Whether you’re new to collecting or have boxes full of cards from your childhood, one of the most common questions is: “How do I know what my card is worth?”

With so many brands, parallels, and player variations out there, it can feel overwhelming — but the good news is, there are a few simple ways to check your card’s true market value before you sell, trade, or grade it.  

Step 1: Identify Exactly What You Have

Before you can look up prices, you need to know the specific details of your card.

That includes:  

  • Player name 
  • Year and brand (e.g., 2023 Topps Chrome
  • Card number (found on the back) 
  • Variation type (e.g., refractor, parallel, autograph, relic) 
  • Serial number (e.g., /99, /25, or 1/1

Once you have that info, you’re ready to find comps (comparable sales).  

Step 2: Use SportsCardsPro for Quick Price Checks

SportsCardsPro.com is one of the easiest tools for beginners to check approximate card values. You can:  

  • Search by player, set, or card number 
  • See average selling prices for raw, graded, and sealed cards 
  • View sales trends over time 
  • Check historical pricing data from eBay and other marketplaces 

It’s a great starting point to get a ballpark estimate of what your card typically sells for — especially for common base, rookie, or parallel cards. 

Example:

Search “2023 Topps Chrome Adley Rutschman Refractor” on SportsCardsPro, and you’ll see recent average sales, condition breakdowns, and charts.  

Step 3: Use 130 Point to See Real eBay Sale Prices

While price guides are helpful, real sale data gives you the most accurate picture of what collectors are currently paying.

That’s where 130Point.com comes in. 130 Point pulls verified eBay sales, including best offer prices (which eBay hides), so you can see what cards actually sold for — not just what sellers listed them at. 

Example: If someone accepted a $42 best offer on a card listed for $60, 130 Point will show the actual $42 sale — giving you real market insight. This tool is a favorite among serious collectors for checking comps before buying or selling.  

Step 4: Compare Similar Cards and Grades

When checking value, compare apples to apples:  

  • Is your card raw or graded? 
  • Same numbering or parallel color? 
  • Same player year and condition? 

Even small details can make a huge difference — a base card might sell for $2, while the numbered Gold Refractor /50 version of the same card could sell for $75+. If you’re looking at graded cards, compare the same grading company and grade (PSA 10 vs. BGS 9.5, etc.) to keep your valuation consistent.  

Step 5: Factor in Condition

Condition plays a massive role in value — especially for modern cards.

Look closely at:  

  • Surface scratches or print lines 
  • Corner and edge wear 
  • Centering (front and back) 

Even a small flaw can drop a card’s value by 30–50%.

If you plan to sell a high-value card, grading it through PSA, BGS, or SGC can help lock in its true worth.  

Examples by Sport

  • Baseball: Rare parallels like a Shohei Ohtani Gold /50 or Bobby Witt Jr. SP can fetch hundreds depending on demand. 
  • Football: Rookie autographs of players like CJ Stroud or Patrick Mahomes are among the most searched on 130 Point. 
  • Basketball: Luka Dončić, LeBron James, and Victor Wembanyama autos or numbered cards dominate sales charts on both platforms. 

Final Thoughts

Finding out what your card is worth doesn’t have to be complicated — it just takes the right tools and a little attention to detail. By combining SportsCardsPro for quick estimates and 130 Point for real-time comps, you can get a clear, accurate view of your card’s market value — whether it’s a $5 rookie or a $500 numbered autograph. 

At Legacy Select, every pack includes real collectible cards — from rookies and parallels to numbered hits and autographs — giving you cards that actually hold value, not just filler.

👉 Shop now and see what you can pull today.