Valheim Armor Progression Guide — Every Tier from Leather to Padded

Armor Tier Overview
| Tier | Biome | Key Materials | Armor Value (full set) | Special Bonus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rag Armor | Meadows | Leather scraps | ~6 | Starting gear only |
| Leather Armor | Meadows | Deer hide, Bone fragments | ~14 | None — basic protection |
| Troll Leather Armor | Black Forest | Troll hide, Bone fragments | ~19 | Stealth bonus — enemies detect you from shorter range |
| Bronze Armor | Black Forest | Bronze bars (2 Copper + 1 Tin) | ~28 | None — pure armor value increase |
| Iron Armor | Swamp | Iron bars from Muddy Scrap Piles in Swamp Crypts | ~42 | None — strong mid-tier protection |
| Root Armor (alt) | Swamp | Abomination drops (Root) | ~20 + resist | Resistance to Poison and Spirit damage — powerful niche set |
| Wolf Armor | Mountains | Silver bars, Wolf pelts, Wolf trophy | ~60 | Frost Resistance — essential for Mountain survival without constant mead |
| Padded Armor | Plains | Linen Thread (from Flax) + Iron bars | ~82 | Highest pre-Mistlands protection |
| Carapace Armor | Mistlands | Carapace shell from Seekers + Refined Eitr | ~94 | Strongest physical armor in base game |
Tier 1 — Leather and Troll Leather Armor (Meadows & Black Forest)
Leather Armor is crafted at a basic Workbench using Deer Hide and Bone Fragments. Each piece provides minimal protection but is a significant step up from the starting Rag Armor. Craft the full set (helmet, chest, legs) as soon as you have the materials — Neck tails and Deer provide Leather Scraps and Deer Hide respectively from your first hour of play.
Troll Leather Armor is often underestimated. Despite being available in the Black Forest biome, its armor value (approximately 19 for the full set) is deceptively high — it actually exceeds Iron Armor in some comparisons when you account for the stealth system. Troll hides drop from Blue Trolls found in the Black Forest (typically cave entrances and forested areas). The critical advantage: the Troll set applies a significant stealth bonus, reducing your detection range by all enemies. This enables you to sneak past Black Forest Greydwarf camps and approach enemies from stealth.
For most players, Troll Leather Armor is superior to Bronze Armor for the Black Forest biome. Bronze Armor requires smelting multiple bars and gives no special bonus, while Troll Leather is lighter, provides competitive armor, and adds stealth utility. Skip straight from Leather to Troll if you can farm Troll hides before engaging with the Elder.
Troll Leather Armor — Crafting Requirements
| Slot | Recommended pick | Why / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Troll Leather Helmet | 5 Troll Hide | Grants Hood of the Troll — stealth bonus active with full set |
| Troll Leather Chest | 5 Troll Hide + 5 Bone Fragments | Bone Fragments from Skeleton graves and enemy drops |
| Troll Leather Legs | 5 Troll Hide + 5 Bone Fragments | Complete the set for maximum stealth bonus application |
| Total for Full Set | 15 Troll Hide + 10 Bone Fragments | Each Troll drops 0-3 hides — expect to kill 6-8 Trolls for a reliable full set |
Tier 2 — Iron Armor (Swamp Biome Gate)
Iron Armor is unlocked by entering the Swamp biome and finding Iron from Muddy Scrap Piles inside Sunken Crypts (the stone dungeons scattered throughout the Swamp). Each Crypt contains multiple Muddy Scrap Piles, each dropping Iron Scrap when mined with a pickaxe. Smelt Iron Scrap at a Smelter to produce Iron bars.
Iron Armor provides substantially more protection than Troll Leather but requires significant resource investment. Prioritize the Iron Chest (Banded Scale Mail) for the largest single armor value increase, then legs (Iron Scale Mail), then helmet (Iron Helmet). Each piece requires 20 Iron bars — a full set needs 60 Iron bars total, which means extensive Crypt farming.
The Root Armor set is an interesting alternative. Crafted from Root materials dropped by Abominations (vine-covered creatures in Swamp), Root Armor provides less raw armor but adds resistance to Poison and Spirit damage — both common in the Swamp biome. The Root Harnesk (chest) is particularly strong and is used by some players through the Mountain biome despite lower raw armor value.
Iron Armor — Full Set Requirements
| Slot | Recommended pick | Why / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Iron Helmet | 20 Iron + 2 Deer Hide | Second upgrade priority — significant armor bonus |
| Iron Scale Mail (Chest) | 20 Iron + 2 Chain | Highest armor value piece — craft first. Chains from dungeon chests. |
| Iron Greaves (Legs) | 20 Iron + 2 Deer Hide | Complete the set before upgrading pieces |
| Total Iron Cost | ~60 Iron bars | Expect 3-5 full Crypt clears for this amount. Iron never goes to waste — also needed for Iron tools and weapons. |
Tier 3 — Wolf Armor (Mountains — Mandatory for Frost Resistance)
Wolf Armor is one of the most important armor milestones in Valheim because of its built-in Frost Resistance. In the Mountain biome, players without frost protection take continuous cold damage — this drains health so quickly that extended exploration is impossible without either the Frost Resistance Mead (brewed from ingredients) or the Wolf Armor set's chest piece specifically.
The Wolf Armor Chest piece provides Frost Resistance intrinsically, making it mandatory equipment for Mountain exploration without constant Frost Resistance Mead consumption. Craft this piece before anything else in the set. Wolf hides drop from Wolves that spawn in the Mountains at night, and Wolf trophies are rare additional drops used for the Wolf Fur Cape.
Silver bars are required for the full Wolf set and are mined from Silver veins in Mountains. Silver veins are hidden underground — the Wishbone (dropped by Bonemass, the Swamp boss) pulses when near hidden Silver veins and is the primary method for locating them. Never enter the Mountains without first defeating Bonemass to get the Wishbone.
Wolf Armor — Crafting Requirements
| Slot | Recommended pick | Why / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Drake Helmet (Helmet) | 20 Silver + 2 Wolf pelt + 2 Dragon egg | Dragon eggs from Moder nests on Mountain cliffs — heavy and rare. Craft later. |
| Wolf Armor (Chest) | 20 Silver + 5 Wolf pelt + 1 Chain | PRIORITY PIECE — provides Frost Resistance. Craft this before anything else in the Mountain tier. |
| Wolf Leg Armor (Legs) | 20 Silver + 5 Wolf pelt | Solid armor boost. Easier to craft than helmet — no Dragon eggs needed. |
| Wolf Fur Cape (optional) | 6 Silver + 4 Wolf pelt + 1 Wolf trophy | Provides Frost Resistance too — useful as backup or for players who skipped the Armor chest earlier |
| Total Silver Cost (core pieces) | ~60 Silver bars minimum | Silver veins require Wishbone to find efficiently. Mine extensively before leaving the Mountain. |
Tier 4 — Padded Armor (Plains — Strongest Pre-Mistlands Set)
Padded Armor is crafted using Linen Thread, which requires Flax plants grown in the Plains biome. Flax seeds are found inside Fuling villages (the goblin camps scattered throughout the Plains) — search Fuling buildings and storage areas for Flax seeds, then plant them in the Plains biome to grow your own supply. Each Linen Thread requires 1 Flax processed through a Spinning Wheel (craftable with Fine Wood + Iron).
The full Padded set provides approximately 82 total armor, making it the strongest available before entering the Mistlands. Unlike Wolf Armor, Padded has no special resistance but its raw armor value makes physical combat dramatically safer. Prioritize the Padded Cuirass (chest) first for the largest armor jump, then greaves (legs), then coif (helmet).
Upgrading Padded Armor significantly increases its effectiveness. Each upgrade level requires additional Linen Thread and Iron bars. A fully upgraded Padded set provides armor values competitive with early Mistlands gear — investing in upgrades before advancing is worthwhile if your Spinning Wheel production allows it.
Padded Armor — Crafting Requirements
| Slot | Recommended pick | Why / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Padded Helmet (Coif) | 10 Linen Thread + 25 Iron | Also requires access to an Artisan Table (from Moder boss trophy) |
| Padded Chest (Cuirass) | 20 Linen Thread + 10 Iron | Highest armor value piece — craft first. No special biome resistance. |
| Padded Legs (Greaves) | 10 Linen Thread + 20 Iron | Requires Artisan Table. Farm Flax extensively before targeting this set. |
| Artisan Table Requirement | Dragon Tear (from Moder boss) + 2 Fine Wood | Must defeat Moder (Mountain boss) before crafting Padded Armor — gated behind Mountain progression |
| Total Linen Thread | ~40 Linen Thread for full set | 1 Linen Thread = 1 Flax. Plan a farm of 40+ Flax plants in the Plains before crafting. |
When to Switch Armor Tiers
The decision to switch armor tiers should be driven by biome access and boss preparation, not raw time played. Switch from Leather to Troll Leather when you can reliably kill Black Forest Trolls (bring a good bow and kite them). Move to Iron Armor when you've cleared several Sunken Crypts and have the Iron stockpile. Move to Wolf Armor the moment you access Mountains and have the Wishbone from Bonemass.
Don't delay Padded Armor farming. Fuling villages in the Plains can be dangerous, but the Linen Thread infrastructure pays off immediately — Padded is used through the entire Mistlands preparation phase. The gap between fully upgraded Wolf Armor and Padded Armor is large enough that rushing Padded is worth the Plains risk.
Always upgrade your current armor tier before moving to the next. A fully upgraded Iron set (Iron level 4) provides more armor than a base Wolf set and is much cheaper to achieve. Use your resources to max out upgrades on each tier before transitioning unless you're actively blocked by biome gating.
Troll Leather vs. Iron Armor — When Is Troll Better?
| Factor | Troll Leather Armor | Iron Armor |
|---|---|---|
| Total Armor (base) | ~19 | ~42 |
| Stealth Bonus | Yes — reduced detection range | None |
| Crafting Cost | 15 Troll Hide + 10 Bone Fragments | 60 Iron bars + misc |
| Weight | Low — no movement penalty | Medium — slight movement impact |
| Best Use Case | Stealth, foraging, early Black Forest | Combat-heavy Swamp and beyond |
Verdict: Troll Leather wins for early exploration and stealth-focused play. Iron is required once Swamp Draugrs and Blobs deal enough damage to matter. Many players keep Troll Leather as a secondary set for sneaking through dangerous areas even after acquiring Iron.
Common Armor Mistakes to Avoid
- Skipping Troll Leather for Bronze Armor: Bronze costs significant smelting effort and provides less utility than Troll. Unless you specifically need the armor value, Troll Leather is better for Black Forest play.
- Entering Mountains without Wolf Armor Chest: Without Frost Resistance, Mountain exploration drains health constantly. Always have either the Wolf Armor chest or a stack of Frost Resistance Mead before venturing into Mountains.
- Not farming Silver before leaving Mountains: Silver is heavy to transport and veins are hard to relocate without the Wishbone. Mine more than you think you need while in the Mountain biome.
- Crafting Padded Armor before defeating Moder: Padded Armor requires an Artisan Table, which requires Dragon Tears from Moder. You can't craft Padded at all until Moder is defeated — plan your progression accordingly.
- Not upgrading current armor before advancing: Each upgrade level of Iron Armor is cheaper than transitioning to the next tier. Max out your current tier's upgrades before moving on.
- Ignoring Root Armor for Swamp boss fights: The Poison resistance from Root Armor is useful against Bonemass. Consider keeping a Root Harnesk specifically for Swamp boss encounters even after acquiring Iron for general use.
Frequently asked questions
Is Troll Leather Armor worth crafting in Valheim?
Yes — Troll Leather Armor is one of the best early-game investments. Its stealth bonus reduces enemy detection range significantly, making it ideal for sneaking through Black Forest Greydwarf camps and approaching enemies carefully. Its armor value also competes favorably with Bronze Armor while being faster to craft.
Do I need the Wishbone to farm Silver for Wolf Armor?
Technically no, but practically yes. Silver veins spawn underground in Mountains and are extremely difficult to find without the Wishbone's pulsing detection mechanic. Without it, you'd need to mine entire Mountain slopes hoping to hit a vein randomly. Defeat Bonemass in the Swamp to get the Wishbone first.
Can I use Padded Armor in the Mistlands?
A fully upgraded Padded set is usable in early Mistlands but struggles against the stronger enemies there. Carapace Armor (crafted from Seeker shells) is the correct Mistlands tier armor. However, transitioning to Padded before entering Mistlands is strongly recommended — the armor gap between Wolf and Padded is substantial.
What is the best armor in Valheim?
Carapace Armor from the Mistlands is the strongest physical armor in the base game. For pre-Mistlands content, fully upgraded Padded Armor is the strongest available. Wolf Armor is specifically optimal for Mountain biome play because of its Frost Resistance.
How many Iron bars do I need for a full Iron Armor set?
Approximately 60 Iron bars for the base Iron Armor set (helmet, chest, legs). Upgrading each piece to maximum level requires additional Iron. Plan on farming 100-120 Iron bars from Sunken Crypts before calling your Iron run complete.
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Continue this guide path
- ›Valheim Progression Guide — Biomes, Boss Order & Gear MilestonesThe complete Valheim progression guide from your first night in the Meadows through the Ashlands. Covers every biome, boss order, and gear milestone you need to advance.
- ›Valheim Biomes Guide — What to Expect in Each Biome & How to PrepareA comprehensive guide to every Valheim biome from the beginner-friendly Meadows to the lethal Mistlands and Ashlands. Covers enemies, resources, dangers, and gear requirements for each zone.
- ›Valheim Iron Farming Guide — Best Methods for Getting Iron FastIron is the most important mid-game material in Valheim. Learn how to farm it efficiently from Sunken Crypts in the Swamp, process it in your Smelter, and how much iron you need for each gear piece.
- ›Valheim Silver Mining Guide — Using Wishbone to Find Silver VeinsSilver is Valheim's Mountain biome metal, used for the powerful Frostner, Silver Sword, and Wolf Armor. Learn how to use the Wishbone to locate buried Silver veins and mine them safely.
- ›Valheim Food System Explained — HP, Stamina & Healing MechanicsUnderstanding Valheim's food system is essential for survival. Learn how three food slots work, which foods maximize HP or Stamina, how healing works, and the best foods at each progression stage.