Best Pokemon Cards to Invest In
Is Investing in Pokemon Cards Smart?
Pokemon cards have proven to be a legitimate alternative asset class. The top cards have consistently appreciated over decades, outperforming many traditional investments. However, like any collectible market, there are risks. Not every card appreciates, and market corrections happen. The key is understanding what drives long-term value and selecting cards with strong fundamentals.
Investment Principles
Scarcity Is King
Cards with limited, fixed supplies appreciate best. First Edition prints, vintage holos, and short-printed variants cannot be reprinted. Modern sets can be reprinted, which suppresses long-term growth unless the specific card rarity within the set is extremely scarce.
Iconic Characters Outperform
Charizard, Pikachu, Mewtwo, and the original 151 Pokemon have universal recognition that transcends the card game community. Cards featuring these characters consistently outperform equivalent cards featuring less popular Pokemon.
Graded Over Raw
For investment purposes, graded cards (especially PSA 10 and BGS 10) provide authenticity guarantee, condition certainty, and the strongest appreciation history. The grading premium tends to increase over time as more collectors enter the market.
Sealed Product Appreciates
Unopened booster boxes and sealed products from out-of-print sets have some of the strongest appreciation records. A Base Set Unlimited booster box has gone from $100 retail to $15,000-20,000 over 25 years.
Top Investment Picks
Vintage Tier (Highest Confidence)
Base Set First Edition Holos (any PSA grade) — The blue-chip Pokemon investments. Even PSA 5-7 copies of major holos have shown consistent multi-year appreciation. The supply is fixed and shrinking as cards get lost or damaged over time.
Neo Genesis/Discovery/Revelation 1st Edition Holos — The Neo era is undervalued relative to Base Set. First Edition holos from these sets in high grades are scarce and appreciating as the market recognizes the era.
e-Series Holos and Crystal Cards — Skyridge, Aquapolis, and Expedition cards are from the lowest print-run era of the English Pokemon TCG. Crystal type cards in particular have shown exceptional growth.
Modern Tier (High Potential)
Sword & Shield Alt Arts — Umbreon VMAX, Rayquaza VMAX, and Gengar VMAX alt arts are the defining chase cards of the SWSH era. As this era moves further into the past and packs become scarce, these should appreciate steadily.
Scarlet & Violet SARs of Popular Pokemon — Charizard ex SAR from 151, Mew ex SAR, and Eeveelution SARs represent the current pinnacle of modern card art. The best SARs should follow the appreciation path of SWSH alt arts.
Japanese Exclusive Cards — Certain Japanese promos and special set cards are not available in English. As the Western market becomes more aware of Japanese exclusives, cross-market demand is increasing.
Sealed Product Tier
Out-of-Print Booster Boxes — Any sealed booster box from a set that is no longer in print tends to appreciate. Recent examples: Evolving Skies booster boxes went from $130 retail to $300-400 within a year of going out of print.
Elite Trainer Boxes from Popular Sets — ETBs from sets like Evolving Skies, Brilliant Stars, and Pokemon 151 are solid sealed holds. They combine playability (competitive cards inside) with collectibility.
What to Avoid
- Bulk modern ultra rares: Standard V and ex cards from sets still in print rarely appreciate
- Overproduced sets: Sets with multiple print waves tend to suppress card values
- Damaged vintage: Unless extremely rare, damaged cards depreciate rather than appreciate
- Speculation on unproven characters: New Pokemon without established fanbases are risky investments
Using Pokex for Investment Research
Scan your existing collection to identify which cards have investment potential. Track values over time to spot appreciation trends. Focus your purchases on cards that the scanner flags as high-value, and use the market data to make informed buying decisions.