CZ75-Auto Skins
36 skinsThe CZ75-Auto is a fully automatic secondary that occupies the same buy slot as your default starting pistol. Buying it for $500 forfeits your Glock-18, USP-S or P2000 for the round, so it is an all-in eco and pistol-round choice rather than a sidearm you carry alongside something else. It fires in full auto with a high rate of fire and deals heavy close-range damage, which made it dominant enough to be nerfed several times (smaller reserve magazine and tighter accuracy after the first shots).




































Role and why people skin it
The CZ75-Auto holds a 12-round magazine with a limited reserve, so it rewards accurate first shots and punishes spray-and-pray. It is most effective in tight angles where its full-auto rate of fire overwhelms opponents before reserve ammo becomes a problem. On full-buy rounds it is rarely chosen because it costs you your default pistol; its home is pistol rounds and forced anti-ecos. Skin buyers therefore tend to be CZ specialists who use it most rounds, which keeps demand for clean, high-visibility finishes steady even though the weapon is a situational pick.
Notable and high-tier finishes
Victoria is the top-tier Covert finish, an ornate engraved/gilded design that sits at the high end of the CZ market. The Fuschia Is Now is the signature bright-pink finish and one of the most recognizable CZ paints. Other sought-after mid-to-high finishes include Tigris (tiger stripes), Xiangliu (a dragon-themed paint), Yellow Jacket, Emerald Quartz, Crimson Web, Tacticat (cat motif) and Pole Position. These cover a wide visual range from loud color blocks to detailed art, so most loadout palettes can be matched.
Cheapest ways in
Entry-level CZ75-Auto finishes are some of the cheapest skins in the game in well-worn grades. Look at Tread Plate, Polymer, Hexane, Eco, Imprint and Distressed for low-cost solid or industrial looks. These are ideal if you want a non-default CZ without spending meaningfully, and Field-Tested or Battle-Scarred copies of mid-tier paints like Tigris or Yellow Jacket also stay inexpensive while looking far better than the lowest tiers.
Float and wear behaviour
Wear on the CZ75-Auto shows mainly on the slide and frame, where scratches accumulate at higher float values. Solid-color and coated finishes (Polymer, Eco) hold up visually even in worn grades because there is little fine detail to lose, making cheaper Field-Tested and Battle-Scarred copies a good value. Detailed paints like Victoria, Xiangliu and Tigris look noticeably better in Factory New or Minimal Wear, since edge wear erodes the artwork. Always check the exterior and a preview before buying detailed finishes.
Frequently asked questions
Why does buying a CZ75-Auto remove my pistol?
The CZ75-Auto uses the same loadout slot as your default starting pistol. When you buy it you give up your Glock-18, USP-S or P2000 for that round, which is why it is treated as a high-commitment eco and pistol-round weapon rather than a backup sidearm.
How much does the CZ75-Auto cost in-game?
It costs $500 in the buy menu. Combined with losing your free starting pistol, that price is part of why it is reserved for pistol rounds and forced buys rather than full-buy rounds.
What is the most expensive CZ75-Auto skin?
Victoria, the Covert-tier engraved finish, is the top of the CZ75-Auto market. StatTrak and low-float Factory New copies command the highest prices.
Is the CZ75-Auto good after the nerfs?
It is still strong in close range thanks to full-auto fire and high damage, but reduced reserve ammo and tighter accuracy mean it now demands disciplined positioning and aim rather than holding open angles.
Are there StatTrak CZ75-Auto skins?
Yes. Most of the popular finishes, including The Fuschia Is Now, Tigris, Yellow Jacket and Victoria, have StatTrak versions that track confirmed kills with the weapon.
What is the cheapest CZ75-Auto skin?
Entry finishes such as Tread Plate, Polymer, Hexane and Eco are among the cheapest in the game, especially in Field-Tested or Battle-Scarred condition.
Because the CZ trades reserve ammo for burst lethality, skins for it are mostly bought by players who lean on it as a niche force-buy weapon. The finish pool is broad and skews affordable, with a small number of standout high-tier paints. StatTrak versions exist for most of the popular finishes. Russian players commonly call it the чезетка or just чз.
Prices range from $0.0030 (CZ75-Auto (Honey Paisley)) to $273.42 (CZ75-Auto (Chalice)). Compare markets to find the best place to buy or sell.
Updated: June 26, 2026