How much is your Fisch account worth?
Free estimate built from real EB24 marketplace sales. Add your level, coins and rods below.
- No login
- No credentials
- Refreshed daily
Add your level, coins and rods, and we compare your account against real EB24 sales from the last 90 days.
No login, no credentials. We only ask for public account attributes.
- 90 days of real EB24 sales feed every estimate.
- 3 levels of confidence so you know how dense the data is.
- 12 mo median price trend, refreshed daily.
- 0 risk no login, no game credentials, ever.
How Much Is a Fisch Account Worth?
A Fisch account prices on account level first, rod breadth and coin balance second, and rare or event rods on top. Our calculator anchors every estimate on real EB24 Fisch marketplace transactions, so the number you see is what comparable accounts actually traded at.
For a fast feel, a novice account under level 100 lands in the $3–$10 range. An angler account at level 100-299 clears $7–$22. An expert account at level 300-699 reaches $14–$41. A master account past level 700 with near-complete rods regularly clears $25–$71 or more.
The four levers that move every Fisch account price
Account level sets the band
Rods set the zone access
Coins prove spendable progress
Rare rods and cleanliness on top
Indicative price ranges on the EB24 Fisch marketplace
The table below is a reference snapshot built from EB24 sales data. Rod breadth, coin balance and rare event rods all add a meaningful adjustment on top of every row.
| Rank | USD range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Novice (under level 100) | $3 – $10 | early progress, few rods, small coin balance |
| Angler (level 100-299) | $7 – $22 | mid rod collection, regular play, growing coin balance |
| Expert (level 300-699) | $14 – $41 | broad rod collection, deep coin balance, most zones reached |
| Master (level 700+) | $25 – $71+ | near-complete rods, large coin balance, rare and event rods |
Indicative ranges, in USD. The live calculator above pulls the latest 90 days of EB24 sales and recomputes daily. These table values are a static reference, not a price quote.
What Drives the Price of a Fisch Account?
Not all attributes weigh the same when buyers price a Fisch account. We split them into three buckets so you can see at a glance which inputs to focus on if you want a tighter estimate, or a stronger listing.
Major factors (≈85% of the price)
- Account level, the progression band (≈32%)
- Rods unlocked, zone and catch access (≈28%)
- Coin balance, spendable progress (≈15%)
- Rare and event rods, named in description (≈10%)
Minor factors (the last ≈15%)
- Bestiary completion, named in description
- Limited event rods, named in description
- Rare mutation catches, named in description
- Account age and cleanliness, handover ready
How rod tiers actually price
Each rod tier prices very differently. The premium hierarchy is limited event rods > rare high-zone rods > broad standard collection > starter rods. Collector value sits almost entirely in the top tiers.
Tier 1, limited event rods
Tier 2, rare high-zone rods
Tier 3, broad standard collection
Tier 4, starter rods
What buyers do not pay for
Adding the items below to a listing rarely raises the final price and sometimes hurts it by making the description look padded.
- Subjective "stacked account" claims that do not name the rods
- Coin balances framed as a headline (they are spendable and grind back fast)
- Starter rods described as if they were event drops
- Accounts with a restriction or recent moderation flag
- Accounts the seller cannot fully hand over with email access
Fisch Account Prices by Level Band
Account level is the cleanest progression bucket Fisch offers because there is no competitive ladder that segments resale value. The calculator pools all accounts in one global comparable set; the level band is the rank label used by the fallback model when comparables are thin.
Browse Fisch accounts by signal
Browse Fisch accounts by level band
Selling a Fisch Account for Maximum Value
The biggest mistake we see on the EB24 Fisch marketplace is sellers anchoring on the hours they personally sank into the grind, not on where comparable accounts clear. The tips below are what separates listings that sell within a week from listings that sit and end up discounted.
List inside the estimated range
Screenshot your rods and bestiary
Time the sale around event rods
Stick with EB24 escrow
Disclose handover state up front
Once your listing is live, you can edit pricing as the market moves. The calculator updates at least daily, so re-checking your estimate every couple of weeks keeps you anchored to current EB24 demand. Ready to list? You can create a free seller account and put your Fisch listing live in minutes. See the seller rank tiers for how reputation compounds into higher conversion over time.
Buying Fisch Accounts for Value
The same calculator that helps sellers price fair listings is a clean filter for buyers hunting under-priced accounts. The rules below describe how experienced EB24 buyers turn the calculator from a number into a buying signal.
- Compare every listing against the calculator. If the asking price sits below our 25th percentile for the same level band, you are looking at a value buy, especially when the listing names near-complete rods and rare event rods.
- Prefer accounts naming specific event rods and rare catches over vague "stacked" listings. A single named event rod can swing the value more than a pile of standard rods.
- Confirm full handover with email and login access before paying. The linked login method is the trickiest handover step on a Roblox experience.
- Prefer accounts where the seller has completed sales history on EB24. Established sellers price closer to fair market value with less negotiation drama.
- For collection-focused buyers, decide up front whether you want a rod-heavy account or a coin-rich account ready to spend.
When resale actually pays
When the market actually pays more
When you should pass on resale
The "event launch play"
Best value buckets to start from
Methodology: How EB24 Values a Fisch Account
Calculators that hide their methodology earn distrust they deserve. Here is exactly how this page produces every estimate, what data feeds it, and what we deliberately leave out.
Where the data comes from
How we build the range
How fresh the snapshot is
Why we publish a confidence label
Why the bucket is a single global pool
Why AI input refinement is collected for Fisch
Spotted a number that looks off? Open a chat from any Fisch marketplace listing and tell us. Corrections from sellers and buyers feed straight back into how we score new comparables.
Fisch account value calculator FAQ
The questions Fisch sellers and buyers ask us most often: why account level sets the band, how rod breadth and coin balance drive the price, when to time a sale around an event drop, and what really drives the value of a Fisch account on the EB24 marketplace.
How much is my Fisch account worth?
A novice account under level 100 with few rods lands in the $3 to $10 range. An angler account at level 100 to 299 reaches $7 to $22. An expert account at level 300 to 699 with a broad rod collection clears $14 to $41. A master account past level 700 with near-complete rods and rare event rods clears $25 to $71 or more. Enter your level, coins and rods above for what comparable accounts actually traded for on EB24.
Why does account level matter so much?
Fisch has no competitive ladder, so account level is the closest progression signal the game exposes. It tracks the zones reached and the rods unlocked along the way, which is what a buyer pays for. The calculator bands your level into Novice, Angler, Expert and Master and uses that band as the baseline that every other signal adjusts around.
Do rods or coins matter more for the price?
They measure different things. Rod breadth gates zones and rare catches and is the heavier of the two, so a rod-rich account reads above a bare one at the same level. Coins are the spendable currency and act as a secondary lever that shifts the estimate within bounds. An account high in one and low in the other lands in the middle of its band.
How are limited event rods valued?
Limited event rods that can no longer be earned are impossible to score from a single integer, because the specific rod decides the value. The calculator captures a rod count for matching, then asks you to name the standout event rods and rare catches in the description so the AI refinement layer can weight them on top of the bucket median.
Is there a server or region split for Fisch?
No. Fisch is a Roblox experience, so the same login works everywhere and there is no region partition. The calculator pools every account into one global comparable set rather than splitting by server. That keeps the sample size healthy and matches your account against the widest pool of real EB24 sales.
Is selling a Fisch account allowed?
Roblox terms of service technically restrict account transfers, in line with most online platforms. In practice Roblox-experience accounts change hands on EB24 regularly, especially when the buyer changes the linked email and login method on day one. The risk is non-zero and we tell you that openly. Use the calculator to set fair expectations before you list.
When is the best time to sell a Fisch account?
Demand rises when a new event introduces chase rods and catches, because buyers want a head start on the new content. A stocked account also picks up interest around major updates that add zones. Listing deep into a quiet stretch with no event on the calendar usually means a longer wait or a smaller final price.
How fresh is the data behind the Fisch value estimate?
Estimates refresh at least every 24 hours and pull from sales and listings inside the last 90 days. Around new events the snapshot keeps up: the moment new sales close, the next estimate reflects them. Each result shows the snapshot timestamp so you always know how recent the data is, plus a confidence label that tells you how dense the comparable pool was.
How the Fisch account value calculator works
Every estimate is built from real EB24 Fisch marketplace transactions, not a generic formula or scraped competitor data. Here is the exact path your inputs take from the form to the value range you see: level, coins and rods in, percentile of comparable EB24 sales out, with a confidence label and an audit trail of the listings behind the number.
Enter your account level — Fisch has no competitive ladder, so account level is the closest progression signal the game exposes. The calculator bands your level into Novice, Angler, Expert and Master and uses that band as the rank label for the fallback model when comparable sales are thin.
Add your coin balance — Coins are the spendable progression currency that buys rods and upgrades. The calculator anchors on a typical balance for your band and credits how far above or below it you sit within calibrated bounds, so a coin-rich account reads above a freshly spent one at the same level.
Enter your rods unlocked — Rods gate the zones and the catches a buyer is paying to skip, so the unlocked rod count is the secondary lever on top of the level baseline. The calculator adds a flat lift that grows with your rod count and caps so a single number can never run away from the band median.
Describe rare and event rods — Limited event rods, rare catches and bestiary completion cannot be scored from integers. Name them in the description and the AI refinement layer weights them on top of the bucket median so a stand-out account is not flattened to the average.
We compare against real EB24 sales — Every estimate is anchored to comparable Fisch accounts sold or actively listed on the EB24 marketplace in the last 90 days, then we take the 25th, 50th and 75th percentile of those prices. You get a low, expected and high price, a confidence label, a 12 month price trend and the listings behind the number so the result is auditable.