rather than permanent power boosts.
Between Rockstar Games’ own launcher, community outlets like IGN and Eurogamer, and retailers, you’ll find platform-specific pre-order bonuses or retailer bundles—so check the PlayStation Store, Xbox Store, Steam, Epic Games Store, or the Rockstar Games Launcher for final regional details.
I’ve seen pre-order lists that read like a catalog and others that feel like a map to how you’ll play. The Ultimate Edition is more a curated wardrobe and garage than a cheat sheet—part status, part convenience, and part aesthetic promise. Think of it as a candy shop for car enthusiasts.
Which reward matters most to you and why—rare car or custom gun engraving?



