Item Economy — Choosing the Right Held Item
Held items are a single-slot economy: you get one item per Pokémon, and the choice can be the difference between winning a matchup and losing it. This page covers every meta-relevant item, when to run each, and how Pokékipe's item-usage data helps you pick.
Items per Pokémon
1 (no swap mid-battle except via Trick / Switcheroo)
Most-used Gen 9 OU items
Heavy-Duty Boots, Leftovers, Choice Scarf
Booster Energy unique to
Gen 9 Paradox Pokémon
Item % per format on Pokékipe
Per Pokémon, per ELO bracket
Items are a binary economy — you have one slot. Pick the item your role needs, not the item that "could be cool." A Pokémon with the wrong item is worse than a Pokémon with no item at all.
At a glance
Held items modify a Pokémon's combat profile. They fall into 7 categories: Choice items (lock + boost), passive recovery, damage boost, defensive (hazards), one-shot consumables, type-specific, and meta-unique (Booster Energy).
- Choice itemsChoice Scarf / Band / Specs — × 1.5 to one stat, locked into one move
- Passive recoveryLeftovers, Black Sludge — heal 1/16 per turn
- Damage boostLife Orb (× 1.3 damage, -10% HP), Expert Belt (× 1.2 super-effective)
- Defensive (hazards)Heavy-Duty Boots — immune to entry hazards
- One-shot consumablesSitrus Berry, Focus Sash, Custap Berry, Lum Berry
- Type-specificPlates / Z-Crystals / Mega Stones (gen-locked)
- Meta-uniqueBooster Energy (Gen 9 Paradox), Eviolite (NFE Pokémon)
The held-item economy
Each Pokémon holds 0 or 1 items. The item slot is exclusive — you can't hold both Choice Scarf and Leftovers. This forces a single decision per Pokémon, which is why item picks reveal the role.
Item slot rules
- One item per Pokémon: no stacking, no swapping mid-battle without specific moves.
- Trick / Switcheroo / Knock Off: items can be removed or swapped mid-battle. Mega Stones and Z-Crystals are protected from these.
- Consumed items: Sitrus Berry, Focus Sash, Custap Berry, Lum Berry are consumed on activation. After consumption, the item slot is empty for the rest of the battle.
- Mega Stones / Z-Crystals (Gen 6-7): occupy the slot but enable Mega Evolution / Z-Move. Gen 8+ removed these.
Choice items — Scarf, Band, Specs
The Choice trio: Choice Scarf (× 1.5 Speed), Choice Band (× 1.5 Atk), Choice Specs (× 1.5 Sp.Atk). Each locks the holder into one move per stay-in. Massively powerful, but the lock is real.
Boosts Speed by 50%. Most-used revenge-killer item. Iconic users: Heatran, Iron Bundle, Dragapult, Garchomp. The single most-used offensive item across all formats.
Boosts Atk by 50%. Defines pure physical wallbreakers. Iconic users: Iron Hands, Roaring Moon, Urshifu, Iron Boulder.
Boosts Sp.Atk by 50%. Defines special wallbreakers. Iconic users: Walking Wake, Iron Bundle, Heatran, Dragapult.
When to run a Choice item
- You need to OHKO / 2HKO and locking is acceptable: when your role is "come in, hit hard, leave or die."
- You have a switch-out plan: U-turn, Volt Switch, Flip Turn — the move is "switch into next Pokémon" AND "deal damage." Choice items shine on these.
- You don't need setup: Choice items + setup don't mix. If you want Belly Drum + Drain Punch, you can't Choice.
When NOT to run a Choice item
- Setup sweepers: setup move + locked-in attack is wasted. Run Leftovers / Life Orb.
- Mixed attackers: locking into one stat means the other moves are weakened. Choice items punish moveset versatility.
- Defensive Pokémon: Choice on a wall doesn't make sense — walls don't hit hard, they pivot.
Heavy-Duty Boots — the Gen 8 standard
Heavy-Duty Boots make the holder immune to all entry hazards (Stealth Rock, Spikes, Toxic Spikes, Sticky Web, Steelsurge from G-Max Stunfisk). Defining item from Gen 8 onward — solves the "hazards bleed me" problem in one slot.
Immunity to all hazards on switch-in: Stealth Rock, Spikes, Toxic Spikes, Sticky Web. Doesn't prevent hazards from being set; doesn't affect post-switch-in moves. The defining item for any Pokémon that switches frequently.
When Boots is mandatory
- 4× weak to Stealth Rock: Charizard, Mantine, Volcarona — losing 50% on switch-in is unsustainable.
- 2× weak to Stealth Rock + heavy switching: Talonflame, Mandibuzz, Dragonite — 25% per switch is a bleed they can't afford.
- Status-vulnerable + Sticky Web meta: Pokémon with Speed-defining roles (Iron Bundle, Dragapult) can't afford Sticky Web -1.
- Heavily-pivoting: Pokémon switching multiple times per game (Slowking-G, Toxapex pivots) accumulate hazards every entry.
When Boots is NOT needed
- Static sweepers: Pokémon that come in once and either kill or die don't need hazard immunity.
- Hazard control teammates: if your team has Defog / Rapid Spin running, individual Boots are less critical.
- Levitate / Magnet Rise: Pokémon already immune to Spikes / T-Spikes / Sticky Web (still vulnerable to Stealth Rock).
Leftovers — the bulky pivot's friend
Leftovers heals 1/16 max HP at the end of every turn the holder is on the field. The classic bulky-pivot item — turns a pivot into a self-healing wall.
Passive recovery. Adds up over a long game: 16 turns = full HP refresh. Pairs perfectly with Recover / Roost / Slack Off / Wish for total recovery economy. The defining item for defensive Pokémon.
When Leftovers is the right pick
- Bulky pivots: Toxapex, Slowking-G, Clodsire, Hippowdon — pivots that stay on the field for multiple turns.
- Setup sweepers: setup users (Garchomp DD, Dragonite DD) running Leftovers can heal up between setup turns.
- Pokémon with reliable recovery: stack Leftovers with Recover / Roost / Slack Off / Wish for a 1/16 + 50% per Recover combo.
- Hazard-immune (Boots-having teammates handle): when your team handles hazards elsewhere, Leftovers is preferred over Boots for the recovery economy.
Black Sludge — Poison-type variant
Black Sludge heals 1/16 HP per turn for Poison-type Pokémon, and damages 1/8 HP per turn for non-Poison-types. Functionally identical to Leftovers for Poison-types but defends against Trick / Switcheroo (the trick-er gets damaged).
Life Orb — the breaker's tool
Life Orb boosts damage by × 1.3 but costs the holder 10% max HP per attack. The defining wallbreaker item — when you need every move to hit hard but Choice locks would limit your options.
Boosts damage by 30% on every attacking move. Costs 10% max HP per attacking move (no cost on status moves or switching). Defining mixed attacker / multi-move sweeper item.
When Life Orb is the right pick
- Mixed attackers: when you need both physical and special hits (Garchomp Mixed, Iron Valiant Mixed). Choice would lock you out of half your moveset.
- Setup sweepers needing breakthrough: Iron Valiant Swords Dance + Life Orb Close Combat hits even harder than +1 standalone.
- Pivot moves + damage: U-turn / Volt Switch users that need each non-pivot attack to count.
Life Orb tradeoffs
- 10% per move = 50% HP gone in 5 attacks. Pairs poorly with Multiscale or Shed Skin (already dependent on full HP).
- Doesn't apply to status moves: Will-O-Wisp / Toxic / setup moves cost no HP. Run Life Orb on attackers that occasionally use status.
Sitrus Berry, Berry Juice & Sashes
One-shot consumables: Sitrus Berry (heal 25% at 50% HP threshold), Focus Sash (survive a 1HKO at full HP), Berry Juice (heal 20 HP at 50% threshold — Wonder Launcher only). Each is a single-use safety net.
One-shot heal 25% max HP when HP drops below 50%. Common in VGC for Pokémon that need to survive a single hit and counter-attack. Iconic users: Cresselia, bulky setup sweepers in VGC.
Survive what would otherwise be an OHKO if at full HP. Defining lead-Pokémon item for HO archetypes. Iconic users: Cinccino, Endeavor Pokémon, Fast lead setters.
Cures any status condition or confusion when applied. Defending move on Pokémon vulnerable to spread paralysis or sleep moves. Iconic users: Garchomp DD (cures Will-O-Wisp), Kingambit (cures Lum + Sucker tied to Knock Off chip).
One-shot priority move when HP drops below 25%. Niche; common with Endeavor / Sturdy pairings. Iconic users: Donphan with Endeavor + Custap.
One-shot consumable: +2 Atk and +2 Sp.Atk when hit by a super-effective move. Defining VGC sweeper item for Trick Room (Iron Hands + Tera Fighting + WP for example).
Booster Energy — Gen 9 Paradox enabler
Booster Energy is unique to Gen 9. It activates the holder's Quark Drive (Future Paradox) or Protosynthesis (Past Paradox) ability without the field condition (Electric Terrain or Sun). One-shot, consumed on activation.
Activates the holder's ability outside of field conditions. The user's highest stat is boosted by × 1.5 if Speed, × 1.3 otherwise. Consumed on activation. Defining item for Iron Bundle, Iron Valiant, Roaring Moon, Walking Wake.
Booster Energy strategy
- Highest stat selection: Booster Energy boosts the user's highest base stat. For Iron Bundle (136 Speed), Booster activates Speed at × 1.5 = 410. For Iron Valiant (130 Sp.Atk + 116 Atk), Booster activates Sp.Atk at × 1.3.
- Field condition alternative: if you can set Electric Terrain or sun via teammate, Booster Energy isn't needed. Use the field-set Pokémon then run Boots / Leftovers on the Paradox.
- One-shot: consumed on switch-in. Pokémon can't re-trigger Booster mid-game. Plan around the activation timing.
Item-by-role decision tree
Use this decision tree to pick the right item for any Pokémon. Match the role to the item, not the item to the Pokémon.
| Role | Default item | Alternative | When to deviate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hazards setter (defensive) | Heavy-Duty Boots | Leftovers | Run Leftovers if your team has hazard control elsewhere |
| Hazards remover | Heavy-Duty Boots | Leftovers | Run Leftovers on Tidy Up users (already self-removing) |
| Bulky pivot | Leftovers | Heavy-Duty Boots | Boots if your team takes too much hazard chip |
| Setup sweeper | Leftovers | Lum Berry / Heavy-Duty Boots | Lum if status-vulnerable; Boots if Stealth Rock 2-4× |
| Choice Scarf revenge killer | Choice Scarf | Heavy-Duty Boots if SR-vulnerable | — |
| Wallbreaker (mixed) | Life Orb | Choice Specs / Choice Band | Choice if mono-attacking move set; LO if mixed |
| Wallbreaker (mono physical) | Choice Band | Life Orb | Life Orb if pivot move; Band if mono-attacking |
| Wallbreaker (mono special) | Choice Specs | Life Orb | Same logic as physical |
| Status absorber | Heavy-Duty Boots | Leftovers | Boots typically wins; Lefties on Pokémon with reliable status removal |
| Lead (HO) | Focus Sash | Heavy-Duty Boots | Sash for survival turn 1; Boots for hazard immunity |
| Paradox Pokémon (Gen 9) | Booster Energy | Heavy-Duty Boots / Choice items | Booster Energy if no terrain/sun teammate; otherwise utility item |
| Trick Room sweeper | Life Orb / Weakness Policy | Leftovers | Weakness Policy for VGC TR; Life Orb for Singles TR |
| NFE (LC / Eviolite tier) | Eviolite | — | Always Eviolite if NFE-eligible; transforms 50% Def + Sp.Def boost |
Item differences by format
Item meta varies by format. Boots dominate hazard-heavy Smogon Singles; Sitrus Berry dominates VGC; Eviolite is essential in LC. Knowing which items each format favors saves teambuilding time.
Smogon Singles (OU/UU/RU)
- Top items: Heavy-Duty Boots (45-60% on grounded Pokémon), Choice Scarf (~20%), Leftovers (~15%), Life Orb (~10%).
- Hazard meta: Stealth Rock + Spikes + T-Spikes are common. Boots is the standard for any switch-in.
- Pivot economy: Choice Scarf revenge killers are the dominant offensive item. 1 in 5 Pokémon run Scarf.
VGC (Doubles)
- Top items: Sitrus Berry (~25% on bulky Pokémon), Choice Specs/Band (~15%), Booster Energy (Paradox-specific), Focus Sash (~10% on lead Pokémon).
- No SR meta: hazards are rare in VGC (4-Pokémon battle = no time for hazards). Boots is much less common.
- Bulk economy: Sitrus Berry + Wide Guard + Trick Room + bulky Pokémon define the format.
Little Cup (LC)
- Eviolite mandatory: NFE Pokémon get +50% Def and +50% Sp.Def with Eviolite. Universal item for the format.
- Berry Juice: heals 20 HP at 50% HP threshold (but actually 100% in LC due to low max HP). Niche but format-specific.
Common mistakes
- Choice Scarf on a setup sweeper — Scarf locks you in. Setup users need flexibility. Don't pair Choice with Swords Dance / Dragon Dance.
- Leftovers on a glass cannon — Leftovers heals 1/16 per turn. If your Pokémon dies in 1 turn, Leftovers heals 0% over the game. Glass cannons want Life Orb / Choice items.
- No item — running an empty item slot in 2026 is genuinely worse than picking any reasonable item. Always pick.
- Mismatched format items — running Heavy-Duty Boots in VGC where SR is rare; running Sitrus Berry in OU where it's outclassed by Leftovers.
- Ignoring Booster Energy on Paradox — running Iron Bundle without Booster Energy in Gen 9 = playing at 273 Speed instead of 410 Speed. Massive tier loss.
- Mega Stone holdovers — running Mega Stones in Gen 8/9 (no effect in those gens). Common archive-mistake when copying old sets.
- Trick Choice items as your wincon — locks the OPPONENT into your move's slot, but if your wincon then has to switch, you can't bring back the item. Use Trick on supporters, not on critical wincons.
Where to go from here
Items, spreads, and the team's composition all link together. Once items are picked, validate the spreads against the role; once spreads are validated, test the team.
- EV spreads — EV Spreads & Speed Tiers for the math behind how items modify spread requirements.
- Reading the meta — Reading the Meta for using item % data to decide what fits.
- Build a team from scratch — Build a Team from Scratch for the broader 7-step workflow.
- VGC lead bringing — Lead Bringing in VGC for VGC-specific item considerations.
- Live data — Items index with usage %, Team Builder, Gen 9 OU live data.