Top DayZ Mods and Maps for Your Server in 2026
DayZ's modding scene is genuinely impressive. Thousands of mods on the Steam Workshop, an active community of mod creators, and enough variety to turn the game into just about anything you want. The right mod list is usually what separates a server people remember from one they forget about by next week.
I've organised this guide by category, with notes on what works for different server types. If you're setting up your first modded server, pair this with our DayZ Server Configuration Guide for the installation side of things.
Essential Framework Mods
Before you touch any content mods, you need the framework that most of them depend on.
Community Framework (CF)
Workshop ID: 1559212036
CF is the foundation that nearly every DayZ mod builds on. It provides shared libraries, UI components, and communication protocols. Without CF, most mods won't even load. Install this first, and make sure it's at the top of your load order.
Content Overhaul Mods
DayZ Expansion
Workshop IDs: Multiple modules (Core, Vehicles, Market, AI, Missions, Base Building, Navigation)
This is the biggest mod project in DayZ, and it's not one mod but a whole suite of interconnected modules.
- Expansion Core -- the framework and shared systems everything else depends on
- Expansion Vehicles -- adds helicopters (MH-6 Little Bird, Merlin, UH1H, Gyrocopter), boats, and additional ground vehicles with improved physics
- Expansion Market -- a complete trading system with NPC traders, ATMs, banking, and configurable prices
- Expansion Base Building -- improved building with snap-together construction, more materials, and better structural options
- Expansion AI -- AI soldiers that patrol areas, defend locations, and provide PvE challenges
- Expansion Missions -- dynamic PvE missions that spawn across the map with objectives and rewards
- Expansion Navigation -- GPS, 3D markers, and a party system
You can pick and choose modules. Most PvE and trader servers run the full suite. PvP servers might just grab Vehicles and Base Building.
RAM impact: Significant. Expect Expansion to add 2-4 GB to your server's RAM usage. Check our DayZ hosting page for details on RAM allocations and upgrade options.
Base Building Mods
BaseBuildingPlus (BBP)
Workshop ID: 1710977250
BBP expands on DayZ's base building with more wall types, elevated platforms, watchtowers, improved gates, custom furniture placement, and electrical systems like lights and alarms. For servers where long-term survival and base warfare are the focus, BBP is pretty much essential. It gives players enough tools to build something impressive without breaking the game's visual style.
Code Lock
Workshop ID: 1646187754
A simple mod that replaces vanilla's physical key system with 4-digit combination codes on doors and gates. In vanilla DayZ, base security relies on padlocks with physical keys that are easy to lose and impossible to share without physically handing them over. Code Lock lets you share a code via Discord and move on. Small mod, big quality-of-life improvement.
Weapons and Gear Mods
Morty's Weapons
One of the most popular weapon packs. Adds dozens of real-world firearms with detailed models, custom sounds, and balanced stats. Assault rifles, sniper rifles, SMGs, pistols, shotguns from various manufacturers. It integrates well with DayZ's existing attachment and maintenance systems.
A note on weapon packs: I'd avoid stacking too many at once. Each one adds entries to types.xml and expands the overall item pool. Two weapon packs at the same time can start diluting the loot economy. With three or more, specific items become incredibly rare just because there are so many possibilities competing for spawn slots.
Quality of Life Mods
VPP Map
Adds an in-game map with a player position marker. Vanilla DayZ gives you a map but no indication of where you are on it. You have to navigate by landmarks and road signs. VPP Map removes that particular challenge, and honestly, most players find it more convenient than fun to navigate blind.
Ear Plugs
A keybind toggle that lets you reduce ambient sound volume. DayZ's audio can be overwhelming at times. Rain, wind, zombie screams, close-range gunfire. Ear Plugs lets you turn down the environmental noise without affecting important combat audio cues. Simple, but it's one of those mods you miss when it's not there.
Airdrop-Upgraded
Spawns random supply drops on a configurable timer. Each drop produces a smoke signal visible from a distance, pulling players toward a contested location with high-value loot. Works well on any server type for creating organic encounters.
DayZ-Dog
Tameable companion dogs. Particularly popular on PvE servers. Your dog follows you, and there's something oddly comforting about having a companion in DayZ's bleak world.
CannabisPlus
Extended farming and agriculture. Adds more crops and a fuller farming system. Popular on PvE and RP servers where players want more to do beyond looting and shooting.
KillFeed
Global kill notifications. Everyone on the server sees who killed whom and with what weapon. Essential for PvP and deathmatch servers. Optional but fun on other types.
Notes
Lets players write and leave notes in the world. Great for RP servers where you want players to communicate in-character. People leave warnings, trade offers, or cryptic messages at common meeting points.
Leaderboard
Player stats tracking with kill/death ratios and other metrics. Competitive servers love it. RP servers sometimes use it too.
Community Maps
DayZ's community map makers are talented. These offer genuinely different experiences from the official maps.
Namalsk
Workshop ID: 2289456201
Created by Sumrak (who later joined Bohemia Interactive as a developer), Namalsk is a harsh, frozen island. At roughly 27 km² of land area, it's considerably smaller than Chernarus, and that's part of what makes it work. The smaller footprint means you're running into other players constantly.
What makes Namalsk worth playing: extreme cold mechanics that force constant attention to warmth and shelter. Unique environmental events like electromagnetic storms and the unsettling "EVR" anomaly. Underground military bunkers with high-tier loot. Genuinely atmospheric, bordering on horror at times. And the quality is basically on par with Bohemia's own work.
Best for: Hardcore survival, smaller server populations (30-50 players), PvP-focused servers.
Deer Isle
Workshop ID: 1602372402
A large, heavily forested archipelago inspired by the coast of Maine. Dense pine forests, coastal towns, a prison island, military facilities, and extensive cave systems that are unique to this map.
The map is massive with diverse terrain and the cave networks give it a character you won't find elsewhere. Loot placement is well-balanced, development is active with regular updates, and it supports large populations comfortably.
Best for: PvE servers, exploration-focused communities, 40-80 players.
Banov
A sprawling Eastern European countryside with rolling hills, dense forests, and small villages connected by winding roads. It feels like a spiritual cousin of Chernarus but with its own layout and atmosphere.
Familiar DayZ aesthetic with a fresh map. Large enough for high player counts. Good road networks make for solid vehicle gameplay. Active community and regular updates keep it current.
Best for: Vanilla+, trader/PvE, 60-100 players.
Building Your Mod List
Here are some tested combinations for popular server types. These aren't exhaustive, but they're a reasonable starting point.
Vanilla+ (Minimal Mods)
CF, VPP Map, Code Lock, Ear Plugs
PvE Trader
CF, DayZ Expansion (full suite), BaseBuildingPlus, Code Lock, VPP Map, DayZ-Dog, CannabisPlus, Airdrop-Upgraded, one weapon pack (Morty's Weapons is a safe choice)
Hardcore PvP
CF, and that's about it. Maybe one weapon pack if your community wants more variety. The point is to keep it lean.
Roleplay
CF, DayZ Expansion (full suite), BaseBuildingPlus, Code Lock, VPP Map, Morty's Weapons, Notes, DayZ-Dog, CannabisPlus, Airdrop-Upgraded
Installation Tips
- Load order matters. CF has to load first, then Expansion Core before any other Expansion modules, then everything else. Check Workshop pages for dependency chains.
- Add mods in batches. Two or three at a time, verify the server starts, then add more. Debugging a broken server with 20 new mods is miserable.
- Back up your mission folder before adding or updating anything. You'll thank yourself later.
- Validate your XML. Merging types.xml entries with bad syntax will break your entire loot economy. Run it through an XML validator after every edit.
- Watch your RAM. Each mod adds to memory usage. Monitor your server's consumption after changes and upgrade if needed. Our DayZ hosting page has details on RAM options.
- Keep everything updated. After game updates, check for mod updates immediately. Version mismatches between the game and your mods are the most common cause of server crashes.
Getting Started
Ready to build your modded DayZ server? Order from LOW.MS and get NVMe storage, full FTP access, and DDoS protection included with every plan. Our DayZ Getting Started Guide walks through setup step by step, and the DayZ Troubleshooting Guide covers common mod issues.