I’ve spent plenty of late nights scrolling through the League of Legends store, staring at skins I probably shouldn’t buy. Skins are more than cosmetics for me.
They shape how you connect with your champions. I play better when my champion feels fresh and updated.
Sometimes I use a Prestige skin to stand out. Other times, I pick a goofy skin just for fun. This blog looks at who holds the most skins in League of Legends this year.
I pulled numbers from different sources and compared the results. The counts don’t always line up because of how skins are tracked.
By the end, you’ll see which champion leads the list, which ones follow, and why the totals vary.
Current Skin Landscape in LoL
The skin count in League of Legends keeps moving. Each year adds more, and different trackers report slightly different totals. This is what the most recent numbers look like:
- Esports Insider: 1,781 skins as of April 2025
- GameBoost: about 1,825 skins across 171 champions
- Turbosmurfs: 1,794 skins as of May 2025
The numbers don’t match perfectly. Some sources count chromas, others leave out vaulted skins, and Prestige re-releases sometimes get listed twice.
However you slice it, the total is massive. It sets the stage for figuring out which champion sits at the top.
Champion with the Most Skins
Miss Fortune sits at the top of the list. Most sources place her between 21 and 22 skins.
- Esports Insider: 22 skins
- GameBoost: 22 skins
- Dot Esports: 21 skins (corrected after removing a duplicate Prestige count)
- Esports.gg: 21 skins at the end of 2024
So, the safe number is 21–22 skins, depending on how you track them. I’ve played her on and off, and it makes sense. She’s flashy, popular, and fits into almost every skin line Riot puts out.
Champions Who Follow Closely
Miss Fortune may be in first place, but she’s not far ahead of the pack. Several champions sit right behind her with big skin collections of their own.
These are the ones Riot tends to revisit again and again because of their popularity and flexibility in skin lines.
| Champion | Skins (approx.) | Source Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lux | 19–21 | Top-tier favorite, steady releases |
| Ezreal | 20–21 | Consistently near the top |
| Akali | 19–21 | Fits futuristic and fantasy themes |
| Ahri | 18–21 | Always in the top five rankings |
| Ashe | 18–19 | Long-time champ, steady support |
| Lee Sin | 18–19 | Popular pick, frequent skin updates |
| Sivir | 17–18 | Classic champ with solid lineup |
| Riven | 17 | Fan favorite, fewer recent releases |
| Annie | 17 | Old champ with skins spread across years |
| Leona | 17 | Often picked for group skin lines |
Why Skin Counts Differ Across Lists?
The numbers don’t always match across different lists, and there are a few reasons for that.
Some sources update more often than others, while others count things that many players wouldn’t. These are the main differences:
- Timing: Older lists may not include the newest skins from recent patches.
- Prestige duplicates: Certain Prestige editions, like Bewitching Miss Fortune, sometimes get counted twice.
- Legacy skins: Vaulted or event-limited skins may be included by some and skipped by others.
- Counting rules: Some trackers add chromas or regional skins, while others don’t.
Because of this, one site might list Miss Fortune at 21 skins and another at 22. Personally, I only count the main skins. Chromas feel more like color swaps than full releases.
Some champions keep getting fresh skins, while others wait years without one. If you want to see which champs have the fewest skins and the longest gaps, check out my blog on 9 Top Champions with Few Skins and Long Droughts.
Why Some Champions Get More Skins?
Some champions always seem to get new skins, while others sit around for years without much love.
A lot of it comes down to popularity. Champs like Lux, Ezreal, and Miss Fortune are played by a huge chunk of the player base, so Riot knows those skins will sell.
Flexibility matters too. Akali is a good example; she fits many themes and even benefits from esports influence.
Champions that show up often on stage tend to get more attention because fans want to play what they see the pros using. Lore and design count as well.
Some champs just match the vibe of more creative ideas.
I’ve felt the frustration when my main sits skinless for years while Lux gets yet another premium drop, but at the end of the day, Riot is balancing what players love with what keeps the game profitable.
Conclusion
This year, Miss Fortune takes the top spot with around 21–22 skins, and it’s clear why she keeps getting attention. She’s popular, flashy, and fits into nearly every theme Riot creates.
Other champions like Lux, Ezreal, Akali, and Ahri are close behind, which makes the race even more interesting.
The numbers vary depending on which lists you read, but the results point to the same answer. If you came here wondering who has the most skins, you now have the full picture.
With so many skins in the game, prices matter too. If you’re curious about how Epic, Legendary, and Ultimate skins stack up, I broke it down in my blog: LoL Skins Price Guide: Epic vs Legendary vs Ultimate.