A League of Legends account on our marketplace has a median asking price of about $32, computed from 6,524 active listings — a fraction of what a Valorant account costs (~$226), because the LoL resale market is built on cheap, high-Blue-Essence smurfs rather than rare cosmetics. This guide breaks down what LoL accounts actually cost in 2026 by what drives the price, and why server matters more than rank here.
Figures computed from live BuyAccount marketplace data, July 2026 — asking prices of active listings, 2% outlier tails trimmed. Full dataset: Game Account Price Index.
What a LoL account costs in 2026
Across all live League of Legends listings, prices run from about $7 at the floor to just over $1,000 for rare skin-collector accounts, with a median near $32. The bulk of the catalogue clusters low: these are ranked-ready smurfs — Level 30, fresh MMR, enough Blue Essence to build a champion pool. A cheap LoL account is cheap because the game gives away champions in essence, so scarcity lives in skins and old accounts, not in the base account.
Rank vs. server: which one moves the price
As with Valorant, rank is a weak price signal on the resale market — almost everything is unranked, so a "Diamond" median is built on a small, skin-skewed sample. Server is the more useful axis, because it decides who you queue and duo with. If you have friends on a region, buy there. Browse by server on the EUW, EUNE, TR and NA hubs — and see EUW vs EUNE vs TR for how the regions actually differ.
What actually sets the price: Blue Essence and skins
Two things walk a LoL account up from the ~$32 median:
- Blue Essence. A 40K–60K BE account can unlock dozens of champions instantly — that convenience is priced in. See Blue Essence & RP explained.
- Rare skins. Legacy, PAX, and prestige skins can't be re-bought, so accounts carrying them command a premium — the same own-data pattern we document in rarest LoL skins.
A brand-new Level 30 smurf sits near the floor; a loaded, high-BE or rare-skin account is what reaches the top of the range. Level and champion pool matter for readiness (see the Level 30 grind), skins and BE matter for price.
Is buying a LoL account allowed?
Plainly: buying or transferring accounts violates Riot's Terms of Service and can result in a ban. That risk is real. What lowers it is taking full control on delivery — change the email and password, enable 2FA, and play normally. Every listing ships with the original email and 14-day buyer protection; read can you get banned for buying a LoL account for the measured version. Definitions of terms like escrow and full email access are in the glossary.