
Mod Menu: The Fabric Mod Worth Installing in 2026
Mod Menu is a Fabric utility that adds a "Mods" button to your title screen, so you can see every mod you've installed and open their settings without alt-tabbing to a config file. It's tiny, it's free, and in 2026 it's pretty much required if you play with Fabric mods. Here's the honest rundown.
What Mod Menu Does
Strip away the hype and it's simple. Mod Menu drops a button into your main menu and your pause screen. Click it, and you get a scrollable list of every mod currently loaded, complete with names, version numbers, authors, descriptions, and links back to each project page.
That alone is handy when you're trying to remember which of your 80 mods is the one adding those weird floating islands. But the part that matters most is the small wrench icon sitting next to certain mods. Click it and you drop straight into that mod's config screen: sliders, toggles, keybinds and all, rendered right inside Minecraft.
No digging through a folder full of.json files. No restarting the game five times to test one value.
A few smaller touches don't get mentioned much but make daily use nicer. There's a search bar at the top of the list, which sounds trivial until you're hunting one mod out of 200. Mods carry little badges too, flagging which ones are libraries, which are client-side only, and which have been deprecated. You can also click straight through to a mod's source code, issue tracker, or homepage from its entry, which is genuinely useful when something breaks and you want to report it.
Why It Keeps Trending in 2026
Mod Menu shows up on "best mods" lists every single year, and there's a slightly boring reason for it: half your other mods quietly expect it to be there. Over on Modrinth it sits near the top of the all-time download charts, and a big chunk of those installs aren't people choosing it for its own sake. They're people installing some other mod that points to Mod Menu as the way to reach its settings.
So it trends partly by accident. A new minimap mod blows up, a new shader controller makes the rounds, and Mod Menu rides along because it's how you actually configure the thing.
The current builds track Minecraft 26.1.2, the latest Java release, and the team behind it (TerraformersMC) usually ships an update within a couple of days of a new version landing. That reliability is a big reason nobody bothers trying to replace it.
Installing Mod Menu
You need three things before Mod Menu does anything useful:
- Fabric Loader installed for your Minecraft version (26.1.2 right now).
- Fabric API, the dependency that most Fabric content needs to run at all.
- The Mod Menu build that matches your exact game version.
Grab the file from Modrinth or CurseForge, drop the.jar into your mods folder, and launch the game on your Fabric profile. If it worked, the new button shows up on the title screen straight away. If it didn't, nine times out of ten it's a version mismatch: a Mod Menu built for 26.0 won't load on 26.1.2, and the reverse is just as true.
When the button doesn't show up
Open your launcher's log and look for a line moaning about a missing dependency. Usually it's Fabric API not being in the folder, or two mods arguing over different game versions. Pull everything out, add the jars back one at a time, and you'll find the troublemaker fast.
The Config Screens Are the Real Selling Point
Time to be honest about something. On its own, a list of installed mods is nice but not life-changing. The reason Mod Menu earns its permanent spot in my folder is the config integration, and that's worth understanding properly.
Mods don't get those settings screens for free. Their developers have to wire them up, usually through a config library like Cloth Config, and Mod Menu just provides the door you walk through to reach them. Real talk, so a mod can fully support Mod Menu, support it half-heartedly, or ignore it completely. Most of the popular ones support it well, but not all of them do, and that's worth knowing before you assume every mod will have a tidy screen.
A real example from my own setup: I run a HUD mod that piles a clock, a coordinate readout, and an FPS counter onto the screen. The toggles for hiding each one used to live in a config file. With Mod Menu, they're checkboxes I can flip mid-game. Tiny thing on its own, but multiply that across 40 mods and you've saved yourself a genuinely annoying afternoon.
And no, it won't cost you frames. Mod Menu only does work when you actually open its screen, so it's not running anything in the background while you play. I've had it loaded alongside 150-plus mods on a mid-range laptop and the menu still opens instantly. The stuff that tanks your frame rate in a heavy pack is the shader pack and the world-gen mods, never this.
Loaders and Servers: A Few Gotchas
Quick clarification first, because this trips people up constantly. Mod Menu is a Fabric and Quilt mod. It does not work on Forge or NeoForge, full stop. Those loaders already bake a mod list into the launcher screen, and a separate mod called Configured handles in-game settings instead. So when a YouTuber raves about Mod Menu and your Forge pack doesn't have it, you're not doing anything wrong. Wrong loader, that's all.
Servers are the other gotcha. If you're loading Mod Menu and a stack of other mods onto a server for friends, everyone needs the same mods at the same versions, or the server kicks people the moment they try to join. Mismatched mod lists cause more failed joins than anything else I've run into.
And once your modded world is live, lock it down. A modded survival server with random strangers wandering in is asking for trouble. Setting up a proper allowlist takes about two minutes with our Minecraft whitelist creator, and it saves you the pain of someone griefing a base you spent a whole weekend building.
My Take
Install it. Seriously, if you touch Fabric mods at all, there's no real reason to skip it. It's lightweight, it doesn't change how the game plays, and it turns "where on earth is this setting hidden" into a two-click job.
Would I call it exciting? Not really. It's plumbing.
But it's the kind of plumbing you stop noticing until it's gone, and then everything feels harder. (It's the same small quality-of-life lift as remembering you can swap your whole look in seconds over on our Minecraft skins page.)
My one genuine gripe is the version-matching dance after every big Minecraft update. You'll wait a day or two for builds to catch up, then you're sorted. Small price for something this useful.


