Grading & ROI
Is it worth grading Pokémon cards?
Reviewed July 2026
The short answer
Grading a Pokémon card is worth it when the graded card's expected value clearly beats the raw value plus the total grading cost — and when the card is clean enough to have a real shot at a Gem-Mint grade. In practice, with PSA's cheapest active tier now $79.99 per card (its sub-$40 Value tiers were paused in June 2026) and CGC's Economy tier at about $15, grading rarely pays on modern bulk worth a few dollars, and makes the most sense for scarce, near-perfect cards — vintage WOTC, first-edition holos, and sought-after modern chase cards.
The break-even math (the only rule that matters)
Grading pays only when the grade adds more value than it costs. Don't guess — run the four numbers.
- ◆Raw value: what the card sells for ungraded today.
- ◆Graded upside: what the same card tends to fetch in a strong grade (a premium, never guaranteed).
- ◆Total cost: grading fee + return shipping + insurance + any membership.
- ◆Grade risk: a 9 instead of a 10 can erase most of the premium on modern cards.
What grading actually costs in 2026
Costs jumped this year, which changes the math. PSA paused its Value tiers ($24.99–$64.99) on June 2, 2026 amid a reported ~14-million-card backlog, so its entry point is now $79.99 (Regular, up to $1,500 declared value, ~40–50 business days). CGC and SGC stayed cheaper at the low end.
| Grader | Cheapest tier (2026) | Note for Pokémon |
|---|---|---|
| PSA | $79.99 (Regular) | Best resale/liquidity; Value tiers paused Jun 2026 |
| CGC | ~$15 (Economy, ~80 days) | Strong TCG following; recognized on Japanese Pokémon |
| SGC | ~$15–25 | Vintage-leaning; less common for modern Pokémon |
| BGS | ~$20 | Sub-grades on every slab; Black Label prestige |
When grading a Pokémon card usually makes sense
The premium has to be large relative to the fee.
- ◆Vintage WOTC-era holos (Base Set, Jungle, Fossil) and first-edition cards.
- ◆Genuinely scarce modern chase cards — alt-arts, special illustration rares, sealed-era hits.
- ◆Cards that look Gem-Mint: sharp corners, clean holo surface, tight centering.
- ◆You plan to sell, where a slab and grade reassure buyers and lift the price.
When to leave it raw
For most modern Pokémon, grading is a cost with little return.
- ◆Common or bulk cards worth under ~$100 raw — the fee usually eats the upside.
- ◆Cards with whitening, scratches on the holo, or off-centre printing that will cap the grade.
- ◆Anything you can't confidently call Near-Mint or better with your own eyes.
Check condition and value before you pay
The trap is paying a fee just to confirm a common card is common. Get an honest read first: Worth My Card reads a Pokémon card's centering, corners, edges, and holo surface from a photo, flags whether it looks worth grading, and gives a hedged value range from its attributes. Worth My Card gives an estimated value range from a card's attributes plus a condition and authenticity read — it's an educational guide, not a price database or a formal PSA/BGS/SGC grade.
Frequently asked
Is it worth grading Pokémon cards under $50?
Usually not. With PSA's entry tier at $79.99 and even CGC Economy around $15 plus shipping, the cost tends to exceed the premium on low-value cards. Grading pays best on scarce cards in Gem-Mint condition.
How much does it cost to grade a Pokémon card in 2026?
It depends on the grader and tier. PSA's cheapest active tier is $79.99 per card after its Value tiers were paused in June 2026; CGC Economy is around $15 (with a long turnaround). Add return shipping and, for PSA, a $99/year membership or a group-submission fee.
Which grading company is best for Pokémon cards?
PSA has the deepest resale market and highest liquidity; CGC is popular with TCG collectors and is well-regarded on Japanese Pokémon; SGC and BGS have their own niches. The 'best' one depends on the card and whether you value price ceiling or cost.
Does a graded Pokémon card sell for more?
Often, yes — a high grade adds a premium and reassures buyers — but a low grade can add little. The gain is largest on scarce cards that grade Gem-Mint, and smallest on common modern cards.
Sources
Grading fees change often — figures are current as of the review date; confirm at each grader's official fee page before submitting.
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