A homotope, or a mutation, of a k-algebra is a new algebra with the same underlying space, but with the multiplication law dependent on the multiplication law of the original algebra. In this paper, we show that a generic finite-dimensional algebra of dimension greater than 3 has infinitely many non-isotopic homotopes, and that, more generally, a similar result is true for generic trilinear forms. We also study a particular class of homotopes called ∆-homotopes, where ∆ is an element of the algebra, and show that there are algebras with infinitely many non-isomorphic homotopes even under some additional assumptions, such as the associativity of the algebra or ∆ being well-tempered.