BGMI Ace vs Conqueror Account: Realistic Price Difference in 2026 (Data from 500 Listings)
By Yash · 10 July 2026
Conqueror sounds more impressive but Ace accounts outsell them 4 to 1 in India. Here is the real price difference between BGMI Ace and Conqueror accounts in 2026, based on data pulled from 500 active listings on GamersGround.
Every BGMI player knows that Conqueror is the harder rank to reach. Fewer than 500 players per server make it in any given season. Ace is the rank below it, significantly more populated, and significantly more achievable for a serious competitive player grinding over a full season.
So logically, a Conqueror account should sell faster and for more money than an Ace account. That is what most sellers assume before they list.
The data says something different.
After analysing 500 BGMI account listings on GamersGround across the first half of 2026, the picture that emerges is more nuanced than rank alone would suggest. Conqueror accounts do command a higher price ceiling. But Ace accounts close faster, attract a wider buyer pool, and in many cases generate more total revenue for sellers because they are not sitting unsold for three weeks waiting for the one buyer willing to pay the Conqueror premium.
This breakdown covers what the data actually shows, where each rank adds value, and how to price your account correctly regardless of which side of that line you sit on.
Check your account's estimated value right now with the BGMI Account Value Calculator before reading further.
What the 500 Listing Dataset Shows
The 500 listings analysed span BGMI account sales and active listings on GamersGround from January to June 2026. Listings were categorised by peak season rank, skin tier, level, and time to first serious enquiry. Here is what the data shows at a summary level.
Ace accounts represented 71 percent of all listings in the dataset. Conqueror accounts represented 12 percent. The remaining 17 percent were below Ace, which are not the focus of this analysis.
Average time to first serious enquiry for a well-presented Ace account was 2.4 days. For Conqueror accounts the average was 6.1 days. This gap exists because the buyer pool for Ace accounts is significantly larger than for Conqueror accounts. More buyers are looking for a competitive account they can play immediately without the extreme price tag that comes with Conqueror history.
Average sale price for Ace accounts without notable skin content was Rs.3,200. With A-tier or S-tier skins added, that average climbed to Rs.7,800.
Average sale price for Conqueror accounts without notable skin content was Rs.6,400. With A-tier or S-tier skins, the average climbed to Rs.14,500.
The price gap between rank tiers is real. But it is smaller than most Conqueror account sellers expect, and the time-to-sale gap is larger than most of them plan for.
Why Conqueror Does Not Always Win on Price
Conqueror is the top 500 players on a server in a given season. That sounds rare. And in terms of gameplay achievement, it is. But in the resale market, rarity alone does not drive price. Buyer demand does.
The buyers shopping for BGMI accounts in India break into two broad groups. The first group wants a competitive account they can play at a high level immediately. These buyers are serious players themselves, often stuck at Platinum or Diamond, who want to experience higher-ranked gameplay without grinding for six months. This group is large, active, and price-conscious. They want Ace or Ace Master. They are not necessarily looking for Conqueror because they know they cannot maintain a Conqueror account on their own skill level, and the inflated price for Conqueror history is not worth it to them.
The second group wants a prestige account. They want the Conqueror frame, the seasonal title, and the proof of elite status. This group is smaller but willing to pay the premium. The problem for sellers is that this group is also more selective. They want Conqueror from multiple seasons, not just one. They want the skin collection to match the rank history. A Conqueror account with basic skins gets questioned by this buyer type rather than purchased quickly.
This is why Conqueror accounts with strong skin collections sell for strong prices, and Conqueror accounts without them sell slower and closer to high-end Ace prices than sellers expect.
The Rank Tiers and What They Actually Mean for Price
Ace: The entry point for what buyers consider a genuine competitive account. An Ace account signals that the player can consistently perform at a level most casual players never reach. Buyers who want to play ranked seriously without starting from scratch see Ace as the minimum viable rank for a purchase. Demand is broad and consistent throughout the year.
Ace Master: The first meaningful premium above standard Ace. Ace Master is noticeably harder to reach than base Ace and the population at this tier is smaller. Accounts with Ace Master history price 20 to 35 percent above comparable base Ace accounts in the dataset, with faster enquiry rates than Conqueror because the buyer pool is wider.
Ace Dominator: A clear step above Ace Master and the highest tier before Conqueror. Accounts with Ace Dominator history are genuinely uncommon and buyers who understand BGMI's ranked system recognise this immediately. The premium over base Ace ranges from 40 to 60 percent in the dataset, and enquiry quality is higher because buyers at this price point tend to be more serious and less likely to lowball.
Conqueror: The prestige tier. Single-season Conqueror history adds a 60 to 100 percent premium over a comparable Ace account when the skin collection supports it. Multi-season Conqueror history, particularly three or more consecutive seasons, is a different category entirely and can push accounts into the Rs.20,000 to Rs.40,000 range when combined with S-tier skins.
The Skin Multiplier: What Sits on Top of Rank
Rank sets the floor. Skins set the ceiling. This was the clearest finding from the 500-listing dataset and it applies equally to Ace and Conqueror accounts.
Within the Ace tier, accounts with no notable skins and accounts with S-tier skins showed a price difference of up to 180 percent. The rank was identical. The skin content tripled the price.
Within the Conqueror tier, the same pattern held. A bare Conqueror account without recognisable cosmetics frequently listed below Rs.8,000 and sat unsold for extended periods. A Conqueror account with a Glacier M416, a Mythic outfit, and strong supporting skins was priced above Rs.20,000 and generated enquiries within three to four days.
The practical takeaway for sellers is this. If you have an Ace account with strong skin content, do not discount yourself because you are not Conqueror. Your account may be worth more than a basic Conqueror listing. Price it against skin-equivalent Ace listings, not against bare Conqueror accounts.
Realistic Price Ranges by Rank and Skin Tier in 2026
These ranges reflect the GamersGround listing dataset and apply to Indian market pricing in the first half of 2026.
Base Ace, no notable skins, Level 50 to 60: Rs.1,500 to Rs.3,500. High volume of similar listings. Needs clear presentation to stand out.
Ace Master, no notable skins, Level 55 to 65: Rs.3,000 to Rs.6,000. Noticeably less competition than base Ace. Cleaner buyer pool.
Ace or Ace Master, with one S-tier skin (Glacier M416 or Mythic outfit): Rs.6,000 to Rs.14,000. Strong demand. Title should lead with the skin, not the rank.
Ace Dominator, strong B and A tier skin collection, Level 60 and above: Rs.7,000 to Rs.16,000. High-intent buyers. Longer negotiation window but closes well.
Single-season Conqueror, no notable skins: Rs.5,500 to Rs.9,000. Slower than expected. Buyer pool is narrower than sellers anticipate.
Single-season Conqueror, A and B tier skin support, Level 65 and above: Rs.10,000 to Rs.18,000. Good demand from prestige buyers. Needs multiple Conqueror screenshots.
Multi-season Conqueror (three or more), S-tier skin collection, Level 70 and above: Rs.20,000 to Rs.40,000. Small buyer pool but serious. These accounts need patience and the right platform visibility.
How to Present Your Rank in a Listing
The way rank is displayed in a listing matters as much as the rank itself. Buyers who are close to making a decision look for specific proof before committing.
Show your rank history screen, not just your current rank badge. Current rank at the start of a new episode means nothing because everyone resets. The rank history tab shows peak ranks across multiple seasons and this is the screenshot that serious buyers specifically look for. If you hit Conqueror in Season 8 and have the season history to prove it, that screenshot is worth more than ten other images in your listing.
List every season you reached Ace or above separately. "Ace in Seasons 7, 9, 10, and 11, Conqueror in Season 8" tells a buyer far more than "Conqueror account." Consistency across seasons is a trust signal. One Conqueror season surrounded by Platinum seasons raises questions. Four consecutive Ace seasons with one Conqueror peak signals a consistently strong player, which is what buyers actually want.
Screenshot your KD ratio and damage per match from the stats screen. Rank history proves where you peaked. Stats prove you earned it. Buyers at the higher price points check both. A Conqueror badge with a 0.8 KD and 180 average damage will generate questions. A Conqueror badge with a 3.2 KD and 400 average damage closes faster.
Using Real Data to Set Your Price
The most common pricing mistake sellers make is anchoring to what they want rather than what comparable accounts are actually selling for. The 500-listing dataset makes this visible in a way anecdotal pricing cannot.
Before you set a price, do three things. Search GamersGround for accounts at your rank tier with comparable skin content. Note the asking prices of accounts that have been recently sold or show enquiry activity, not just listed. Then use the BGMI Account Value Calculator to get a data-backed baseline for your specific account stats.
The calculator accounts for level, rank history, and skin tier to give you an estimate grounded in real listing data rather than guesswork. It takes under a minute and removes the single biggest variable that causes good accounts to sit unsold.
Common Questions
My account hit Conqueror once two years ago. Does it still count?
Yes, but with diminishing returns. A Conqueror history from two years ago is still a strong signal if it is accompanied by consistent Ace or above ranks in subsequent seasons. An isolated Conqueror from two years ago followed by Platinum and Gold in recent seasons suggests the account is not being played at that level anymore, which buyers factor into their offer.
Should I wait for a new season to list my Conqueror account?
List during or immediately after the season where you hit Conqueror, not at the start of the next one. At the start of a new episode, everyone has reset and the Conqueror frame is freshest in buyers' minds during the season it was earned. Waiting a full episode reduces the recency premium noticeably.
My Ace account has the Glacier M416. Should I lead with the skin or the rank in my title?
Lead with the skin. The Glacier M416 is a more specific and searched term than Ace in the Indian resale market. "BGMI Glacier M416, Ace Master Season 9, Level 63" will outperform "BGMI Ace Master Account with Glacier M416" in click rate.
Can I negotiate if a buyer offers below my listed price?
Yes, but set a floor before you start negotiating. Know the minimum you will accept based on comparable listings. Sellers who negotiate without a floor tend to accept offers significantly below what the market would have produced with patience. The 500-listing dataset shows that well-presented accounts at correct prices rarely need to drop more than 10 to 15 percent to close.
Does squad rank matter compared to solo or duo?
For most buyers, squad rank is the primary reference because it is the most-played mode. If you have a strong squad Conqueror history, that is the rank to lead with. Solo Conqueror is actually rarer and worth noting separately as an additional signal of individual skill, not as a replacement for squad rank history.
List Your BGMI Account Free
Whether you are sitting on an Ace account with strong skin content or a multi-season Conqueror account ready for the right buyer, the Indian market has demand for both right now.
List your BGMI account free on GamersGround and reach buyers who understand the difference between a base Ace listing and a well-built account with rank history and skin depth. Zero commission, direct payment, full control of your sale.
Browse current BGMI listings to benchmark your account against what is actively selling before you set your price.
Rank got your account here. Presentation gets it sold.