Method and disclaimer

How to make money grading Pokémon cards

The Pokémon Investor method is simple: compare the raw card price, grading cost, downside grade values, PSA 10 upside, liquidity, and exact-printing risk before buying a card to grade.

Open today’s watchlistSearch a card

Pokémon card grading research chart from Pokémon Investor
Pokémon Investor compares raw market value against graded outcomes so you can decide whether a card deserves deeper inspection.

raw card → grade → resale math

Buying raw Pokémon cards to grade can work when the raw price is low enough, the condition is strong enough, the exact printing is verified, and the likely PSA grade still leaves room after fees. The site is built to help collectors move from a guess to a repeatable checklist.

No card is a guaranteed profit. The numbers are research signals, not financial advice, and they cannot predict the grade PSA will assign to the exact copy you buy.

1Find raw candidate

Search or scan the watchlist for cards where the current raw price is below the modeled buy zone.

2Verify exact printing

Match set, card number, rarity, foil type, stamp, language, and product image before trusting the value spread.

3Model grading cost

Add raw card price plus estimated PSA fee and shipping. This site uses a single-card grading cost of $34.98.

4Check downside

PSA 9 or PSA 8 should still make sense. If the card only works as a PSA 10, the setup is more speculative.

5Buy, watch, or pass

Use TCGplayer links, saved-card alerts, and recent comps to decide whether to act or wait.

What the opportunity score means

The top ranking is not simply “largest PSA 10 price.” A raw card can look exciting and still be a bad grading candidate if PSA 9 is weak, the listing price is too high, the PriceCharting match is questionable, or the card only works when it gems perfectly.

The score favors credible variant matches, meaningful PSA 9 or PSA 8 downside support, enough sales volume to suggest liquidity, and strong PSA 10 upside after grading cost. It penalizes weak matches, high variant risk, thin sales history, and lottery-style spreads where PSA 10 is many multiples above PSA 9.

What “all-in” means

All-in means the raw card price plus an estimated single-card PSA grading cost: $24.99 grading fee plus $9.99 shipping/return allowance, or $34.98 before the raw card itself. It does not use a cheaper bulk-order assumption, because many collectors are evaluating one card at a time.

How to use Pokémon Investor before grading

How marketplace comps fit into this

We use marketplace activity as a reality check, not just headline price guides. Before acting on any card, compare recent sold comps, active listings, seller photos, and the exact printing so the numbers match the card in front of you.

The simple rule is to never trust one number by itself. Check the exact card, compare recent sales, and only grade copies that have the centering, corners, edges, and surface needed to justify the risk.

Important risk disclaimer

Pokémon Investor is educational card research for collectors. It is not investment, legal, tax, accounting, or financial advice. Values change, liquidity can disappear, PSA grading outcomes are uncertain, fees change, sellers may mislabel cards, and buyer demand can move quickly. You are responsible for verifying every listing and deciding whether a purchase or grading submission fits your own risk tolerance.