
How Much Is My CS2 Inventory Worth? (Check It Free in 10 Seconds)
slothiwMaybe you are coming back after years away, maybe you just want to flex a number — either way, the question is the same: what is all this actually worth? You can now answer it in about ten seconds.
The 10-second check
Open our free CS2 inventory value calculator, paste your Steam profile link (or SteamID64, or vanity name), and hit check. It reads your public inventory directly from Steam, matches every marketable item against live Steam Community Market prices, counts your duplicates, and totals it — skins, knives, cases, stickers, charms, agents, the lot. No login, no API key, nothing stored.
Three numbers, not one
Your inventory really has three values. The Steam Market value — what our calculator shows — is the headline. Your Steam wallet value is that minus roughly 13% in fees, locked to Steam purchases forever. Your real cash value is what cash-out platforms pay: typically 70–85% of Steam prices for liquid items. A '$1,000 inventory' is about $870 in wallet funds or roughly $750–850 in actual money.
If the number surprised you
Up or down, the next move is detail: open your top items in the skin price database to see per-wear pricing and whether your float sits near a tier border worth real money. Old cases sitting in your inventory from years ago are a common surprise — several retired cases have 10×'d. If you are thinking about selling, read our guide to selling CS2 skins for real money first to keep the fee bite minimal.

Frequently Asked Questions
How do I check my CS2 inventory value?
Paste your Steam profile link, SteamID64 or vanity name into SlothiW's free inventory value calculator. It prices every marketable item against live Steam Community Market data. Your inventory must be set to Public.
Why is my real cash-out value lower than the Steam value?
Steam takes ~13% on market sales and those funds stay in your Steam wallet. Real-money cash-out sites pay roughly 70–85% of Steam prices for liquid items.
Does checking my inventory require logging in?
No. Public inventories are readable through Steam's own public API — you never enter credentials, and nothing is stored.