Most Expensive Koi Fish in the World: Top 10 Record Prices
S Legend — a Kohaku koi bred in Japan — sold for $1.8 million at auction in 2018, making her the most expensive koi fish ever recorded. Here are the top 10 record-breaking koi sales with prices in USD, GBP, and PHP.

The most expensive koi fish ever sold is S Legend, a female Kohaku that fetched $1.8 million USD (£1.4 million / ₱100 million) at a Sakai Fish Farm auction in Japan in October 2018. She was purchased by Dr. Tomoharu Aoki. The second most expensive was Ginrin Karin at $341,990 in 2019. Top koi command record prices due to flawless pattern, skin quality, body conformation, elite bloodline, and size.
Most Expensive Koi Fish — Key Facts
- 🏆World record: S Legend — $1.8M USD / £1.4M GBP / ₱100M PHP
- 🐟Variety: Kohaku (red and white)
- 🇯🇵Bred by: Sakai Fish Farm, Hiroshima, Japan
- 👤Buyer: Dr. Tomoharu Aoki (Japanese breeder)
- 📅Sold: October 2018 auction
- 💰Common koi: $10–$500 USD / ₱500–₱25,000
- ⭐Show-grade koi: $500–$50,000+ USD
- 🔑Key value factors: Pattern, skin, bloodline, size
Top 10 Most Expensive Koi Fish Ever Sold
These are the confirmed top 10 record-breaking koi fish sales, with prices converted to USD, GBP, and PHP for US, UK, and Filipino audiences.

- Year sold: October 2018
- Location: Sakai Fish Farm auction, Hiroshima, Japan
- Buyer: Dr. Tomoharu Aoki
- Why so valuable: Near-perfect Kohaku pattern, exceptional skin quality, large size, elite Sakai bloodline
- Fate: Tragically died shortly after purchase, reportedly due to transport stress

- Year sold: 2019
- Why so valuable: Rare Ginrin metallic shimmer combined with Showa tri-color pattern — an extremely unusual combination at this quality level

- Year sold: 2018
- Size: Over 80cm (31 inches)
- Why so valuable: Bold, balanced black and red markings on a large body — power and elegance in perfect proportion

- Year sold: 2012
- Why so valuable: Metallic gold scales with white and black contrasts — a living ember effect that few Doitsu Goshiki achieve

- Year sold: 2018
- Why so valuable: Intricate pattern resembling a delicate pine branch dusted with gold flakes — rare Doitsu scaleless variety

- Year sold: 2014
- Why so valuable: Platinum scales with flowing red markings resembling a Japanese dragon — Kumonryu are also famous for changing color throughout their lives

- Year sold: 2013
- Why so valuable: Red and black swirling pattern on metallic Doitsu scales — the “Flower Storm” nickname captures its visual drama

- Year sold: 2017
- Why so valuable: Intricate swirling orange and white Kohaku markings — named after the Japanese noodle dish for its winding pattern

- Year sold: 2016
- Why so valuable: Flawless snow-white skin with vibrant, intense red hi markings — the name means “lucky koi” in Japanese

- Year sold: 2019
- Size: Over 80cm (31 inches)
- Why so valuable: Bold black, white, and red Showa markings on an impressively large body — “Yamato” means “warrior spirit” in Japanese