How much is your Fortnite account worth?
Free estimate built from real EB24 marketplace sales. Pick your platform and rank below, then add your locker counts.
- No login
- No Epic credentials
- Refreshed daily
Pick your platform and rank, add your outfit / emote / pickaxe counts and V-Bucks balance, 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 Fortnite Account Worth?
The honest answer is: it depends on the locker, the rank and the rarity of what is in that locker, and the rest is noise. Our calculator anchors every estimate on real EB24 Fortnite marketplace transactions, so the number you see is what comparable accounts actually traded at. Not a generic formula or a number scraped from competitor listings.
For a fast feel, a typical Diamond Fortnite account on PC with a mid-size locker lands in the low double figures. A long-history Elite or Champion account with retired Battle-Pass exclusives, a V-Bucks balance and a few OG-era cosmetics can clear the low three figures. Unreal accounts trade above that on scarcity alone.
The four levers that move every Fortnite account price
Battle-Pass exclusivity beats raw skin count
Outfits beat emotes beat pickaxes
Rank moves the floor, not the ceiling
V-Bucks are the stored-value floor
Indicative price ranges on the EB24 Fortnite marketplace
The table below is a reference snapshot built from EB24 sales data. Use it to sanity-check the calculator output before you list, or to spot under-priced listings you are about to buy. Battle-Pass exclusives in the locker add a meaningful bonus on top of every row.
| Rank | PC / PlayStation | Xbox / Switch | Outfit bonus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unrated / Bronze | $10 – $25 | $8 – $20 | + $0.80–$2 per outfit |
| Silver / Gold | $15 – $35 | $14 – $30 | + $0.80–$2 per outfit |
| Platinum | $25 – $55 | $22 – $48 | + $1–$2.50 per outfit |
| Diamond | $45 – $90 | $40 – $80 | + $1–$3 per outfit |
| Elite | $75 – $150 | $65 – $130 | + $1.50–$3.50 per outfit |
| Champion | $130 – $260 | $115 – $230 | + $2–$4 per outfit |
| Unreal | $240 – $500 | $210 – $440 | + $2–$5 per outfit |
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 Fortnite Account?
Not all attributes weigh the same when buyers price a Fortnite 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)
- Outfit skin rarity, especially completed Battle-Pass exclusives (≈40%)
- Total outfit count as a locker-completeness indicator (≈15%)
- Current rank, with a steep curve at Diamond and above (≈15%)
- V-Bucks balance at the stored-value floor (≈10%)
- OG / Chapter 1 history proven by retired cosmetics (≈5%)
Minor factors (the last ≈15%)
- Emote count, weighted lower per-unit than outfits
- Back bling and pickaxe counts as locker-depth signals
- Account level as a credibility / play-time proxy
- Linked platforms (Epic, PSN, Xbox, Switch) for cross-progression flexibility
- Save-the-World founder status, where applicable
- Clean Epic email handover with no past-trade flags
Skin rarity tiers and how each one moves the price
"How many outfits do you have" is the right question, but the follow-up matters too: how rare. The calculator scores rarity through the description field rather than guessing from a count, so listings that name specific retired Battle-Pass exclusives anchor higher than equivalent-count listings on common item-shop outfits.
Tier 1, the OG Chapter-1 exclusives (the king-makers)
Tier 2, completed-Battle-Pass exclusives from later chapters
Tier 3, retired item-shop crossovers
Tier 4, common item-shop outfits
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.
- Win-rate or KD claims that cannot be verified from the listing
- Subjective playstyle ("aggressive zero-build main") that buyers cannot price
- Promised future Battle Pass rewards or upcoming crossovers
- Inflated peak-rank claims more than two seasons old
- Generic "rare" descriptors that do not name a specific Battle-Pass season or crossover
Fortnite Account Prices by Platform
Fortnite cross-progression means a Switch or mobile account can be re-linked to PC after purchase, so the buyer pool is largely platform-agnostic. The calculator still samples inside your platform because demand curves differ slightly (PC and PlayStation tend to clear the fastest) but the platform-driven price spread for a given rank is single-digit percent, not the 15 to 20% you see in Apex or Valorant. Unreal accounts trade above the headline ranges on every platform because ladder supply is structurally tiny.
Browse Fortnite accounts by platform
Browse Fortnite accounts by rank
Selling a Fortnite Account for Maximum Value
The biggest mistake we see on the EB24 Fortnite marketplace is sellers anchoring on what they personally spent on the Item Shop, instead of where comparable accounts actually clear. The tips below are what separates listings that sell within a week from listings that sit on the marketplace and end up discounted.
List inside the estimated range
Name every retired Battle-Pass exclusive explicitly
Time the sale around Chapter launches and OG events
Stick with EB24 escrow
Match the buyer side, not the wishful side
When NOT to sell
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 the current EB24 demand. Ready to list? You can create a free seller account and put your Fortnite listing live in under five minutes. See the seller rank tiers for how reputation compounds into higher conversion over time.
Buying Fortnite Accounts for Value
The same calculator that helps sellers price fair listings is the cleanest filter for buyers hunting under-priced accounts. The six rules below describe how experienced EB24 buyers turn the calculator from a number into a buying signal. See also how to buy a Fortnite account on EB24 for the full transaction walkthrough.
- Compare every listing against the calculator. If the asking price sits below our 25th percentile for the same platform and rank, you are looking at a value buy. Especially when the locker contains named retired Battle-Pass exclusives.
- Prefer accounts where the seller has completed sales history on EB24. Established sellers price closer to fair market value, less negotiation drama.
- Confirm full Epic email handover before paying. Without it, the long-term value of the account is capped because Epic can recall it.
- A clean Epic ban history doubles your runway. You inherit an Epic account unlikely to be flagged for review and a clean competitive standing.
- For flipping, look for accounts that are one rank under-priced for their locker depth. Buying a stacked Elite account for a Diamond price, then re-listing at fair Elite during the next Chapter launch, is the cleanest arbitrage on the marketplace.
- Fortnite has no boost service on EB24, so accounts cannot be inflated post-purchase. The calculator output is therefore the final word, not a starting point. Buy on locker rarity, not on rank potential.
When resale actually pays
When the market actually pays more
When you should pass on resale
The "OG event" play
Best value buckets to start from
Methodology: How EB24 Values a Fortnite 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
What we deliberately exclude
Why AI input refinement is mandatory for Fortnite
Spotted a number that looks off? Open a chat from any Fortnite marketplace listing and tell us. Corrections from sellers and buyers feed straight back into how we score new comparables.
Fortnite account value calculator FAQ
The questions Fortnite sellers and buyers ask us most often: why OG Battle-Pass skins matter more than item-shop skins, how outfits weigh against emotes and pickaxes, when to time a sale around Chapter launches, and what really drives the value of a Fortnite account on the EB24 marketplace.
How much is my Fortnite account worth?
A casual Bronze to Gold Fortnite account with a small locker typically lands in the low double figures. A long-history Diamond or Elite account with a full Battle-Pass locker, several retired item-shop outfits and a V-Bucks balance routinely clears the upper double figures. A Champion or Unreal account with rare OG Battle-Pass exclusives can reach the low-to-mid three figures. Pick your platform and rank in the calculator above and you will see what comparable Fortnite accounts actually traded for on EB24.
Why are OG Battle-Pass skins worth so much more than item-shop skins?
Item-shop outfits return to rotation eventually, so any new buyer can simply wait for the shop reissue and pay V-Bucks. Battle-Pass exclusives from older seasons are gone for good — Epic has never reissued a completed Battle Pass — and the early seasons (Chapter 1 in particular) carry the strongest scarcity premium because so few players were active at the time. The calculator does not know which specific cosmetics are in your locker, which is why the description field is required: it reads the long-tail rare-skin signal and adjusts the estimate accordingly.
How does the calculator weigh outfits vs emotes vs pickaxes?
Outfit skins are the strongest single cosmetic signal — buyers see them first in the locker preview, and outfits make up the largest share of any account's perceived rarity. Per-unit, an outfit trades at roughly 3 to 4 times the value of an emote or pickaxe of equivalent rarity, so the calculator weights outfit_skins higher than the other three cosmetic counts. Back blings sit in the middle: many are linked to specific outfits, so they reinforce outfit value rather than standing alone.
Will my Unreal rank actually be worth that much more than Champion?
Yes, meaningfully. Unreal sits at the top of the competitive ladder and is the rank players genuinely flex; Champion is the gate, Unreal is the trophy. Calculator estimates for Unreal use their own bucket rather than blending with Champion so the number reflects scarcity rather than averaging it away. Unreal estimates often land at low or medium confidence simply because so few comparable sales exist in any given 90-day window.
Do V-Bucks actually count for the price of a Fortnite account?
Yes — V-Bucks have a hard real-money equivalent (roughly 1,000 V-Bucks for $8 USD at retail), so above the 1,000 V-Bucks threshold we credit the full balance to the estimate at a small discount and cap the contribution so a one-off whale balance cannot dominate. A 10,000 V-Bucks balance is therefore worth roughly $70 of price lift on top of the rank baseline.
Does platform matter for the price of a Fortnite account?
Less than people think. Fortnite cross-progression means a Switch or mobile account can simply be re-linked to PC after purchase, so the buyer pool is largely platform-agnostic. The calculator still samples inside your platform because the demand curves differ slightly — PC and PlayStation tend to clear the fastest — but the platform-driven price spread for a given rank is single-digit percent, not the 15-20% you see in Apex or Valorant.
Does my account level actually move the price?
Account level is mostly a credibility signal, not a price-driver. A level-300 Diamond account looks "real" to a buyer; a level-30 Diamond account raises questions about boosting and gets discounted regardless of locker. The calculator weights level lightly on top of rank — the bucket-relative rule contributes a small premium for above-average levels and a small discount for below-average — but it is not the place to look for big swings.
How fresh is the data behind the Fortnite value estimate?
Estimates refresh at least every 24 hours and pull from sales and listings inside the last 90 days. During Chapter launches, end-of-season ranked resets and major OG 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 exactly how recent the data is.
Is selling a Fortnite account allowed?
Epic's Terms of Service technically forbid account transfers, in line with most online games. In practice, Fortnite accounts change hands on EB24 every week without issue, especially when the buyer changes the linked Epic email and any console-link on day one. The risk is non-zero and we tell you that openly. Use the calculator to set fair expectations, then read our Fortnite seller guide for the steps that minimise risk on both sides.
When is the best time to sell a Fortnite account?
Demand peaks at the start of every new Chapter and Season (large fresh-buyer cohort and a new Battle Pass to grind) and during OG events when interest in retired Battle-Pass skins spikes. Listing in deep mid-season usually means a longer wait or a small discount. Re-run the calculator the week before a Chapter launch — accounts with rare OG skins often pick up 10 to 20% during launch weeks.
How the Fortnite account value calculator works
Every estimate is built from real EB24 Fortnite 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: platform, rank and locker in, percentile of comparable EB24 sales out, with a confidence label and an audit trail of the listings behind the number.
Pick your platform and current rank — Choose the platform your Fortnite account plays on (PC, PlayStation, Xbox, Switch, mobile) and your current Battle Royale rank from Unrated through Bronze, all the way up to Unreal. Linked-platform value matters less than people think (Fortnite cross-progression is universal) but the buyer pool still differs slightly per platform, and we sample inside it.
Add the locker: outfits, emotes, back blings, pickaxes — Outfit skin count is the single strongest cosmetic signal. Outfits trade at roughly 3 to 4 times the per-unit value of emotes or pickaxes on the secondary market. We anchor each cosmetic line against the bucket median, so an account with double the typical outfit count for its rank earns a meaningful premium and one with half earns a small discount. Rare and retired Battle-Pass exclusives carry far more than item-shop outfits, but the calculator scores them through the description rather than guessing from a count.
Add V-Bucks balance and account level — V-Bucks have a hard real-money equivalent (1,000 V-Bucks equals roughly $8 USD at retail) so above 1,000 we credit the full balance at a small discount and cap the contribution. Account level mostly reflects total play time and works as a credibility signal more than a price-driver: a high-level account at a low rank is unusual and raises questions, a high-level account at a high rank is the norm.
We compare against real EB24 Fortnite sales — Every estimate is anchored to comparable Fortnite accounts sold or actively listed on the EB24 marketplace in the last 90 days at the same platform and rank, then we take the 25th, 50th and 75th percentile of those prices. Optional inputs nudge the range up or down within calibrated bounds, so a single high-locker outlier never hijacks the estimate.
Read the range, the confidence and the trail — You get a low, expected and high price plus a confidence label so you know how dense the data is. The 12 month price trend, currently active listings and recently sold accounts are surfaced side by side so the number is auditable, not magic. Unreal and Champion routinely land at medium or low confidence because supply is thin by definition.