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How Many Champions Are in League of Legends? (Updated 2026)

Updated February 11, 2026
Total number of League of Legends champions in 2026

Champion Roster

172+
Playable champions in League of Legends as of February 2026 — and Riot keeps adding more every year.

League of Legends has one of the largest playable rosters in any competitive game. Over 170 unique champions, each with their own abilities, playstyle, and identity. If you're a new player staring at the champion select screen for the first time, that number is genuinely intimidating.

But here's the thing most veteran players will tell you: you don't need to learn all of them. The players who climb fastest in ranked are the ones who master a small pool of 3-5 champions and learn every matchup inside out. Knowing what every champion does is helpful, but you'll pick that up naturally over hundreds of games.

Still, knowing the full roster — how it's organized, how it's grown, and what's new — helps a lot in draft and in-game decision making.

Champion Count by Year: The Full Growth Timeline

Riot released champions at a breakneck pace in the early years. In 2010 and 2011, a new champion dropped almost every two weeks. That pace has slowed dramatically — now it's 3-5 per year — but each new release is far more polished, with unique mechanics and deeper gameplay identity.

2009
40
2010
63
2011
87
2012
108
2013
117
2014
123
2015
128
2016
134
2017
139
2018
143
2019
148
2020
154
2021
157
2022
162
2023
166
2024
169
2025
172+

Why did releases slow down? In the early years, champions were simpler — point-and-click abilities, straightforward kits. Modern champions like Hwei (10 abilities), Aphelios (5 weapons), and Viego (possessing dead enemies) take significantly more development time. Riot also invests heavily in champion reworks now, essentially rebuilding older champions from scratch.

The full year-by-year breakdown:

YearTotal ChampionsNew ReleasesNotable Releases
20094040 (launch)Annie, Ashe, Ryze, Twisted Fate
20106323Caitlyn, Irelia, Lee Sin, Vayne
20118724Ahri, Fizz, Graves, Riven, Xerath
201210821Darius, Draven, Kha'Zix, Thresh, Zed
20131179Jinx, Lucian, Yasuo, Zac
20141236Braum, Gnar, Azir
20151285Bard, Ekko, Kindred
20161346Jhin, Aurelion Sol, Camille
20171395Kayn, Ornn, Xayah & Rakan
20181434Kai'Sa, Pyke, Neeko
20191485Senna, Aphelios, Qiyana
20201546Sett, Lillia, Yone, Samira
20211574Gwen, Akshan, Vex
20221625Zeri, Renata, Bel'Veth, K'Sante
20231664Milio, Naafiri, Briar, Hwei
20241693Smolder, Aurora, Ambessa
2025172+3+Mel, Yunara, Zaahen and more

Champions by Role

Every champion fills a specific role on the team, though many can flex between positions depending on the meta. Here's how the roster breaks down by primary role:

⚔️ Top Lane 40+ Bruisers, tanks, split-pushers
🌿 Jungle 35+ Gankers, farmers, objective control
🔮 Mid Lane 40+ Mages, assassins, roamers
🎯 Bot Lane 25+ Marksmen, ranged carries
🛡️ Support 30+ Enchanters, tanks, playmakers

These numbers are approximate because the meta constantly shifts which champions are viable where. Pantheon can go top, mid, jungle, or support. Brand works as both mid and support. Viego jungles but occasionally shows up mid. The lines between roles are blurrier than ever in Season 16.

Season 16 role shifts: With the new Role Quest system, some champions are moving positions. Top laners who benefit from level 20 (like Jax and Darius) are stronger than ever. ADCs with the seventh item slot are scaling harder. The meta is still settling — check back as it evolves.

Champions by Class

Riot organizes champions into gameplay classes that describe their combat identity. Understanding these classes helps you build balanced team compositions and know what to expect from enemies in champ select.

🗡️Fighters (Bruisers)
Durable melee champions who deal sustained damage. They thrive in extended fights and can both deal and take punishment. Most top laners fall into this category.
Popular: Darius, Irelia, Jax, Camille, Fiora
🏰Tanks
High durability, crowd control focused. Tanks initiate fights, absorb damage, and lock down priority targets. They're the backbone of team fights.
Popular: Ornn, Malphite, Leona, Nautilus, Shen
Mages
Ability-based damage dealers who scale with Ability Power. Control mages zone enemies with area denial, while burst mages delete targets in a single combo.
Popular: Lux, Syndra, Viktor, Orianna, Ahri
🗡️Assassins
High burst damage and mobility. Assassins specialize in finding and eliminating squishy targets — ADCs and mages live in fear of a fed assassin.
Popular: Zed, Akali, Katarina, Talon, LeBlanc
🏹Marksmen (ADCs)
Ranged auto-attack carries who deal consistent physical damage. Weak early, devastating late. The team's primary source of sustained DPS in fights.
Popular: Jinx, Caitlyn, Kai'Sa, Jhin, Aphelios
💚Supports
Utility, healing, shielding, and crowd control. Supports enable their team through vision control, peel, and engage. The most underappreciated role in the game.
Popular: Lulu, Thresh, Nautilus, Janna, Pyke
🎪Specialists
Unique playstyles that don't fit neatly into other categories. These champions break conventional rules — they proxy farm, set traps, or have entirely unique win conditions.
Popular: Teemo, Singed, Heimerdinger, Fiddlesticks

Most Recent Champion Releases

The newest additions to the League of Legends roster. Riot now focuses on giving each champion a truly unique mechanical identity rather than rushing out quantity.

ChampionRoleRelease YearSignature Mechanic
MelMid2025Light/Shadow stance switching — two forms, two playstyles
AmbessaTop2024Dash-heavy bruiser from Arcane, energy-based combos
AuroraMid/Top2024Bunny hop mobility, spirit realm zone control
SmolderBot2024Infinite-scaling dragon ADC, abilities grow with stacks
HweiMid202310-ability painter mage — 3 subjects × 3 spells + ultimate
BriarJungle2023Self-frenzying vampire, loses control for power
NaafiriMid2023Pack-hunting assassin with companion dogs
MilioSupport2023Fire-based enchanter, long-range shields and heals

Fun fact: Hwei holds the record for the most abilities of any champion in the game with 10 unique spells. His kit is organized like an artist's palette — three "subjects" (Disaster, Serenity, Torment) each with three spells, plus his ultimate. He's one of the hardest champions to master but incredibly rewarding when you do.

How Many Champions Do You Need for Ranked?

To queue for ranked games in League of Legends, you need to own at least 20 champions. This ensures you always have enough options even after bans (10 total) and picks from both teams.

Here's the math: 10 bans + 9 other picks = 19 champions unavailable. You need at least 20 so you're guaranteed to have at least one champion available. In practice, you'll want more than 20 so you have actual choices.

With the free champion rotation giving you access to 16 champions each week, plus the Blue Essence you earn from leveling up, hitting 20 owned champions typically happens around level 25-30. New accounts start with a few champions for free and earn enough BE through the early levels to buy more.

Skip the Champion Grind

Our smurf accounts come loaded with 40,000+ Blue Essence — enough to unlock 6-10 champions immediately. Level 30, ranked-ready, all regions.

How Many Champions Should You Main?

This is one of the most debated topics in the League community, and the answer depends on your goals:

For climbing ranked (the meta answer):

  • 2-3 champions in your main role
  • 1-2 in your secondary role
  • That's it. Resist the urge to play everything.

For one-tricking:

  • 1 champion, every game, dodge if banned
  • One-tricks consistently reach higher ranks than players who spread across many champions
  • The downside: you become predictable and bannable in high elo

For having fun:

  • Play whatever you want in normals and ARAM
  • Trying new champions is part of the experience
  • Just don't bring your first-time Azir into ranked

The 3-champion rule: Most coaches and high-elo players recommend mastering exactly 3 champions for your main role. This gives you enough flexibility to handle bans and bad matchups while still building deep game knowledge. Players who try to "main" 10+ champions almost always plateau because they never develop true mastery of any of them.

Champion Reworks: Old Champions Made New

Riot doesn't just add new champions — they rebuild older ones whose kits feel outdated. These Visual and Gameplay Updates (VGUs) essentially create a brand new champion while keeping the original's identity and theme.

Major reworks in recent years:

ChampionRework YearWhat Changed
Skarner2024Complete rebuild — new crystal scorpion fantasy, entirely new kit
Aurelion Sol2023Stars replaced with stacking Stardust mechanic, became a scaling mage
Udyr2022Visual overhaul + modernized stance-switching gameplay
Dr. Mundo2021Updated visuals and abilities while keeping the "goes where he pleases" identity
Volibear2020Transformed from generic bear into a demigod of storms
Fiddlesticks2020Became a genuine horror champion with terrifying ambush gameplay

Riot also does smaller-scale Art and Sustainability Updates (ASUs) that refresh a champion's visuals without changing gameplay. Recent ASUs include Teemo, Lee Sin, and Ahri.

Free Champions: What's Available Without Paying?

Each week, 16 champions are available on the free rotation. This rotation changes every Tuesday and is a great way to try champions before buying them.

Additional free access:

  • ARAM: All champions are free to play in ARAM mode, regardless of ownership
  • New player rotation: Players under level 10 get an expanded free rotation with beginner-friendly champions
  • Champion shards: You can get champion shards from leveling up, which let you unlock champions at a discount (60% of the normal BE cost)

The most cost-efficient way to build your champion pool is to use champion shards from level-up capsules. Disenchant shards you don't want, and use the ones you do want to unlock champions at a reduced price.

The Original 40: League's Launch Roster

When League of Legends launched on October 27, 2009, it shipped with 40 playable champions. Many of these original 40 are still popular today, though most have received significant visual and gameplay updates over the years.

The original launch roster included: Alistar, Amumu, Anivia, Annie, Ashe, Blitzcrank, Cho'Gath, Corki, Dr. Mundo, Evelynn, Fiddlesticks, Gangplank, Heimerdinger, Janna, Jax, Karthus, Kassadin, Kayle, Malphite, Master Yi, Morgana, Nasus, Nunu, Ryze, Shaco, Singed, Sion, Sivir, Soraka, Taric, Teemo, Tristana, Trundle, Twisted Fate, Twitch, Veigar, Warwick, Zilean, and two others.

Of these, champions like Ashe, Annie, and Master Yi remain popular picks for new players due to their straightforward kits. Others like Twisted Fate, Jax, and Morgana have remained competitively relevant across all 16 seasons.

Will Riot Ever Stop Making Champions?

Riot has confirmed they'll continue releasing new champions indefinitely, but at the slower pace of 3-5 per year. The focus has shifted toward quality over quantity — each new champion needs to bring something mechanically unique to the game.

The bigger question is whether the roster will ever feel "too big." With 172+ champions, new players already face a steep learning curve just understanding what every champion does. Riot addresses this through:

  • Champion spotlights and tutorials for new releases
  • The free rotation letting players try before they buy
  • ARAM as a low-pressure way to experience random champions
  • Champion reworks keeping older champions feeling fresh

The roster will likely hit 200 champions within the next 5-7 years at the current pace. Whether that's a problem or a feature depends on who you ask.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many champions are in LoL right now?
As of February 2026, there are over 172 champions in League of Legends. The exact number increases by 3-5 each year as Riot releases new champions throughout the seasonal calendar.

Who was the first champion in League of Legends?
The game launched with 40 champions simultaneously in October 2009, so there's no single "first" champion. However, Singed is often cited as the first champion Riot ever designed during development. The first champion released after launch was Udyr.

Who is the newest champion in LoL?
As of early 2026, the most recent champion release is Mel, a mid lane mage with Light/Shadow stance switching. Check the releases table above — we update this article as new champions are announced.

How many champions do I need to play ranked?
You need to own at least 20 champions to queue for ranked games. This accounts for 10 bans and 9 other player picks, ensuring you always have at least one champion available.

What's the most expensive champion in LoL?
Most newer champions cost 6,300 Blue Essence (or 975 RP). Older champions have been reduced over time — some cost as little as 450 BE. The cheapest way to unlock champions is through champion shards from level-up capsules.

Which champion has the most abilities?
Hwei holds the record with 10 unique abilities — three "subjects" each containing three spells, plus his ultimate. Aphelios is a close second with 5 different weapons that each change his basic abilities.

How often does Riot release new champions?
Riot currently releases 3-5 new champions per year, down from 20+ per year in the early days. The slower pace allows for more unique and polished champion designs.

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*Want to jump straight into ranked with your favorite champions? Our LoL accounts come loaded with 40,000+ Blue Essence so you can unlock who you need from day one. Check out our complete season history to see how the game has evolved alongside its growing roster.*

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