What's my Pokémon card worth?
Search any card by name to see its current TCGplayer market value — by set and finish. Tap a result for the full price breakdown and a link to live listings.
Tip: the set and card number are printed in the bottom corner of your card (like 4/102) — use them to pick the right match.
How card pricing works
The figure shown is the TCGplayer market price — an average of recent actual sales, which is far more reliable than the asking price on any single listing. Prices move constantly, so treat every number as a live snapshot. The same card can have several prices because finishes differ: a holo or reverse-holo copy usually sells for more than the plain version. These are raw (ungraded) prices — a high-grade slabbed copy can be worth several times as much, and a damaged card less.
Want to understand why a card is worth what it is? Our guide on how to tell if a card is valuable breaks down rarity, condition, and edition. And before you celebrate a big hit, make sure it’s genuine with how to spot a fake card.
Card value FAQ
Type the card's name above and open the match that matches your set and card number (printed in the bottom corner, like 4/102). The price shown is the current TCGplayer market value — what copies are actually selling for, not a list price.
Many cards exist in different finishes — normal, holo, and reverse holo — and each has its own market price. Check the finish of your copy and use the matching figure. Foil versions usually sell for a bit more.
No — these are raw (ungraded) market prices. A professionally graded card in high condition can be worth several times the raw price, while a damaged card is worth less. Condition matters a lot.