How Much Is My TFT Account Worth? 2026 Valuation Guide

Published 2026-06-07 • Marcus Chen • 7 min read

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Most TFT accounts sell in the $10–$80 range, but Master+ accounts with large Little Legend collections can push $150 or more. Whether you're quitting the game, consolidating accounts, or simply curious about what your Tactician collection is worth to a buyer, the valuation process is more nuanced than checking your rank alone. This guide walks through every factor that moves the needle — in the order that actually matters to buyers.

What Actually Drives TFT Account Value?

TFT account pricing follows a predictable hierarchy. Buyers care about what they're getting on day one: the ability to play at a high rank, a collection of cosmetics they'd otherwise grind or pay for, and the assurance that the account is safe to transfer. Understanding that hierarchy lets you price honestly rather than anchor on a number that won't attract serious buyers.

  • Ranked tier & peak rank — the single biggest driver, especially Master, Grandmaster, and Challenger
  • Little Legend count & rarity — event-exclusive and limited chibis command a real premium
  • Tacticians, arenas, and board skins — cosmetic depth signals an invested account
  • Ranked emblems and set history — proof of consistent play across multiple sets
  • Server/region — NA and EUW accounts are easiest to sell; OCE and emerging regions trade at a discount
  • Shared Riot account bonus — skins, champions, and rank on the same LoL login can meaningfully lift the total price

Ranked Tier: The Biggest Price Lever

Rank is what most buyers lead with in search queries, and it's what sellers should lead with in listings. A Gold account and a Platinum account look almost identical on the surface, but the difference between Diamond and Master is where price curves start to slope sharply upward. This happens for a simple reason: reaching Master or above requires either hundreds of hours of dedicated play or genuine game knowledge — and buyers value both the time saved and the social signal of a high-rank badge.

Peak rank matters almost as much as current rank. An account that reached Challenger in an earlier set but decayed to Platinum carries a verifiable history that a dedicated buyer will find meaningful. If your profile shows a top finish from any set in the past two years, include it in your listing. Screenshots from your match history and the ranked badge on your profile page are standard evidence buyers expect.

Also note that TFT ranked is completely separate from League of Legends ranked. Your LoL rank doesn't affect your TFT rank, but both live on the same Riot account — which is relevant to the section below on shared-account bonuses.

Little Legends: The Cosmetic Wild Card

Little Legends (the creatures that walk around your board) are the closest thing TFT has to a prestige cosmetic system, and their value on the secondary market reflects that. Standard Little Legends from the current egg pool contribute modestly. The accounts that attract collector interest are the ones with event-exclusive or limited-window chibis — the kinds that were only available through a specific battle pass, a launch event, or a collaboration that has since ended.

Star level matters too. A three-star version of a common Little Legend is worth more than a one-star version of the same creature, because three-starring requires either spending significantly on eggs or playing through hundreds of games to accumulate duplicates. Buyers recognize the sunk cost and the visual prestige.

To inventory your collection accurately, go to your TFT Collection tab in the client and count:

  • Total unique Little Legends owned
  • Number of three-star Little Legends
  • Any event-exclusive or collaboration chibis (list them by name)
  • Tacticians — the newer Riot term for Little Legends tied to set themes or crossover events

Don't just say "I have a lot of Little Legends." Buyers want a specific count. An account with 40 unique Little Legends including several event-exclusives at two- or three-star is a fundamentally different product than one with 12 standard chibis from the base egg pool.

Arenas, Board Skins & Cosmetic Depth

Arenas — the animated boards your units fight on — are a secondary but real value driver. Limited arenas from past sets or collaboration events carry a small premium over the default board. Similarly, the animated backgrounds available during limited windows add visual interest that some buyers will pay for.

Tactician Emotes and Booms (the explosion effects when a unit dies) are worth noting if you have rare variants, though they're a smaller factor than Little Legends themselves. In practice, cosmetic depth is best presented as a package: "45 Little Legends, 8 Tacticians, 12 arenas, 3 limited Booms" tells a compelling story even when no single item would justify a premium on its own.

Observed TFT Account Price Bands

The table below reflects observed market ranges based on typical account profiles. These are not guarantees — actual prices vary with buyer demand, listing quality, and the specific cosmetics involved. Use the account price index to cross-reference current asking prices in the live market, or run your details through the account value calculator for a personalized estimate.

Account Profile What It Typically Includes Observed USD Range
Bronze – Gold, minimal cosmetics Ranked placement, default Little Legends, no event chibis $5 – $15
Platinum – Diamond, basic collection Steady rank history, 10–25 Little Legends, a few arenas $15 – $40
Diamond, solid cosmetics 25–50 Little Legends incl. some limited, multiple arenas, set emblems $35 – $65
Master / Grandmaster 500+ LP history, average cosmetic depth, set history across 4+ sets $60 – $110
Challenger (current or peak) Leaderboard history, verifiable top-ranking finish $100 – $200+
Any tier + rich cosmetics + LoL skins 50+ Little Legends, event chibis, LoL skins & rank on same login +$20 – $80 premium over base tier

The Shared Riot Account Bonus

This is the factor most TFT-only players underestimate. Because TFT runs on a Riot account — the same login as League of Legends, Valorant, and other Riot games — every cosmetic and ranked achievement across the entire Riot ecosystem transfers with the account. A buyer who primarily wants a TFT account but discovers it also has a large LoL skin library and a Diamond LoL rank is getting significantly more than they searched for.

If your account has meaningful LoL content, price it accordingly and list both games explicitly. The combined value of a Diamond TFT account with a deep LoL skin collection and an LoL Platinum rank is not the sum of two separate accounts, but it is materially higher than the TFT rank alone. Some buyers specifically search for cross-game Riot accounts precisely because of this bundled value. Browse the TFT marketplace to see how active sellers are presenting their cross-game inventory to calibrate your own listing.

How to Inventory Your Account Before Pricing

A strong listing is a specific listing. Before you set a price, spend fifteen minutes pulling the exact numbers from your client and writing them down. Here's the checklist that serious sellers use:

  • Current TFT rank and the exact LP
  • Peak rank per set — check your profile history or a reputable tracker
  • Little Legend count by rarity tier (standard vs. event vs. limited)
  • Star levels — count your two-stars and three-stars separately
  • Arena & board skin count with names of any limited ones
  • Set-specific rewards — ranked emblems, loading-screen borders, profile icons from past ranked seasons
  • Riot account status — LoL rank, Valorant rank, champion count, skin count
  • Account age and honor level — older accounts with Honor 5 signal stability to buyers
  • Email-verified and no pending bans — this is a baseline expectation, not a selling point, but omitting it raises red flags

Once you have the numbers, use the account value calculator to generate a baseline estimate, then adjust based on cosmetic specifics and current buyer demand in the account price index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does rank or cosmetics matter more for TFT account value?

Rank is the primary driver, especially at Master and above, because it's the hardest thing to replicate. Cosmetics are the secondary driver that separates two accounts at the same rank — a Diamond account with 60 Little Legends including event-exclusives will consistently outprice a Diamond account with 10 standard chibis. Below Diamond, cosmetics can sometimes represent the majority of an account's appeal, because the ranked tier itself doesn't command a significant premium over a fresh account.

Do Little Legends really add meaningful value?

Yes, particularly limited and event-exclusive ones. The key word is "limited" — Little Legends that can no longer be obtained through eggs or the current shop are genuinely scarce, and buyers who want a specific chibi know they can't just grind for it. Three-star versions of any Little Legend add more value than their one-star equivalent. Standard Little Legends from the active egg pool add modest value but won't significantly move your price because buyers could theoretically obtain them on their own.

Does my League of Legends content count toward the TFT account value?

It counts directly, because TFT and LoL share the same Riot account login. A buyer who purchases your account gets everything on it: your TFT rank, your LoL rank, your LoL champion collection, your LoL skins, your Valorant rank if applicable, and your Little Legend collection. Sellers with strong LoL libraries should price the bundle above the TFT-only baseline and highlight both games explicitly in their listing. Buyers often search specifically for dual-game accounts because of this bundled value.

How do I get the best price when selling my TFT account?

Specificity and verifiability are the two levers you control. Write an exact inventory — rank, LP, peak per set, Little Legend count by tier and star level, arena count, LoL skin count — rather than vague descriptors. Include screenshots of your TFT collection page, your ranked history, and your LoL client skin collection. List on a verified marketplace rather than forums or Discord to reach buyers who are ready to pay and who trust the platform's dispute resolution. If you're ready to list, you can apply to become a verified seller and get your account in front of active TFT buyers. And before you set your ask price, check comparable listings via the best sites to buy TFT accounts guide so you're anchoring to real market data rather than guessing.

Knowing your account's worth is the first step — getting paid for it is the second. Run your details through the account value calculator, browse what similar accounts are trading for on the TFT marketplace, and if you're ready to sell, apply as a verified seller to list your account where serious buyers are already looking.

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