NFT Floor Price Explained
What floor means and why collectors and creators care.
The floor price of an NFT collection is the lowest price at which an item in that collection is currently listed for sale. It is the entry cost to buy into the set.
How It Is Calculated
Marketplaces scan all listed NFTs in a collection and take the minimum listed price. That is the floor. It changes as listings are added or removed.
Why It Matters
For buyers, the floor is the cheapest way to own one of the collection. For sellers, listing at or near the floor can mean a quicker sale. For creators, a rising floor can signal demand.
Floor vs Last Sale
Floor price is lowest ask. The last sale is what someone actually paid. Both are useful: floor for entry, last sale for recent demand.
For 1/1 and Single Pieces
For a single NFT (1/1), floor is less meaningful. You set the price when you mint.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Does floor price include fees?
- Usually the floor is shown as the listed price in SOL. The buyer may pay marketplace fees on top.
- Why did the floor drop?
- More listings or fewer buyers. Sellers listing lower push the floor down.
- Where do I see floor price for Solana NFTs?
- Marketplaces like Magic Eden and Tensor show floor price per collection.
If you want to create and mint your NFT without coding you can use our Solana NFT creator tool which lets you generate metadata and mint NFTs directly on the Solana blockchain.
Create Your Solana NFT
Mint your NFT and list it. For collections, track your floor as you grow.
Create NFT