
The prices listed in the PSA Price Guide do not always reflect the potential premium associated with a particular "Low Pop" card. Scarcity, within different grades, can impact the value of a card significantly. This includes notable sales at public auction.įollow PSA’s step-by-step guide for determining the value of your cards. In addition, important notes about the collectibles are listed throughout the online reference, often at the bottom of each specific category. This means that our prices more accurately reflect what you will realize when you sell or buy PSA graded sports cards. No subjective pricing surveys or price ranges of ungraded cards are ever included. Find out what your cards are really worthĮvery issue contains card prices based on established price histories. Read more about what PSA can do for your collection. The clear benefit of having your items certified by PSA is because, generally speaking, items certified by PSA tend to sell for more - sometimes significantly more - than those that are not. Prices listed in the PSA Price Guide are based on PSA-certified/graded collectibles. A minus (-) beside the price indicates that price has decreased in the past month.
#TRADING CARD DATABASE PLUS#
* Editor's note: plus (+) beside a price indicates that the price has increased in the past month. No other price guide covers such a wide range of collectibles, from vintage legends like Babe Ruth to modern stars like Derek Jeter. Baseball, basketball, football, hockey, golf, racing and even boxing prices are here! PSA Price Guide also covers many of the most popular non-sports issues like 1940 Gum, Inc. PSA Price Guide covers all the major sports too. It includes over 400,000 prices for a host of different collectibles including, but not limited to: sports and non-sports trading cards, autographs, unopened packs, tickets, professional model bats and graded baseballs. PSA Price Guide is the only official price guide for PSA-certified collectibles and it is the most comprehensive price guide in the hobby.
