May 1, 2026

Your Highrise avatar is your digital identity across a social world with over 50,000 items spanning clothing, hairstyles, accessories, and more. Creating a custom avatar in Highrise starts with choosing a base body, facial features, and starter outfit, then expands through the Shop, Grabs, Marketplace, events, and trading. This guide covers every step from first launch to advanced styling, including how currencies work, where to find rare items, how to build a standout look without spending a fortune, and newer topics like scripting outfits for NPCs, pushing avatar proportions, and designing hair with realistic flow.
Your avatar is you in Highrise. It’s the character that walks through rooms, chats with friends, competes in fashion events, and shows up on your profile. Unlike a static profile picture, your Highrise avatar is a fully customizable 3D figure that persists across every device you play on, whether that’s iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, or Steam.
What makes Highrise avatar customization stand out from other virtual worlds is the sheer depth of options. The platform offers over 50,000 digital items and outfits, with new collections dropping weekly. Items span everything from streetwear hoodies to fantasy wings to anime inspired hairstyles. The style range is enormous, and the item library keeps growing.
Your avatar isn’t just cosmetic. In Highrise, fashion is social currency. What you wear signals your taste, your experience level, and sometimes your trading savvy. Some individual items carry real secondary market value reaching hundreds of dollars. Understanding how the system works gives you a genuine advantage.
Ready to jump in? Download Highrise and start building your look today.
Learning how to create a custom avatar in Highrise is straightforward. The process starts the moment you open the app.
Download Highrise from the App Store, Google Play, or Steam. Create an account using your email, Apple ID, or Google account. Pick a username that feels right because other players will see it everywhere.
The avatar editor opens during onboarding. Here’s what you’ll customize right away:
After setting your facial features, you’ll dress your avatar in a starter outfit. The game provides free default items across the basic categories: a top, bottoms, and shoes. These won’t win any fashion contests, but they get you into the world.
Once you finish the editor, you’re dropped into Highrise. Your avatar appears in rooms, and you can start socializing, exploring, and collecting immediately. The initial setup takes about two minutes, but the real customization journey is just beginning. If you’re interested in building Worlds of your own, the step by step world creation guide is a good next read.
To truly understand how to create a custom avatar in Highrise, you need to know what you can actually change. The item system is more granular than most new players expect.
Hair is split into front and back components. The front covers bangs, side pieces, and face framing. The back covers ponytails, long hair, updos, and flow. This two layer system means you can mix front and back pieces from different sets for unique combinations. According to Highrise’s own art guidelines, hair shape and flow frames the avatar’s face and body, so picking the right hair dramatically changes how your avatar reads.
Body items include skin tones and body type options. These form the foundation everything else layers onto.
Many items come with multiple color palette options. A single jacket might be available in black, white, red, and pastel blue. When you own an item with palette support, you can switch between colors without buying separate versions.
Items in Highrise stack. You can wear a shirt under a jacket, add a scarf on top, and put a bag over your shoulder. The layering system is designed so that items of different categories combine properly, which opens up an enormous number of outfit possibilities from a relatively small collection. Browse the item catalog to see the full scope of what’s available.
Once you start building a wardrobe, managing outfits efficiently becomes essential.
To remove a clothing item, open the avatar editor and tap the item you want to take off. A remove or unequip option appears, stripping that piece from your avatar. This works for every category: tops, bottoms, shoes, accessories, even hair layers. If you want to start fresh, you can strip everything back to the base body and rebuild from scratch.
Highrise lets you save complete outfits so you can switch between looks without reassembling them each time. After styling your avatar the way you want, use the save function to store that combination. Name each saved outfit something descriptive (for example, “Dark Academia Friday” or “Event Flex”) so you can find it quickly. Practitioners on Reddit recommend saving outfits before entering fashion events so you can swap between competition looks without scrambling.
This is especially useful for players who maintain multiple aesthetics or who dress differently for events versus casual room hangouts.
Every item in Highrise carries a rarity designation: Common, Rare, Epic, or Legendary.
Rarity affects three things:
For new players, rarity is important context for understanding why some items cost a few Gold while others cost thousands. Practitioners on community forums note that selling and trading is complicated in Highrise because prices vary depending on whether an item is Common, Rare, Epic, or Legendary, and also on current market demand. For a deeper understanding of how Gold and Gold Bars work together, check the guide to Gold Bars and currency mechanics.
Don’t let this intimidate you. Plenty of great looking avatars are built with Common and Rare items. Rarity adds flex value, but good style doesn’t require a Legendary wardrobe.
Knowing how to create a custom avatar in Highrise means knowing where the items come from. There are six main acquisition channels.
The Highrise Shop is where you purchase items directly using Gold or Bubbles. It features rotating collections, themed drops, and limited time items. New drops land every week, so checking the Shop regularly is worth the habit.
Grabs are randomized draws from themed item pools, similar to gacha mechanics. You spend Gold or Bubbles, and you receive a random item from the set. Premium Grabs (Gold only) tend to contain higher rarity items. The randomness means Grabs are exciting but unpredictable. You might land exactly what you want, or you might get something to trade later.
The Marketplace is Highrise’s player to player economy. Other users list items for sale at prices they set, and you buy with Gold. This is where you’ll find items that are no longer available in the Shop or from past events. Prices fluctuate based on rarity and demand, so patience can save you real money. If you have questions about buying or selling Gold itself, the Gold FAQ covers the details.
Highrise runs weekly events with exclusive item rewards. Participating or ranking in these events is one of the best ways to build your wardrobe without spending premium currency. One player on Lemon8 shared a tip worth repeating: “Participate in all the events! The game frequently has special releases, and that’s where you’ll often find limited edition pieces that become super valuable later.”
Stay current on upcoming events and fashion drops by checking the Highrise blog.
You can trade directly with other players by sending trade requests through messages. Trades can involve items, Gold, or Gold Bars (tradeable units you create from Gold using the Vault). Trading is where savvy players build impressive collections by exchanging duplicates or items they no longer want for pieces they’ve been eyeing.
OOTD is a daily feature that opens a special closet filled with random items you don’t own. You style an outfit using those items, complete the daily goal, and earn rewards. The catch: OOTD looks are just for fun and can’t be saved to your avatar or personal closet. But the feature is genuinely useful for discovering items you want to buy later and experimenting with styles risk free.
Three currencies drive the avatar economy in Highrise. Understanding them is essential for building your wardrobe efficiently.
Bubbles are the free to earn currency. You get them through daily logins, the prize wheel, completing goals, and selling items. Use Bubbles for basic Grabs and some Shop purchases. They’re the workhorse currency for players who prefer not to spend real money.
Gold is the premium currency. While you can earn small amounts through gameplay and selling items, most Gold is purchased with real money or earned through offers. Gold is required for trading with other players, buying from the Marketplace, and accessing premium Grabs. If you’re serious about avatar customization, Gold is the currency that unlocks the most options.
Highrise+ subscribers receive a 1,050 Gold monthly stipend at $4.99 USD per month, plus a 5% bonus on standard Gold purchases. For regular players, this is a cost effective way to maintain a steady Gold supply.
Gold Bars are created by converting Gold through the Vault section of the Shop. Their purpose is simple: they’re tradeable. When you’re doing a player to player trade and need to add value beyond items, Gold Bars function as a portable, standardized currency. You can learn how much Gold Bars cost and the fee structure involved.
Think of the three currencies as a ladder. Bubbles get you started. Gold opens up the full economy. Gold Bars make trading smoother.
Creating a custom avatar in Highrise isn’t just about collecting items. It’s about developing a look. The community organizes fashion around recognized aesthetic categories:
You don’t have to commit to one aesthetic. Some of the best looking avatars mix elements from two or three styles. Community members frequently note that unexpected combinations stand out more than playing it safe within a single genre.
For inspiration, search TikTok hashtags like #highriseapp or #ootdhighrise, or look through Pinterest boards for “Highrise avatar ideas.” The Highrise community itself is also a great place to see what other players are wearing and discuss style.
Beyond clothing and accessories, experienced players manipulate avatar proportions to create distinctive silhouettes.
Pushing proportions means intentionally choosing items or combinations that alter how tall, wide, or stylized your avatar appears. Certain shoes add height. Oversized tops change the shoulder to waist ratio. Specific hairstyles with volume can make the head appear larger or smaller relative to the body.
Players on Reddit have shared that stacking specific accessory types (like layered necklaces with high collar tops) creates the illusion of a longer neck or broader frame. The trick is experimenting with item combinations that shift visual weight in the direction you want.
Some items effectively hide or mask body parts, creating a different body shape than the default. Long coats can obscure the legs. High boots paired with shorts change the leg to torso ratio. Full face masks or helmets replace facial features entirely, letting you go for a robotic or masked aesthetic.
This isn’t a bug or exploit. It’s an intentional part of the layering system. Creators who design items for Highrise often consider how their pieces interact with what’s underneath, and smart players take advantage of that.
Hair is one of the most impactful elements of any avatar, and understanding how Highrise approaches hair design helps you make better choices.
Hair in Highrise is designed with careful attention to shape (the overall silhouette) and flow (how strands and sections move and drape). The front layer defines framing around the face, while the back layer handles length and movement. Because these are separate components, mixing a voluminous front piece with a sleek back piece (or vice versa) produces looks that feel custom.
Creators who design hair through Highrise Concepts often discuss how flow direction affects the entire avatar’s mood. Hair that sweeps to one side feels dynamic. Symmetrical, straight hair reads as polished. Curly, high volume hair commands attention and works especially well with simpler outfits.
When choosing hair, consider it as the frame for your avatar’s face. The right hair can elevate a mediocre outfit. The wrong hair can flatten even the best clothing combination.
Related to hair, some clothing items in Highrise feature dynamic flow, meaning they move and drape naturally as your avatar walks or poses. Capes, long skirts, scarves, and certain jacket styles all have flow built in.
Dynamic flow makes an avatar feel alive rather than static. Items with this property tend to look better in motion (in rooms, during events) than they do in a still preview. One useful trick: inspect a player wearing a flow item while they’re walking to see how it actually moves. The Inspect Outfit feature lets you identify the exact item, and you can then search for it on the Marketplace.
Creators submitting designs through Highrise Ideas have noted that flow heavy items tend to get more community votes, likely because they look so good in practice.
If you’re a creator building Worlds in Highrise Studio, avatar outfits go beyond personal fashion. You can control what avatars wear programmatically using Lua scripts. This section is for creators working with Highrise Studio.
There’s an important distinction between NPC outfits and player outfits. Player outfits are controlled by the player and reflect their personal inventory and choices. NPC outfits are defined by the World creator and are typically set in the scene or through scripts. You cannot change a player’s equipped outfit through a script (that would be a privacy and ownership nightmare), but you can fully control NPC appearance.
To make any script work in Highrise Studio, it must be registered in the scene. This means attaching your Lua script to a game object in the Unity editor so the Highrise engine knows to execute it when the World loads. Without registration, the script simply won’t run.
If you’re new to this process, the beginner tutorial and glossary for Highrise Studio walks through the basics of attaching scripts to objects.
For Worlds with multiple NPCs or costume changes, storing outfit data in a module script keeps things organized. A module script acts as a shared data file that other scripts can reference. You define each outfit as a table of item IDs and properties (hair, top, bottoms, shoes, accessories), then any NPC script can pull from that central source.
This approach avoids hardcoding outfit data into every NPC script individually. If you need to update an NPC’s look, you change it in one place.
Unity’s Inspector panel lets you assign outfit data to NPC objects without editing code directly. After creating your outfit module script, you can expose outfit variables in the Inspector and assign them per NPC. This is especially useful for Worlds with many characters, such as themed rooms where each NPC represents a different style.
Practitioners on YouTube walkthroughs of Highrise Studio have demonstrated that using the Inspector for outfit assignment cuts iteration time significantly compared to editing Lua files manually for each NPC.
Once your outfit data is stored and your script is registered, equipping an outfit on an NPC is a matter of calling the appropriate API functions in your Lua script to set each item slot. The Lua scripting examples for Highrise cover related patterns that translate well to outfit management.
This scripting approach opens up possibilities like costume changes during events, NPCs that dress according to the time of day, or interactive shops where players can preview items on NPC mannequins.
HRDream is an unofficial website built by the community for creating dream outfits and previewing how items look on your avatar before you purchase them. It’s not affiliated with Highrise, but it’s widely used by players who want to plan purchases and avoid buyer’s remorse. Think of it as a fitting room for your wishlist.
Inside Highrise, the Looks feature lets you discover and post animated outfits. Browse what other players have assembled, save Looks you like for future inspiration, and share your own creations with the community.
This is a trick every player should know. Tap on any player’s avatar in a room to inspect their outfit. You’ll see exactly which items they’re wearing, and you can jump straight to making a trade offer. It’s the fastest way to figure out “what is that jacket?” when you spot something you love.
One of the most unique aspects of Highrise is that players can actually design items that become real, wearable pieces in the game.
Highrise Concepts are community design competitions centered around a particular theme. You submit item designs, the community votes, and the top rated designs are produced as actual in game items released through events, Grabs, or special sales. If you have design skills (or even just strong ideas), this is your path from player to creator. You can track your submissions through the portal.
Highrise Ideas works differently. It’s a crowdfunding style platform where you pitch a single wearable item to the community. If the design reaches its preorder goal (which varies based on proposed rarity), the item gets produced. It’s a direct line from concept to closet, and it means the Highrise catalog is genuinely shaped by its players.
Both of these programs are part of what makes customizing your avatar in Highrise different from other virtual worlds. You’re not just consuming a fixed catalog; you’re contributing to it.
Your avatar extends beyond what you wear in rooms.
Profile background. Choose a background image for your profile page to set the mood.
Bio. Write a short description of yourself. Many players use this to list their aesthetic, what they’re trading, or their crew affiliations.
Item showcase. Display your favorite or rarest items on your profile for other players to see (and envy).
Emotes. Your avatar can wave, dance, sing, and pose using animated emotes. These bring your character to life during conversations and events.
Pets. Pets follow your avatar around in rooms. They’re part of your visual identity and another collectible category worth exploring.
One of the most common complaints from newer players is that premium items feel expensive. One Google Play reviewer noted that getting a “very basic top tier item will be over 100 USD” from the Marketplace, with some single items valued at over $1,000. That’s real, but it doesn’t mean you need deep pockets to look good.
Here’s how experienced players build strong avatars without overspending:
Log in daily. The daily rewards, prize wheel, and goal completions add up faster than you’d think. Consistency beats occasional spending.
Never skip events. Event exclusive items are free to earn through participation. Some of these become highly valuable later, which means your time investment can pay off in trading power.
Use OOTD every day. It’s a free way to try items before you commit Gold. You’ll discover pieces you love and avoid wasting currency on things that don’t suit your avatar.
Learn to trade. Trading is where budget conscious players thrive. Start by trading duplicates and event rewards for items you actually want. The Marketplace and direct trades are both viable paths.
Watch Marketplace prices. Item values shift constantly based on rarity and demand. Patience lets you buy low on items that are temporarily undervalued.
Inspect other players’ outfits. Before spending Gold on an item, see how it actually looks on a real avatar in a room. The inspect feature is your best friend.
Focus on color coordination over rarity. A well coordinated outfit with Common items will look better than a random collection of Rare pieces. Style matters more than labels.
Join the community. Visiting rooms, joining crews, and connecting with other players exposes you to styling ideas and trading opportunities you’d never find alone.
Yes. The core game is free to download and play on iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, and Steam. You receive starter items during avatar creation at no cost. Premium items and currencies are optional.
Absolutely. You can edit your avatar’s facial features, hairstyle, outfit, and accessories at any time. There’s no penalty for changing your look, and most players update their avatar regularly.
Open the avatar editor, tap the item you want to remove, and select the unequip option. You can remove individual pieces without affecting the rest of your outfit.
After styling your avatar, use the save outfit function in the editor. Give each outfit a name so you can quickly swap between saved looks without rebuilding them manually.
Bubbles are earned through free gameplay and cover basic purchases and Grabs. Gold is the premium currency used for trading, Marketplace purchases, and premium Grabs. Gold can be purchased with real money or earned through offers and selling items.
Participate in weekly events for exclusive rewards, complete daily goals for Bubbles and small Gold amounts, and trade strategically with other players. The OOTD feature also helps you discover items to target.
HRDream is an unofficial community built website that lets you preview how items look on your avatar before purchasing. It’s not affiliated with Highrise but is widely used by the community for outfit planning.
Yes. Highrise Concepts runs design competitions where community voted winners become real in game items. Highrise Ideas lets you pitch individual item designs that get produced if they hit their preorder goal.
Yes. Using Lua scripts in Highrise Studio, you can define and equip outfits on NPCs programmatically. Store outfit metadata in module scripts, register them in the scene, and assign them via the Unity Inspector or through code.
Yes. Highrise supports cross platform play. Your avatar, inventory, and friends list persist across iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, and Steam under one account.
Gold Bars are tradeable units created by converting Gold through the Vault. They’re used in player to player trades as a standardized form of value, making it easier to balance trades that involve items of different worth.
Creating a custom avatar in Highrise is a process that starts in seconds but unfolds over weeks and months as you discover new items, develop your style, and connect with the community. The depth of the system, from item layering and rarity tiers to player designed pieces, scripted NPC outfits, and a real trading economy, means there’s always something new to chase.
Jump into Highrise now and see what you can create.
© 2026 Pocket Worlds. Tous droits réservés.