How to Sell Pokemon Cards
Deciding How to Sell
The best selling approach depends on your collection size, card values, and how much effort you want to invest. High-value singles deserve individual listings on marketplaces. Mid-range cards work well as lots or bundles. Bulk commons and uncommons are best sold in bulk by weight or count to dedicated buyers.
Where to Sell Pokemon Cards
eBay
The largest marketplace for Pokemon cards with the broadest buyer pool. Best for individual high-value cards where auction competition drives up the price. Fees are approximately 13% (seller fees + payment processing). Use auction format for rare cards to generate bidding wars, and Buy It Now for common singles with established market prices.
TCGPlayer
The dedicated TCG marketplace used by competitive players and collectors. Best for selling playable cards and modern singles. Fees are 10-15% depending on seller level. TCGPlayer provides a direct price comparison tool so buyers can find the cheapest listing, making it ideal for competitively-priced inventory.
Local Card Shops (LCS)
Selling to a local card shop is the fastest way to convert cards to cash, but you will receive 40-60% of market value since the shop needs margin to resell. Best for mid-range cards where the time savings outweigh the lower return. Build a relationship with your LCS for better offers over time.
Facebook Groups and Discord
Community marketplaces like Pokemon card trading groups on Facebook and Discord offer lower fees (usually just PayPal G&S protection) but require more trust management. Best for established community members who can leverage reputation for higher prices with lower fees.
Card Shows and Conventions
In-person events let you sell cards directly to buyers and dealers. No platform fees, immediate cash payment, and the ability to negotiate. Bring your best cards in a binder and be prepared to negotiate. Research prices beforehand so you know your minimum acceptable prices.
Pricing Your Cards
Scan your cards with Pokex to get current market values as a starting point. Then check recent sold listings on eBay (filter by "Sold" items) to see what buyers are actually paying. Price your cards competitively: 5-10% below the lowest comparable listing for a quick sale, or at market rate if you are willing to wait.
For graded cards, price based on the specific grade. The difference between a PSA 9 and PSA 10 can be 5-10x or more.
Photography Tips
Good photos sell cards. Use natural lighting or a well-lit desk lamp. Photograph the front, back, and any notable features (centering, corners) on a plain dark background. Include a close-up of the holo pattern for foil cards. Avoid using flash, which washes out details and hides flaws.
Shipping Safely
For single cards: penny sleeve, top-loader, taped shut, placed in a team bag, and shipped in a rigid mailer (PWE for cards under $20, bubble mailer with tracking for $20+). For graded slabs: wrap in bubble wrap, place in a fitted box, and always ship with tracking and insurance.
Maximizing Your Return
- Grade high-value cards before selling (PSA 10 premiums can 5-10x your return)
- Time your sales around hype cycles (new set releases, Pokemon game launches, YouTuber attention)
- Sell chase cards individually, not in lots
- Bundle mid-range cards into themed lots (e.g., "Complete Eeveelution VMAX set")
- Keep detailed records for tax purposes if your annual sales exceed $600
Bulk Selling
For thousands of commons and uncommons, sell by count (1,000-card lots) or by weight. Bulk buyers on eBay and dedicated bulk-buying services pay $15-30 per 1,000 cards for unsorted bulk. Sorting by holo, reverse holo, and rare before selling increases the per-card return.