Minecraft Capes Explained: Which Ones Are Rare and How to Get Them in 2026
Minecraft capes are account-bound cosmetics from events and promotions that are almost all unobtainable now. Here's what the Founder's, Vanilla, Cherry Blossom and other rare capes actually are — and the only way to get one in 2026.
Par Alts.fast Team
What a Minecraft cape actually is
A cape is a purely cosmetic item that hangs off your character's back in Java Edition. It does nothing in gameplay — it's a flex. What makes capes interesting is that almost none of them can be earned anymore. The ones people care about were handed out for specific events, migrations or promotions that are long over.
Two facts drive everything about capes:
- Capes are tied to the account, not to you. They can't be gifted, traded or moved to another account. Whatever account earned the cape is the only account that will ever have it.
- Once a promotion ends, the cape is gone for good. Mojang doesn't re-run them, so the pool of accounts with a given cape only ever shrinks.
Put those together and you get the situation every collector runs into: if you didn't get the cape while it was live, the only way to own it now is to own an account that already has it.
The capes people actually want, and where they came from
Here are the sought-after ones with their real origins, not guesswork:
- Founder's cape — a digital reward from MineCon Live 2019. Along with the Mojang Office cape, it's considered one of the rarest capes in the game.
- Vanilla cape — gifted to players who owned both Java and Bedrock Edition on the same Microsoft account before June 6, 2022. That window is closed, so the supply is fixed.
- Cherry Blossom cape — given to players who took part in the 2023 Mob Vote during Minecraft Live. Pink-flower themed, tied to a one-time event.
- Purple Heart cape — a 2024 Twitch promotion reward.
- Migrator cape — handed out for migrating an old Mojang account to a Microsoft account. More common than the others, but still no longer obtainable.
Event and community capes like the Minecraft Championship and Minecraft Experience capes work the same way: available for a moment, then locked forever.
Why capes hold their value
Most game cosmetics get cheaper over time as more are handed out. Capes do the opposite. Because supply is frozen the day a promotion ends — and accounts get lost, banned or abandoned — the number of accounts carrying a rare cape slowly falls. That's why a caped account is one of the few Minecraft purchases that behaves more like a collectible than a consumable.
You don't buy "a cape" — you buy the account it lives on
This is the part people get wrong. Since capes can't be transferred, nobody can sell you just a cape. What you're actually buying is the account that owns it, which means the usual account-buying rules apply, and then some:
- It has to be full access so you can change the email and password and truly own it. A cape on an account you don't control can be pulled back. If you're fuzzy on why that matters, our rundown of alt account safety walks through it.
- Secure it the moment it arrives — change the email, password and recovery info the same day.
Every caped account we sell is full access for exactly that reason: the cape is only worth having if the account is genuinely yours.
Getting a caped account in 2026
If there's a specific cape you're after — a Founder's, a Cherry Blossom, a Vanilla, or one of the event capes — buying an account that already carries it is the only route left. Check that it's full access, secure it immediately, and you've got a cosmetic that literally cannot be minted again.

