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Fortnite Skin Prices: What Every Rarity Is Actually Worth

PriceMyGame Team5 min read

Fortnite skins don't sell individually — they trade as part of whole accounts. So when someone asks "how much is my Travis Scott skin worth?", the real question is: how much does it add to your account's resale value?

We analyzed thousands of real account sales to answer that question for every rarity tier and the most popular collab skins.

Dark
Highest-Value Rarity
$87 avg account price
Midas
Most Common Skin
appears in ~7% of listings
Travis Scott
Biggest Surprise
$145 avg — 2.5x market avg

How We Measure Skin Value

Since skins only change hands as part of account sales, we measure a skin's value by comparing the average sale price of accounts that contain it against the overall market average (~$58).

A skin that consistently appears in higher-priced accounts is worth more — not because of the skin alone, but because it signals an account with desirable, hard-to-get cosmetics.

Skin Value by Rarity Tier

Not all rarities are created equal. Here's how average account price breaks down by the rarity of skins they contain:

Average Account Price by Skin Rarity
Accounts containing skins of each rarity tier
Dark
$87
Icon
$80
Gaming Leg.
$70
Legendary
$67
Epic
$60
DC
$60
Marvel
$55
Star Wars
$55

Dark Series: The Premium Tier ($87 avg)

Dark Series skins sit at the top with an $87 average account price — roughly 50% above the market average. With only 11 unique Dark skins in existence, scarcity drives the premium. These include skins like Dark Bomber and Dark Wildcard that haven't returned to the shop frequently.

Icon Series: Celebrity Collabs Pay Off ($80 avg)

Icon Series skins — featuring real-world artists and celebrities — command the second-highest prices at $80 average. Travis Scott is the standout, with accounts containing his skin averaging $145, nearly 2.5x the market average. His skin hasn't been available since 2020, making it function like an OG skin for newer players.

Other Icon skins like Marshmello and Ninja also carry strong value, though none approach Travis Scott's premium.

Legendary & Gaming Legends ($67–$70 avg)

The Legendary tier is the broadest category with 136 unique skins and the most listings. Gaming Legends — skins from franchises like Tomb Raider, Metal Gear, and DOOM — come in slightly higher at $70. Lara Croft appears in over 5% of all listings, making her the most common collab skin in the market.

Marvel, Star Wars & DC ($55–$60 avg)

Collab skins from major franchises are popular but don't command as high a premium. This makes sense: Marvel and Star Wars skins come back to the shop regularly, so they're less scarce. Accounts with these skins still sell above market average, but the premium is modest.

The Most Popular Skins in Sold Accounts

Frequency tells a different story than value. These skins show up most often in accounts being sold:

Most Common Skins in Sold Accounts
Percentage of listings containing each skin
Midas
6.7%
The Reaper
6.4%
Elite Agent
5.6%
Omega
5.4%
Lara Croft
5.1%
Travis Scott
3.0%
Spider-Man
3.5%
Mandalorian
3.1%

Midas leads at 6.7% — unsurprising given he was a beloved Chapter 2, Season 2 battle pass skin. The Reaper and Elite Agent follow, both OG skins from Chapter 1 that signal a long-time player.

The key insight: frequency doesn't equal value. Travis Scott appears in only 3% of listings but those accounts average $145. Midas appears in 6.7% but averages $70. Rarity matters more than popularity.

Collab Skins: The New Status Symbols

Collab and special series skins have become the modern equivalent of OG skins. Here's how the top collab skins perform:

Top Collab Skins by Frequency and Value
SkinSeriesAvg Account Price
Travis ScottIcon$145
Lara CroftGaming Legends$64
DeadpoolMarvel$59
ThorMarvel$58
Tony StarkMarvel$58
GrootMarvel$56
Doom SlayerGaming Legends$55
MandalorianStar Wars$55
Darth VaderStar Wars$51
Geralt of RiviaGaming Legends$51
Spider-ManMarvel$50

Travis Scott stands alone at $145 average — more than double most other collabs. His skin's value comes from the perfect storm: massive cultural moment (the Astronomical event), limited availability (only sold April 22–May 1, 2020), and no return to the shop since.

The Marvel and Star Wars skins cluster around $50–$60, which is still above the overall market average. Gaming Legends like Lara Croft and Doom Slayer sit in a similar range.

What Doesn't Add Value

Not every skin helps your account's price:

  • Common and Uncommon skins — accounts with only these rarities average well below market. They signal a newer or less-invested account.
  • Recent battle pass skins — if everyone has it, it doesn't differentiate your account. Peter Griffin (3.5% of listings, $47 avg) is a good example: popular but not premium.
  • Free/default skins — promotional skins given to all players add virtually zero resale value.

The general rule: skins that can't be obtained anymore are worth the most. Battle pass exclusives, limited-time collabs, and discontinued shop items all fit this pattern.

How Skin Count Plays In

Individual skin value matters, but so does total count. Accounts with 200+ skins average over $300 regardless of which specific skins they have. We covered this in detail in our account valuation guide.

The sweet spot for sellers: a few high-value skins (OG or rare collabs) plus a solid overall collection (100+ skins) creates the highest sale prices.

Check What Your Skins Are Worth

Want to know how your specific skin collection affects your account's price? Use our free Fortnite Account Calculator — select your skins, add your account details, and get an instant estimate backed by real marketplace data.