Calculate NFT collection market cap and portfolio holdings value from floor price. Estimate total collection value and your position based on supply.
The floor price is the lowest listing price for any NFT in a collection — it serves as a baseline value metric for the entire project. By multiplying the floor price by the total supply, you get the collection's implied market capitalization. This metric helps compare collections of different sizes and assess whether a project is undervalued or overvalued relative to peers.
This calculator lets you quickly compute market cap from floor price and supply, and estimate the value of your personal holdings based on how many NFTs you own. While floor price doesn't capture the value of rare or trait-specific NFTs, it provides a solid baseline for portfolio valuation and market analysis.
Traders and investors use floor price analysis to identify buying opportunities, track collection health, and make informed decisions about portfolio allocation across multiple NFT projects.
Crypto traders, long-term holders, and DeFi participants benefit from transparent nft floor price calculations when planning entries, exits, or portfolio rebalances. Revisit this calculator whenever market conditions shift to keep your strategy grounded in accurate data.
Floor price is the single most-watched metric in NFT trading. This calculator converts floor price into actionable financial data — market cap for comparing collections of different sizes, and personal holdings value for portfolio tracking. Knowing your exact exposure at current floor prices helps you manage risk and set sell targets.
Market Cap = Floor Price × Total Supply Holdings Value = Floor Price × NFTs Held Market Cap (USD) = Market Cap (ETH) × ETH Price
Result: 25,000 ETH market cap ($75M)
With a floor price of 2.5 ETH and 10,000 total supply, the collection market cap is 25,000 ETH or $75,000,000 at $3,000/ETH. Holding 5 NFTs, your position is worth 12.5 ETH ($37,500) at floor price.
Floor price is the simplest and most widely used metric in NFT valuation. While it has limitations — it doesn't capture rarity premiums, utility value, or sentimental value — it provides a quick, objective baseline. For portfolios holding multiple collections, floor-based valuation gives a consistent framework for tracking overall position value.
NFT market cap (floor price × supply) behaves differently from token market caps. In fungible tokens, every token is identical and equally liquid. In NFTs, only a fraction of supply is typically listed, and individual items vary in desirability. NFT market cap is therefore a theoretical maximum if every item sold at floor, not a precise liquidity measure.
Be aware that floor prices can be manipulated. Wash trading (buying your own listings) can create false volume. Whales sweeping floors can artificially inflate prices. Coordinated delisting campaigns can reduce supply on marketplaces. Always combine floor price analysis with volume, listing count, and holder distribution data.
Diversifying across collections reduces the risk of any single project's floor price collapse destroying your portfolio. Track your total NFT portfolio value at floor prices regularly, and set mental stop-losses — if a collection drops below a certain value, consider whether the fundamentals still support holding.
The floor price is the lowest price at which any NFT in a collection is currently listed for sale on a marketplace. It represents the minimum entry cost to own an NFT from that collection and serves as a baseline valuation metric.
A collection with a 1 ETH floor and 10,000 supply (10,000 ETH market cap) is much larger than one with a 5 ETH floor and 500 supply (2,500 ETH market cap). Market cap normalizes for supply differences, giving a clearer picture of relative size and value.
Floor price provides a conservative estimate. It's the minimum your NFTs should be worth, assuming they're not rarer than average. Actual sales of specific NFTs (especially rare ones) often exceed floor price significantly.
Floor price is driven by supply and demand. New listings, panic sellers, whales accumulating, project announcements, and overall crypto market sentiment all affect floor prices. Wash trading can also artificially inflate floor prices on some platforms.
For conservative portfolio tracking, use floor price. For tax purposes, consult a crypto tax professional — different jurisdictions have varying rules about fair market valuation of NFTs. Last sale price of comparable items can provide additional context.
Healthy collections typically show a gradual uptrend in floor price with occasional corrections. Consistent upward movement with moderate volume is more sustainable than sharp spikes. Floor stability during broader market downturns is a strong positive signal.
All else being equal, lower supply collections tend to have higher floor prices because scarcity drives value. However, total demand matters more than supply alone. A 10,000-piece collection with strong community can maintain a higher floor than a 100-piece collection with no interest.
Floor sweeping is when a buyer purchases many of the lowest-listed NFTs in a collection, rapidly buying up floor inventory. This can cause a sharp floor price increase. Whales and traders sweep floors when they believe a collection is undervalued or to manipulate prices.