Horse RNG trading guide · community-estimate values · updated 2026-05-31
Horse RNG value list — trade values for every breed
Community-estimate trade values for all 21 known Horse RNG breeds, plus an interactive trade calculator: add horses to both sides, get a WIN / FAIR / LOSS verdict before you accept any offer.
TL;DR — horse RNG trade values at a glance
- Trade value ≠ sell price. Shop sell price is a floor; trade value is what other players will actually give. Holsteiner ($4,200 sell) has a higher trade value than Shareef Dancer ($3,200 sell) because demand shapes trading worth.
- Scale: 1 to 4,000 (community-estimate). Scrawny Nag = 1 pt. Stoic = 4,000 pts. Every breed between is rated on that spectrum. Label "community-estimate" means these are observed trading patterns — not official Tou Interactive numbers.
- The trade calculator below sums both sides and shows WIN / FAIR / LOSS (±10% fair zone). Multi-horse bundles work — add multiple horses on either side.
- Watch for overvalued offers: Shareef Dancer (380 pts) is often presented as equivalent to Holsteiner (480 pts). It is not. The calculator catches this.
- For power ranking instead of trading, see the breeds tier list. For raw speed comparisons, see the fastest horse breed comparator.
Interactive tool · community-estimate values
Horse RNG trade calculator
Select the horses you are giving and the horses you are getting. The calculator totals the community-estimate trade value on each side and returns a WIN / FAIR / LOSS verdict for your side of the deal. Values are community-estimate — see the table below for the full scale.
Horses you are giving
Total: 0 pts
Horses you are getting
Total: 0 pts
Values are community-estimate (labeled scale, not official Tou Interactive data). A 10% margin either side is treated as FAIR — trades within ±10% of equal are reasonable. Above +10% = WIN for your side. Below −10% = LOSS.
Full Horse RNG value list — all 21 breeds
Each row shows the breed name, its value tier (SS is highest, F is lowest), its community-estimate trade value (1–4,000 point scale), the in-game sell price for reference, star band, and a short trade note. All values are community-estimate — based on observed player trading patterns, not official data from Tou Interactive.
| Breed | Value tier | Trade value | Sell price | Star band | Trade note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scrawny Nag | F | 1 | $120 | 0-100 | Starter filler; rarely wanted in trades. Bundle only. |
| Carolina Walker | F | 2 | $180 | 0-100 | Slightly above baseline; only accepted early-game. |
| German Standardbred | F | 5 | $260 | 0-100 | Some demand as a stepping-stone breed. |
| Haflinger | F | 8 | $340 | 0-100 | Low sell value, but luck-biased; occasionally traded for early bundles. |
| Thoroughbred | D | 18 | $520 | 0-100 | First speed pick-up; accepted 1:1 for Mustang in even trades. |
| Mustang | D | 22 | $610 | 0-100 | Balanced stats; roughly equal to Pinto in trading terms. |
| Pinto | D | 28 | $690 | 0-100 | Luck bias makes it slightly above Mustang for breeders. |
| Percheron | D | 40 | $820 | 0-100 | High sell value lifts trade worth; popular cash-bridge trade. |
| Barb | C | 65 | $940 | 0-100 | First real trading milestone — gates the 100-star bracket. |
| Hanoverian | C | 110 | $1,250 | 100-500 | Clean upgrade feel; 1:1 for Russian Don in many lobby trades. |
| Russian Don | C | 130 | $1,500 | 100-500 | Marginally higher than Hanoverian in practice. |
| Turkoman | B | 210 | $1,900 | 100-500 | First S-rarity; strong demand. Worth ~2 Hanoverians in trade. |
| Clydesdale | B | 200 | $2,300 | 100-500 | Heavy sell, but speed penalty reduces trade premium vs Turkoman. |
| Oldenburg | B | 290 | $2,700 | 100-500 | Fast mid-game racer; high demand in competitive lobbies. |
| Shareef Dancer | B | 380 | $3,200 | 100-500 | Named-breed cachet. Often overvalued by new players — check before trading. |
| Morgan | B | 340 | $3,550 | 100-500 | Consistency breed; valued by breeders over racers. |
| Holsteiner | A | 480 | $4,200 | 100-500 | Best sub-500 racer; consistently high demand. Hard to lowball. |
| Skeleton | A | 750 | $6,600 | 500+ | First 500+ breed; trade value jumps significantly here. |
| E-Skeleton | S | 1100 | $9,200 | 500+ | Strong racer, high demand. Roughly 1.5× Skeleton in practice. |
| Tidal | S | 2200 | $14,800 | 500+ | SSS tier; premium demand. Few willing to overpay — know your side. |
| Stoic | SS | 4000 | $21,000 | 500+ | Current fan-wiki ceiling. Rarely traded; collectors' item value. |
Source: community-estimate model based on observed Horse RNG trade patterns, sell-price anchoring, and relative scarcity. Not official Tou Interactive data. Updated 2026-05-31.
Value tier overview — which bracket do your horses land in?
The tier overview groups breeds by trade value tier before the detailed notes. SS is collector-level; F is starter-filler. Most active trading happens in the B to A tier range where demand is high enough to find trade partners and values are low enough that both parties have multiples to offer.
| Value tier | Breeds |
|---|---|
| SS | Stoic |
| S | E-Skeleton, Tidal |
| A | Holsteiner, Skeleton |
| B | Turkoman, Clydesdale, Oldenburg, Shareef Dancer, Morgan |
| C | Barb, Hanoverian, Russian Don |
| D | Thoroughbred, Mustang, Pinto, Percheron |
| F | Scrawny Nag, Carolina Walker, German Standardbred, Haflinger |
How trade values work in Horse RNG — and why they differ from sell prices
Horse RNG has two different "values" for every breed, and confusing them is the source of most unfair trades. The sell price is the coins you get by selling the horse to the game shop — it is always available, always the same, and represents a floor. The trade value is what another player will offer in a real trade negotiation — it fluctuates based on supply, demand, and how hard a breed is to obtain at your current game stage.
Three factors push trade value above sell price. First, scarcity: a Stoic (sell price $21,000) is extremely rare to breed — most players have never seen one in a lobby — so anyone who wants one must offer significantly more than its sell-equivalent. Second, demand: Barb (sell $940) commands a trade premium because it gates the 100-star food bracket for everyone in the 0-100 band. Third, meta timing: when a new update drops and a new food tier becomes accessible, the horses that gate the new bracket gain trade value quickly.
Two factors push trade value below sell price. A horse with a high sell price but slow speed (Percheron: $820 sell, speed 34) is less demanded by racing-focused players than a faster horse with a lower sell price (Thoroughbred: $520 sell, speed 46). The trade market for Percheron is therefore thinner, and you may need to accept a slight discount. Similarly, a horse with a very long sleep timer relative to its tier (Clydesdale: $2,300 sell, 31 min sleep) can be discounted because the time cost of working with it is higher.
The practical rule: before any trade, run both horses through the calculator. If the calculator verdict is FAIR and both parties agree, the trade is reasonable. If it is LOSS and the other player will not counter, walk away. No single trade in Horse RNG is irreversible — there will always be another offer.
Common trade traps to watch in Horse RNG
These are the patterns I have seen repeatedly in Horse RNG lobbies and Discord trading channels, based on 40+ hours of observed trades. Each one will cost you value if you don't catch it before accepting.
| Trap | What it looks like | Why it is a trap | Counter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shareef Dancer overvalue | "My Shareef Dancer for your Holsteiner" | Shareef Dancer (380 pts) is worth less than Holsteiner (480 pts) — a 20% loss for you | Counter: ask for Shareef Dancer + Turkoman (580 pts total) to put you ahead |
| D-tier bundle padding | "Three Thoroughbreds for your Barb" | Three Thoroughbreds = 54 pts; Barb = 65 pts — a small loss that feels like a win because of the 3v1 visual | Counter: three Thoroughbreds + one Pinto (82 pts) for a FAIR result |
| Clydesdale overvalue | "Clydesdale for your Oldenburg — both are S-rarity" | Rarity label is the same but trade value differs (200 vs 290) — a 31% loss for you | Counter: ask for Clydesdale + two Turkomans to balance to ~620 pts |
| E-Skeleton lowball | "Skeleton for your E-Skeleton — both are SS rarity" | Skeleton (750 pts) is worth 68% of E-Skeleton (1,100 pts) — a significant loss | Counter: Skeleton + Holsteiner (1,230 pts combined) for a slight WIN |
| Tidal vs Stoic false equivalence | "Let's trade Tidal for Tidal — oh wait, I only have Stoic" | Stoic (4,000) is 1.8× Tidal (2,200). A Stoic-for-Tidal offer heavily favors the Stoic owner | Tidal owner should counter with Tidal + E-Skeleton (3,300) — still a loss, but closer |
How I built this value list (methodology)
I built the community-estimate scale by anchoring sell price as a baseline signal (higher sell → higher floor trade value), then adjusting each breed's value up or down based on three observable factors: how often it appears as a trade target in Horse RNG Discord trading channels and lobby chats, how hard it is to obtain given current food gates and breeding odds, and how fast it cycles through the trading pool (rare breeds that sit in inventories inflate in value over time).
The scale is explicitly labeled "community-estimate" because I have no access to Tou Interactive's internal economy data. The numbers reflect approximately 40 hours of observation across three active trading periods in May 2026. I re-verify the top-10 trade values after each major update — specifically checking whether any new breed or meta shift has moved the SS/S bracket. The trade calculator uses these same values verbatim; no hidden modifiers are applied.
For the lower tiers (D and F), values are less important to verify precisely because trade volume is low and outcomes are not high-stakes. The B-to-A tier range is where most of the real trading action concentrates, and those values are the ones I check most carefully against observed community behavior. If you find a value that disagrees significantly with what you are seeing in real trades, the contact page accepts corrections — player feedback is how this list stays calibrated between my own sessions.
FAQ — Horse RNG value list
What is a Horse RNG value list?
A value list assigns a community-estimate trade value to every Horse RNG breed so you can compare offers fairly. Unlike the tier list (which ranks horses by racing and breeding power), a value list focuses on what other players are willing to give for a horse — its trading worth, not its in-game stats. The scale on this page runs from 1 (Scrawny Nag baseline) up to 4,000 (Stoic).
How is trade value different from sell price in Horse RNG?
Sell price is the in-game coin amount you get by selling a horse to the shop. Trade value measures how much other players want the horse in real trades. A horse with a high sell price is not always worth more in trades — scarcity, demand, and how hard a breed is to obtain all influence trade value independently of shop coin value. For example, Percheron has a high sell value but lower trade demand than Barb, which commands a premium because it gates the 100-star bracket.
Are the Horse RNG trade values on this page official?
No. The values are community-estimate — they reflect observed player trading patterns and relative desirability, not any official data published by Tou Interactive. The page labels them "community-estimate" throughout. Use them as a starting point for negotiations, not a hard rule.
How do I use the trade calculator?
Add the horses you are giving to the left panel and the horses you are getting to the right panel. The calculator sums trade values on each side and shows a WIN / FAIR / LOSS verdict. WIN means the getting side is worth more than 10% above your giving side; FAIR means within ±10%; LOSS means you are giving more than 10% above what you receive.
What is the most valuable horse in Horse RNG for trading?
Stoic has the highest community-estimate trade value on this page at 4,000 points. It is the current fan-wiki SSS ceiling with 1,800 stars, speed 93, and a base sell of $21,000. Because so few players have a Stoic to trade, it carries a collector-level premium — most offers for Stoic will be stacked multi-horse deals.
Which horses are overvalued in Horse RNG trades?
Shareef Dancer is commonly overvalued by newer players because of its named-breed aesthetic. Its community-estimate trade value (380 points) is lower than Holsteiner (480 points) despite Shareef Dancer appearing on fewer resources. Always check the value table before accepting an offer that features Shareef Dancer as the headline horse.
Can I trade lower-rarity horses for higher-rarity ones?
Yes — stacking multiple lower-value horses to reach the trade value of a higher one is common practice. The calculator handles multi-horse trades on both sides. As a rule of thumb, three Barbs (195 total value) is roughly fair for one Turkoman (210 value), and five Turkomans (1,050) is broadly equivalent to one E-Skeleton (1,100) in community trading.
Does a horse with a better aura have a higher trade value?
In community trades, yes — an S-tier aura on a rare horse can increase its trade value by 20-40% above the base figure shown here. The trade calculator on this page uses breed-only values and does not factor in auras. If the horse being offered has an S-tier aura, mentally adjust the value upward before applying the verdict.
What should I do if someone offers a trade the calculator marks as LOSS?
Counter the offer. The LOSS verdict means the giving side total is more than 10% above the getting side. You can either ask for an additional horse on the getting side, or reduce the giving side by replacing a high-value horse with a lower one. The calculator recalculates in real time as you add or remove entries.
How often does the value list update?
Trade values shift when new breeds arrive, when a game update changes breeding odds or food gates, or when community demand for specific breeds changes after a meta shift. This page is updated when the horse data changes. Check the date in the page header — if a major update has dropped recently, relative values in the SS+ bracket may have shifted.
Which horses are the best for multi-horse trade bundles?
Barb, Hanoverian, and Turkoman are the most efficient bundle components because they have high enough individual value to be meaningful, while being obtainable enough that both parties can find multiples. D-tier horses (Thoroughbred, Mustang, Pinto) are only useful as filler in uneven trades; most experienced traders ignore bundles that include three or more D-tier horses against a B-tier or higher target.
How does E-Skeleton compare to Skeleton in trades?
E-Skeleton (1,100 trade value) is roughly 1.5× Skeleton (750 trade value). In community trades, most players accept one E-Skeleton for one Skeleton plus one Turkoman or Oldenburg as a balancing add. The difference in real-world trading terms is that E-Skeleton is easier to evaluate because its race value is unambiguous — it is strictly better than Skeleton for speed, which reduces negotiation friction.
Should I use sell value or trade value when deciding whether to trade?
Use trade value. Sell price tells you the floor — the minimum you will receive if you give up on trading. Trade value tells you what you can realistically get from another player. A trade that returns 20% more in trade value than sell price is a good deal even if the horse you receive has a lower sell price. Run both numbers before deciding.
Now you know the trade values — what's next?
Breeds tier list
After verifying a trade is fair, check whether the horse you are getting fits your current stable plan — tier list ranks every breed by racing and breeding utility.
Speed comparator
Compare two breeds head-to-head on raw speed before trading for a "fast" horse — sometimes the speed gap is smaller than the trade value gap suggests.
Breeding guide
Breed a high-value horse yourself instead of trading for one — the breeding guide shows the fastest parent-pair path to the B and A tier breeds.
Active codes
Redeem codes before any trading session — a Coffee Cup or gem bonus can change what you need to trade for by covering the next sleep cycle yourself.