What is a Floor Price?

In the NFT world, floor price refers to the lowest price at which any NFT in a given collection is currently listed for sale on an open marketplace. It is, quite literally, the price floor — the entry point to own any piece from that collection.

If the Bored Ape Yacht Club floor price is 15 ETH, that means you can buy the cheapest available Bored Ape for 15 ETH. Some individual apes may be listed far higher based on rare traits, but 15 ETH gets you "in the door."

Floor price is the single most widely tracked metric in the NFT market. It acts as a quick barometer of a collection’s health, demand, and market sentiment.

Why Floor Price Matters

1. Entry Cost for Collectors

Floor price tells you the minimum you need to spend to join a community or own a piece of a collection. Many collectors specifically target floor items as the most affordable way to participate.

2. Collection Health Indicator

Rising floor prices signal strong demand and a healthy community. A rapidly falling floor often indicates panic selling, loss of confidence, or a "rug pull" in progress. Traders watch floor price movements closely.

3. Portfolio Valuation

Holders use floor price to estimate the value of their NFT portfolio. If you hold 3 NFTs from a collection with a 2 ETH floor, your position is worth approximately 6 ETH at floor — though rare traits could push individual item value higher.

4. Liquidity Signal

A collection with high volume at or near floor price is more liquid — easier to buy and sell quickly. Low volume near floor can mean you’re stuck holding if you need to exit.

Floor Price vs. Average Sale Price

These two metrics are often confused:

Metric Definition Use Case
Floor Price Lowest current listing Entry cost; real-time demand signal
Average Sale Price Mean price of recent transactions Overall market sentiment
Trait Floor Lowest listing for a specific trait Value of rare attributes

Average sale price can be skewed by rare high-value sales. Floor price is a more grounded, actionable number for most buyers.

What Causes Floor Price to Move?

Factors That Push Floor Up

Factors That Push Floor Down

The "Floor Sweep" Phenomenon

A floor sweep happens when a buyer (often a whale — a large-capital trader) purchases many NFTs at or near the floor price simultaneously. This removes cheap listings and pushes the floor up sharply.

Floor sweeps can be:

Watch on-chain data tools like Etherscan, Dune Analytics, or NFT-specific dashboards to spot unusual sweeping activity.

Trait Floors: Going Deeper Than the Collection Floor

Within any collection, individual NFTs have different traits (background color, outfit, accessories, etc.). Rare traits command premium prices above the collection floor. The trait floor is the lowest listing price for NFTs with a specific attribute.

For example, in a 10,000-piece collection:

Understanding trait floors helps you identify undervalued NFTs with rare attributes priced near the collection floor.

Where to Track Floor Prices

Several tools track NFT floor prices in real time:

Floor Price and Market Cycles

NFT market cycles dramatically affect floor prices across the board:

In the 2021–2022 bull market, many collections saw floors rise 10–50x in weeks. The 2022–2023 correction erased most gains. Understanding cycles helps you make more informed buying decisions.

Tips for Floor Price Analysis

  1. Don’t buy the top — entry when floor is at all-time high is risky
  2. Compare to 30-day floor charts — context is everything
  3. Watch volume alongside floor — rising floor on low volume is weak
  4. Check listing depth — if only 2 NFTs are listed at floor and 50 more are just above, the "floor" is fragile
  5. Verify the marketplace — floor can differ between OpenSea, Blur, and Magic Eden; aggregators give the true floor

Track floor prices for upcoming NFT drops on the NFTRadius Calendar.