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Valorant Best Weapons 2026: Every Gun Ranked S-Tier to F-Tier

Valorant Best Weapons 2026: Every Gun Ranked S-Tier to F-Tier

Tom Whitfield
Tom Whitfield Gaming Editor
PUBLISHED19 Jun 2026
LAST UPDATED19 Jun 2026

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Knowing which weapon to buy in any given Valorant round is one of the most underrated skills in the game.

Raw aim matters, but buying a Sheriff on the wrong eco round, or dropping 4,700 credits on an Operator when you should be saving, costs more matches than bad crosshair placement.

This guide ranks every gun in the current 2026 meta with stats, situational context, and the economy knowledge to make the right call every round.

META SNAPSHOT – Season 2026 / Patch 12.x

  • Vandal: 93.6% pick rate in competitive, the most-used rifle in the game
  • Phantom: 51.6% pick rate preferred at close-mid range and through smokes
  • New in 2026: Bandit sidearm (600cr) and Outlaw sniper have reshaped eco and light-buy rounds
  • S-Tier by win rate: Shorty (54.5% WR), Frenzy (52.2%), Ghost (51.6%), Bandit (51.0%), Vandal (50.6%)
  • Data source: MetaBot.gg, ValoCheck, Beebom analysis updated June 2026

The Tier List: Every Valorant Weapon Ranked

Tier Weapon(s) Price Why It Belongs Here
S Vandal 2,900 cr 93.6% pick rate. One-tap to the head at ANY range. The game’s most consistent full-buy rifle.
S Phantom 2,900 cr Smoother recoil than Vandal, fires through smokes without tracers. Top choice at close-mid range.
S Ghost 500 cr Best pistol in the game. One-shot unarmoured head, 2-shot armoured body. Dominates pistol rounds.
S Shorty 300 cr Highest win rate (54.5%) of any weapon at point-blank range. The definitive retake/close-quarters eco gun.
S Frenzy 450 cr 52.2% win rate. 800 RPM SMG that shreds in eco and anti-eco rounds. Underestimated at every rank.
A Operator 4,700 cr One-shot to the head or body at any range. God-tier in right hands on defence. Economy-prohibitive for most.
A Marshal 950 cr The Operator’s poor cousin is criminally underrated. One-shot headshot, fast scope, perfect for half-buy rounds.
A Spectre 1,600 cr Best SMG for light buy. Silenced, fast fire rate, reliable at close-mid. The weapon that punishes bad saves.
A Bulldog 2,100 cr Fills the gap between rifle and SMG. The 3-round burst is genuinely good at mid-range. Under-bought but solid.
A Sheriff 800 cr High ceiling, brutal learning curve. One-shots unarmoured heads. In skilled hands: the best pistol in the game.
A Outlaw 2,400 cr New sniper that fires twice per scope. Light-shield killer. Reshaped half-buy rounds since its introduction.
A Bandit 600 cr New sidearm. Bridges Ghost and Sheriff. 51% win rate in S-tier. Changed the eco round dynamics significantly.
B Guardian 2,250 cr Semi-auto rifle with Vandal-level headshot damage. Excellent in very specific hands. Inflexible for most.
B Stinger 950 cr Strong first two bullets, catastrophically bad after that. Extremely niche-specific wall-bang situations only.
B Judge 1,500 cr Semi-auto shotgun. Terrifying at point-blank. The only shotgun worth buying outside the Shorty.
B Bucky 900 cr Primary fire at close range is fine. Alt-fire is surprisingly ranged. Situationally decent on Haven, Icebox.
C Ares 1,600 cr Fire rate accelerates while held. Theoretically interesting, practically outclassed by Spectre and Odin.
C Odin 3,200 cr Extremely high DPS when spun up. Wall-bang machine. The problem: 3,200 credits for a spray-and-pray weapon.
D Classic 0 cr A free gun is always worth carrying. The right-click burst can win pistol duels. Upgrade it the moment you have 500 credits.
F Knife 0 cr Move faster. Look cool. Win zero gunfights. Keep it sheathed as your sprint tool, not your combat choice.

The Phantom vs Vandal Debate — Settled (For Now)

The Phantom vs Vandal Debate — Settled (For Now)

This is the question every Valorant player asks, and the honest answer is: both rifles are equally viable, and your playstyle determines which wins.

Here is the precise breakdown:

Factor Vandal Phantom
Price 2,900 cr 2,900 cr
Magazine 25 rounds 30 rounds
Fire rate 9.75 rounds/sec 11 rounds/sec
Headshot (any range) 160 damage (instant kill) 140 damage beyond 15m (not a kill on full armour)
Body shot (close) 120 damage 120 damage
Recoil pattern Higher requires discipline Smoother, more forgiving spray
Tracer rounds Yes (visible to enemies) No (harder to track through smokes)
Pick rate 93.6% (competitive) 51.6% (competitive)
Best for Players with strong crosshair placement, long-range duels Players who spray, smoke pushes, close-mid skirmishes

The single biggest mechanical difference: the Phantom does 140 headshot damage (not 160) beyond 15 metres, meaning a fully armoured enemy survives a Phantom headshot at long range.

The Vandal kills at any range with a headshot. If you regularly take long-range duels, the Vandal is statistically superior. If your game is mid-range and you like firing through smokes, the Phantom’s lack of tracers is a genuine tactical advantage.

The New Meta Additions: Bandit and Outlaw

Bandit (600 Credits) — The Eco Round Game-Changer

The Bandit is the most significant addition to Valorant’s pistol economy since the Ghost. Sitting between the Ghost (500cr) and Sheriff (800cr) at just 600 credits, the Bandit offers precision firepower without the high-ceiling, high-floor difficulty of the Sheriff.

It achieved a 51% win rate in its first season, placing it firmly in S-tier on a per-cost basis. On eco rounds, the Bandit combined with a Shorty represents a lethal dual-sidearm setup that can punish under-prepared full-buy teams.

Outlaw (2,400 Credits) — The Light-Buy Sniper

The Outlaw fires twice per scope cycle and costs 2,400 credits versus the Operator’s 4,700. It is not a replacement for the Operator; the Operator still one-shots anywhere, and the Outlaw requires two body shots, but it is the most effective half-buy weapon ever added to Valorant.

Against teams with light shields (800 credits of armour), the Outlaw’s double-shot kills in two body hits, making it the ‘light shield killer’ of the current meta. Full-buy teams holding with shields are more protected, but the Outlaw has fundamentally changed how half-buy rounds are played.

Economy Guide: What to Buy Every Round?

Economy Guide What to Buy Every Round

Round Type Your Credits What to Buy Why
Pistol round 800 Ghost + Armour (800cr) Ghost wins most pistol duels. Save 500cr on Frenzy unless you need close-range spray.
Eco round 0–1,800 Shorty (300) + Bandit (600) + Abilities Win with abilities and positioning. Upgrade if you have 950cr+ for a Spectre.
Semi-buy / light buy 1,800–2,500 Spectre (1,600) + Light Shield (400) or Outlaw (2,400) + no shield Spectre is reliable close-mid. Outlaw only if you can hold long angles.
Full buy 3,900+ Vandal or Phantom (2,900) + Heavy Shield (1,000) + Abilities Never compromise on rifle + heavy shield on full buy.
Force buy 2,000–3,500 Bulldog (2,100) + Light Shield, or Marshal (950) + Heavy Shield Bulldog punishes eco. Marshal is devastating when you can hold angles.
Save round 0 Classic only spends on abilities Don’t buy a rifle, you’ll lose. Save for the next round’s full buy.

Best Weapons by Role and Map

Rifles (Attack)

  • Vandal: ideal for long-range duels, Ascent B Site, Haven C Long, Fracture A Main. One-tap potential rewards disciplined crosshair placement
  • Phantom: ideal for smoke pushes and close-mid range Bind, Lotus, Pearl. The no-tracer mechanic gives a genuine tactical advantage when firing through smokes

Snipers

  • Operator: defence only in most cases, holding a single long angle like Ascent A Main, Haven C Long, Breeze B Main. Requires 5,700 credits total (weapon + heavy shield). Best on Jett, Chamber, or Iso
  • Marshal (950cr): the underrated buy. One-shot to the head at any range, faster scope animation than most players expect. Perfect for eco rounds where you can hold distance
  • Outlaw (2,400cr): half-buy rounds only. Dominates against light-shielded teams. Do not buy this against heavy-shielded full-buys unless you are an experienced sniper

SMGs

  • Spectre: the best light-buy weapon in the game for indoor maps and close quarters. Its silence and fire rate make it devastating at Bind, Lotus, and Split
  • Stinger: Buy it only if you need the first two bullets (one-tap headshot at very close range). Beyond burst one, the weapon becomes a liability

Pistols

  • Ghost (500cr): buy every pistol round, no exceptions. The most efficient investment in the game
  • Sheriff (800cr): only for players with consistently accurate aim. The two-tap headshot potential is enormous; the spray-and-miss risk is career-ending in clutch situations
  • Bandit (600cr): the new S-tier eco option. More reliable than the Sheriff for mid-level players who want pistol-round firepower without the Sheriff’s harsh penalties

Weapons to Avoid Buying (and When)

Weapons to Avoid Buying (and When)

Weapon Why to Avoid When It’s Actually Fine
Operator At 4,700cr, one death loses the round economy. Only buy with 5,700cr+ in the bank Defending long angles on Ascent, Haven, and Breeze as Jett or Chamber
Ares Outclassed by Spectre at a similar price. Spin-up time is a real liability Never, the Odin does the same job better if you want to spray
Odin 3,200cr for a spray weapon is too expensive for what it does Wall-bang situations through Bind boxes, Icebox walls, but specialists only
Stinger The burst pattern after the first two shots is unpredictable Close-range retakes only, and even then, the Frenzy is usually better at 450cr
Classic It is free, always carry it. Never pay to replace it unless upgrading Every round, in your secondary slot. Never spend credits on it.

Spray Pattern Tips: Vandal and Phantom

Every automatic weapon in Valorant follows a fixed spray pattern. Bullets drift predictably if you hold the trigger.

Mastering the Vandal and Phantom spray patterns is the single highest-value mechanical skill you can develop:

  1. First 4 bullets: both rifles rise straight up. Counter by pulling your mouse straight down
  2. Bullets 5–10: the spray shifts right. Counter by pulling left while continuing to drag down
  3. Bullets 11–20: the spray becomes more erratic. At this stage, stop firing and tap-shoot instead

In practice: most Valorant engagements reward tapping (single shots) or burst firing (2–3 bullets) over full-spray at any range beyond 10 metres. The spray pattern is there as a last resort at close range, not a primary tool at mid or long range.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best weapon in Valorant?

For full-buy rounds, the Vandal is the best all-round rifle with its one-tap kill potential at any range. The Phantom is equally viable at close-mid range.

The Ghost (500cr) is the best pistol per credit cost. By win rate data, the Shorty (54.5% WR) and Frenzy (52.2% WR) lead all weapons, though this reflects their effectiveness in specific eco scenarios rather than overall dominance.

Phantom or Vandal – which should I buy?

Buy the Vandal if you: hit headshots consistently, play long-range angles, or want one-tap kill potential at all ranges. Buy the Phantom if you: prefer spraying, play close-to-mid range, push through smokes, or want the tactical advantage of tracerless fire. Both cost 2,900 credits. At the highest levels, pros switch between them based on map and role.

What is the best weapon for beginners in Valorant?

The Spectre (1,600cr) for buy rounds, its forgiving recoil and fast fire rate make kills accessible for new players. The Ghost (500cr) for pistol rounds rewards even slightly accurate aim. Avoid the Sheriff until your aim is consistent; the penalty for missing with a Sheriff is severe.

What is the Bandit in Valorant?

The Bandit is a new sidearm added in 2026, costing 600 credits. It bridges the gap between the Ghost (500cr) and Sheriff (800cr), offering precision firepower at a price that fits eco-round budgets. It achieved a 51% win rate immediately on release, establishing it as an S-tier economy option.

Is the Operator worth buying?

Only if you have 4,700 credits to spend on the weapon AND 1,000 credits for a heavy shield, a total investment of 5,700 credits. At that price, losing the Operator costs your team the round economy. Only buy it if you can consistently hold long angles as a Jett, Chamber, or Iso and only on maps with long sightlines (Ascent, Haven, Breeze).

Tom Whitfield

Written by Tom Whitfield

Gaming Editor

Tom Whitfield is a gaming journalist and content creator from Leeds who has been covering video games professionally since 2018. He specialises in Fortnite, Valorant, Counter-Strike 2, Rainbow Six Siege, and League of Legends content, including tier lists, patch notes analysis, and esports tournament coverage. Tom has been featured on multiple UK gaming news platforms and streams regularly on Twitch.

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