Free Fire Guild Account Price Guide: How Much Can a Level 7 Guild Account Sell For?
By Toishaa Soni · 19 July 2026
Guild owners rarely think about resale until they are ready to quit. A Level 7 guild is not just a number; it is years of member recruitment and activity that buyers pay a real premium for. Here is what your guild account is actually worth.
Most resale content about Free Fire talks about characters, skins, rank. Nobody really talks about guilds. Which is odd, because guild accounts are one of the more interesting corners of this whole market.
Here is what makes a guild account different. The value is not sitting in your inventory the way it does with a normal account. It is sitting in the guild itself. How high has it levelled? How many people are actually active inside it? How long it took to get there. A Level 7 guild does not just happen. Someone recruited consistently, kept members engaged, and usually did that for over a year before hitting that number.
The buyers who go looking for guild accounts specifically are a small crowd, but they know exactly what they want. A lot of them already run a smaller guild and would rather buy their way past the grind than start from zero again. Others are competitive players chasing an established member base for guild events. Either way, when they find a genuine Level 7 guild, they understand what they are looking at and they pay for it accordingly.
What Guild Level Actually Tells a Buyer
Guilds in Free Fire level up through experience points that members generate through daily play, guild missions, and events. Reaching Level 7 takes sustained activity over a real stretch of time. A guild that rushed to Level 7 through one burst of activity and then went silent is a very different asset from one that climbed there gradually with members who kept showing up.
This is usually the first thing a buyer checks past the headline number. Level tells you the ceiling. Whether members are still active tells you if the guild is actually alive or just a number on a screen.
Level 7 also unlocks real functional benefits inside Free Fire's guild system: a higher member cap, better access in the guild shop, stronger rewards from guild events. So this is not just a badge a buyer inherits. It is something they can use from day one of ownership.
What Buyers Are Actually Looking For
A serious buyer runs through a specific mental checklist before committing, and knowing what it is changes how you should present the listing.
Active members against the cap matters more than almost anything else. A Level 7 guild with a cap of 100 but only 20 people who ever log in is basically a shell. A Level 7 guild with 70 or 80 genuinely active members is a living community, and that is worth real money.
Buyers will ask for this number outright, and screenshots showing recent activity in the member list are the proof that actually convinces them.
Event participation history matters too. Guilds that regularly show up for events generate more experience and unlock more guild-wide rewards over time. A guild with that kind of track record sells for more than one that has been coasting on old momentum.
Age of the guild carries weight almost equal to level. A two-year-old Level 7 guild with strong retention says this community has staying power. A six-month-old Level 7 that grew unusually fast raises a red flag. Buyers start wondering if the membership was padded right before the sale.
Then there is the transfer process itself. Free Fire lets you hand off guild ownership to another member, and buyers want to confirm this can happen cleanly, that they will become the actual recognised leader, not just get handed a linked account with no real control.
And finally, the linked player account matters on its own. The guild sits on top of a personal account, and that account's stats, characters, and skins get factored into the final number too. A strong leader account adds on top of the guild value, it does not replace it.
What a Level 7 Guild Actually Sells For in India
This is a thin market compared to standard accounts, so prices swing more depending on who shows up to buy. Still, there are patterns.
Low active membership, under 30, guild less than a year old: Rs.1,500 to Rs.4,000. It works but it is not exciting. Buyers here mostly want a shortcut past the early grind, not a thriving community.
Moderate activity, 30 to 60 active members, one to two years old, decent event history: Rs.4,000 to Rs.10,000. This is where most solidly built guilds land. Enough life in it to feel real, enough history to prove it was not inflated overnight.
Strong activity, 60 plus active members, two years or older, consistent event participation, well-developed leader account: Rs.10,000 to Rs.20,000. These attract the most serious buyers, often other guild owners merging communities or competitive players wanting an established base right away.
Exceptional guilds with a large loyal membership, long documented history, and a premium leader account: Rs.20,000 and up. Rare.
These take longer to sell simply because so few buyers are shopping at that scale, but the right one, usually someone building a serious competitive presence, pays what it is worth.
How to Actually Write the Listing
A guild listing needs a different structure from a normal character-focused one, because you are selling something fundamentally different.
Put the level and active member count together in the title.
Something like "Free Fire Level 7 Guild, 65 Active Members, 2 Years Old" tells a buyer everything they need in one line, no clicking required to figure out if it is worth their time.
Screenshot the guild info panel: level, total members, experience progress. Screenshot the member list, sorted by recent activity if the game allows it, so buyers can see for themselves the roster is real and not just names. Screenshot any event history or badges the guild has earned along the way.
Be honest about the activity pattern. How often do missions actually get completed. Is there a leadership team beyond just you. What is the community culture like. Buyers purchasing a guild are stepping into an ongoing social structure, not buying a static object, and details like this let them picture what they are actually walking into.
Spell out the ownership transfer clearly too. Mention you will use Free Fire's built-in leadership transfer feature and note any waiting period the game enforces before it finalises.
List your Free Fire account free on GamersGround and reach Indian buyers who already know what a well-built guild is worth.
Browse current Free Fire listings to see what comparable guild and standard accounts are actually going for right now.
Common Questions
Does Level 7 always beat Level 5 on price?
Usually, but not always. A Level 5 guild with 80 genuinely active members and two solid years of history can easily outsell a Level 7 with only 15 people who log in occasionally. Level sets the baseline. Activity is what people are actually paying for.
Can I sell just the guild and keep my player account?
No. Guild ownership in Free Fire is tied directly to the leader's player account. Selling the guild means handing over that account entirely, so factor your personal progress and content into the price along with the guild itself.
Should I remove inactive members before listing?
It can help. A cleaner, more honest active member count builds more trust than a padded total that falls apart the moment a buyer checks the roster themselves.
How long does it usually take to sell a guild account?
Longer than a standard account, since this is a niche market. One to three weeks is typical for a well-presented Level 7 with real activity behind it. Rarer, high-value guilds can take longer just because fewer buyers are shopping at that scale.
Is the in-game ownership transfer actually safe for the buyer?
Yes, it is the standard and safest route. Once it goes through, the new owner has full recognised control inside the game itself, which beats any informal handshake arrangement by a wide margin.