Moto Gloves Skins

12 finishes
Priced items12
Price range$38.54 – $370.00
Look, cut and how they wear in-view

The Moto cut is the most exposed glove in the game, leaving all four fingers and the thumb tip bare. In first person you mostly read the back-of-hand panel and the wrist strap, so finishes that put their pattern there (Spearmint's clean leather, Boom!'s comic burst, Cool Mint's mint-and-grey split) come across clearly, while busier graphics get lost. They are a low-profile choice compared to the bulkier Specialist or Hydra models. As with every glove, wear shows mainly as fading and scuffing across the knuckle panel rather than as scratches on metal, so the visual gap between a high Field-Tested and a Battle-Scarred is smaller than it is on knives.

Finish landscape across the cases

Moto Gloves appear in several glove collections. The original Glove Case finishes include Spearmint, POW!, Transport, Polygon, Eclipse and Turtle. Later cases added more: Boom! and Eclipse-style designs through Operation Hydra, Cool Mint and Finish Line in the Clutch Case, and Blood Pressure, Smoke Out and 3rd Commando Company in the Snakebite Case. The model therefore spans clean monochrome leather, graphic/comic styles and camo-leaning patterns, so the price spread between the cheapest and the priciest Moto finishes is wide.

What drives the value

Spearmint is the headline and most expensive Moto finish: a near-uniform pale mint leather with no graphic noise, which is exactly the kind of clean look that holds value and sells fast. Cool Mint and Boom! are the popular mid-to-upper picks, prized for the mint colourway and the bold comic burst respectively. Because gloves carry no StatTrak and no pattern-index lottery comparable to a knife Case Hardened, value here is driven almost entirely by finish desirability and exterior, not by seed. A low float on a clean finish like Spearmint commands the biggest premium, since cleaner leather makes wear more obvious.

Cheapest way in vs the rest of the model lineup

The budget entry points are the camo and graphic finishes such as Transport, Polygon and Eclipse, which are the most affordable doors into the Moto model and into owning gloves at all. Within the gloves family the Moto sits as a mid-tier model on price: generally cheaper than the most sought Specialist or Sport finishes but with a high ceiling on Spearmint. If you want the look on a budget, target a Field-Tested or Battle-Scarred copy of a cheaper finish; if you want the standout, Spearmint in Minimal Wear or Field-Tested is the recognisable buy.

Frequently asked questions

Do Moto Gloves come in Factory New?

Mostly no. Glove float ranges are compressed, so most Moto finishes start around Minimal Wear or Field-Tested and run down to Battle-Scarred. Don't expect a true Factory New for the bulk of the lineup.

Can Moto Gloves be StatTrak?

No. No CS2 gloves have StatTrak, and they can't take name tags or stickers. There is no kill counter on any glove.

What is the most expensive Moto Gloves finish?

Spearmint is the top pick — a clean pale-mint leather with no graphic clutter. Cool Mint and Boom! follow as popular higher-value options.

What's the cheapest Moto Gloves skin?

The graphic and camo finishes like Transport, Polygon and Eclipse are the most affordable, especially in Field-Tested or Battle-Scarred.

How do you get Moto Gloves?

They drop only as the rare special (Extraordinary, gold) item from cases that include a glove collection — the Glove Case, Clutch Case, Snakebite Case and Operation Hydra cases — at roughly the same ~0.26% combined pull rate as knives. You can also buy specific finishes on the market.

Does float matter for Moto Gloves if patterns don't?

Yes. Gloves have no pattern lottery like a knife Case Hardened, so value comes from finish and exterior. A lower float looks cleaner, which matters most on plain finishes like Spearmint where wear is easy to see.

Updated: June 26, 2026