
CS2 · CS:GO · weapon skins database
CS2 and CS:GO Weapon Skins Database
Every rifle, pistol, SMG and sniper finish in one place. This CS2 skin database maps each weapon skin to its rarity tier, its collection, its float behaviour and an illustrative price range, so you can research a finish before you trade or open a case.
Because CS:GO skins carried straight into CS2, the entries below apply to both games. Use the cards and tables as a research starting point, then confirm live figures on the market you trade on.
Overview
What the skins database covers
A weapon skins catalog only helps if it captures the details that actually move value. Each entry in this cs2 stash is built around five facts that describe any finish.
Weapon & finish
The base weapon and its finish name - for example AK-47 | Bloodsport or AWP | Hyper Beast - the pairing that defines the skin.
Collection & case
The collection or case a skin drops from. This is where cs2 skins and csgo skins connect back to the container that produced them.
Rarity tier
The colour band from mil-spec blue to covert red, plus the rare gold tier used for knives and gloves.
Float & wear
How the finish behaves across Factory New to Battle-Scarred, which is why the same skin can carry very different prices.
StatTrak
Whether a StatTrak kill-counter variant exists, and roughly how much that scarcity adds over the standard version.
Price range
An illustrative low-to-high range across wear levels, always labelled illustrative rather than presented as a live quote.
Rarity
Rarity tiers explained
Every weapon skin sits in a colour-coded rarity tier that hints at how often it drops and where it usually lands on price. The gold tier is shared by knives and gloves rather than ordinary weapon skins.
| Tier | Colour | Relative drop rate | Typical price feel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mil-Spec | Blue | Most common | Low |
| Restricted | Purple | Common | Low to mid |
| Classified | Pink | Uncommon | Mid to high |
| Covert | Red | Rare | High |
| Gold (Exceedingly Rare) | Gold | Very rare special item | Knives & gloves only |
The gold slot holds knives and gloves, not weapon skins, but it is listed here to complete the tier ladder.
CS2 skins
Most searched weapon skins
Eight of the finishes players look up most in the stash. Each skin card lists its rarity tag, the collection it belongs to and an illustrative price range across wear levels.








Found a finish you like in the database?
Confirm you are 18+ and continue to the external CS2 case opening platform, or keep browsing the cases that hold these skins first.
Condition
Float and wear
Float is the single most misunderstood number in the weapon skins world. It is a hidden value between 0 and 1 that decides how scratched a finish looks, and it maps directly onto the five wear grades.
| Wear grade | Float range | Look |
|---|---|---|
| Factory New | 0.00 - 0.07 | Cleanest, usually the priciest |
| Minimal Wear | 0.07 - 0.15 | Very light scratches |
| Field-Tested | 0.15 - 0.38 | Visible wear, the common mid tier |
| Well-Worn | 0.38 - 0.45 | Heavier scuffing |
| Battle-Scarred | 0.45 - 1.00 | Most worn, usually the cheapest |
Two copies of the same skin can differ in price by several times simply because one rolled a lower float. Some finishes barely change with wear, while others show dramatic scratching, so the database treats float as a core attribute rather than an afterthought.
Variants
StatTrak and souvenir
Beyond the base finish, two special variants change how a weapon skin is valued and where it comes from.
StatTrak
A live kill counter bolted onto the weapon. It is purely cosmetic bragging rights, does not affect gameplay, and appears on unboxed skins. StatTrak versions are rarer than standard copies, so they carry a premium - often noticeably higher on popular covert rifles.
Souvenir
Dropped only during pro Counter-Strike events, souvenir skins carry gold stickers of the teams and players from that match. Their value hinges on the tournament, the stickers and the wear, and a well-placed souvenir sticker can eclipse the base skin price.
Standard
The plain finish with no counter and no event stickers. Standard versions are the baseline the database prices against, and they make the clearest reference point when you compare StatTrak or souvenir premiums.
How to
How to read a skin listing
Once you know the attributes, a listing is easy to decode. A typical entry reads something like "StatTrak™ AK-47 | Bloodsport (Field-Tested)". Break it into parts and you know exactly what you are looking at.
Prefix
Any StatTrak™ or Souvenir label sits at the front. No prefix means a standard finish.
Weapon & finish
The weapon name and finish, separated by a vertical bar - the heart of the clash skins entry.
Wear in brackets
The wear grade in parentheses tells you the float band and sets your price expectation.
Put together, the prefix, the weapon-and-finish pairing and the wear grade tell you almost everything before you even look at the price. Match that against the rarity tier and collection in this cs2 skin database and you can judge whether a listing is fair at a glance.
FAQ
Weapon skins - frequently asked questions
What does the CS2 skins database cover?
The database covers CS2 and CS:GO weapon skins across rifles, pistols, SMGs, snipers and shotguns. Each entry lists the finish name, the collection or case it comes from, its rarity tier and an illustrative price range so you can research a skin before you trade or open a case.
Are CS2 skins and CS:GO skins the same items?
Yes. When Counter-Strike 2 replaced CS:GO the inventory carried over, so every CS:GO skin became a CS2 skin. The finishes, collections and cases are identical - only the Source 2 rendering changed how they look in game.
What are the CS2 skin rarity tiers?
Weapon skins run from Mil-Spec blue, up through Restricted purple, Classified pink and Covert red, with a rare gold tier reserved for knives and gloves. Higher tiers drop less often and usually carry a higher price.
What is float and wear on a weapon skin?
Float is a hidden value between 0 and 1 that sets the visible wear of a skin, mapped to Factory New, Minimal Wear, Field-Tested, Well-Worn and Battle-Scarred. Lower floats look cleaner and generally sell for more.
What does StatTrak add to a skin?
StatTrak adds a live counter that tracks confirmed kills with that specific weapon. It is a cosmetic bragging-rights feature that does not change gameplay, but StatTrak versions are rarer and usually cost more than their standard counterparts.
Are the prices in the database live market values?
No. Every figure on StashClash Guru is an illustrative example for research. Skin prices move constantly with supply and demand, so always confirm the live quote on the market you actually trade on before making a decision.
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