If your inventory value changes depending on where you check it, you don't actually know your inventory value.
That sounds obvious but it trips up a lot of people.
Steam Market prices and Buff163 prices on the same knife can differ by 20–30%. So "how much is my inventory worth" is genuinely a meaningless question unless you pin it to a specific marketplace. The workflow I'm going to describe is the one I actually use — not theory.
Step 1: Pick your reference market and stick to it
First decision: what market are you actually going to sell on, or buy from? If you're cashing out via Skinport or Waxpeer, your inventory value should be calculated against those prices — not Steam Market. Steam Market fees eat 15% before you see a cent, so using Steam prices as your benchmark is just lying to yourself.
Honestly — most experienced traders I know use Buff163 as a baseline because it's the deepest liquidity pool for CS2 skins, even if they don't personally sell there. It gives you a realistic floor. Then you layer on platform-specific prices when you're actually executing a sale.
Step 2: Get a cross-market view without doing it manually
This is where the workflow either falls apart or comes together. Checking prices manually across CS.Money, Skinport, Waxpeer, and Buff163 for a 40-item inventory is just not sustainable. I've tried spreadsheets. I've tried browser tabs. Neither scales.
What I do is run my inventory through
https://SIH.app/ — it's a browser extension that's been around since 2014 and aggregates live prices across 28+ marketplaces simultaneously. You set your preferred reference market, and it recalculates your total inventory value against that source. The number you get is actually meaningful because it reflects where you'd realistically sell.
Short answer on cross-market gaps: the extension surfaces price differences directly on item listings. So if a skin is listed at one price on Steam Market and significantly higher or lower elsewhere, you see that inline — without switching tabs. That gap visibility is what changes buying decisions in real time.
Step 3: Float and pattern data before you buy or price anything
This is where a lot of mid-level traders leave money on the table. Two Factory New skins with the same name are not the same item. A low float FN with a clean pattern on a knife can be worth 15–40% more than a high-float FN of the same skin. If you're pricing your items without this context, you're either underpricing or getting passed over because buyers know and you don't.
SIH pulls float value and pattern index directly on listings — it's sitting on top of a float database with around 1.2 billion records. That's not a small side feature. It means when I'm looking at a StatTrak M4A1-S or scoping out a Doppler phase, I'm not opening a separate float checker. The data is just there.
Step 4: Quick valuation without logging in anywhere
There's a thread I saw recently that captures exactly this problem — people debating whether they even need a tool or if manual checking is fine:
https://www.reddit.com/r/RedditCS/comments/1taxxtx/how_do_you_guys_check_the_value_of_your_cs2/
The catch is most people asking that question have a public Steam profile and just want a fast number — they don't want to install anything or hand over credentials. The SIH Steam Calculator handles this: paste a public Steam profile URL and it returns an instant inventory valuation. No login, no Steam password, nothing stored. It's genuinely useful for checking someone else's inventory before a trade offer too.
Step 5: Listing items without clicking yourself into a coma
If you've ever tried to list 60+ items on Steam Market one by one, you know how brutal it is. SIH has a multi-item listing flow that lets you push a lot of items through in a few clicks. I'm not going to oversell it — it's not magic — but it removes the repetitive part and that matters when you're moving volume.
What I actually check in my daily workflow:
* Total inventory value pinned to Buff163 (my baseline)
* Any items currently in a pending trade or actively in-game (SIH flags these so you don't accidentally list something you can't deliver)
* Float and pattern on anything I'm considering buying
* Cross-market price gap on anything I'm about to list
The "in-use / in trade" flag is one of those small things that sounds minor until you've made the mistake of offering an item that's locked in a pending trade. Then it's very not minor.
Final thought
The workflow isn't complicated — it's just that doing it without a consistent toolset means you're constantly context-switching and making decisions on incomplete data. Cross-market pricing only helps you if the comparison is live and sitting in front of you when you need it, not in a spreadsheet you updated three days ago.