Best Cards to Invest In (2025)

Not all Pokemon cards are equal as investments. These picks combine strong fundamentals — popular Pokemon, limited supply, and growing demand — to give you the best chance of long-term appreciation.

1 Umbreon VMAX from Evolving Skies

Umbreon VMAX

$200 - $400

Evolving Skies

The modern benchmark. Evolving Skies is out of print and Umbreon is the most popular Eeveelution. Strong floor with high ceiling.

2 Charizard ex from Pokemon 151

Charizard ex

$80 - $200

Pokemon 151

Pokemon 151 is already going out of print. Charizard SAR from a nostalgia set is as safe an investment as modern cards get.

3 Lugia from Neo Genesis

Lugia

$100 - $500

Neo Genesis

Undervalued vintage holo. 1st Edition prices are a fraction of Base Set Charizard but supply is equally scarce. Room to grow.

4 Rayquaza VMAX from Evolving Skies

Rayquaza VMAX

$100 - $250

Evolving Skies

Second most valuable Evolving Skies card. Rayquaza is a perennially popular legendary. Benefits from the same out-of-print tailwinds as Umbreon.

5 Charizard from Evolutions

Charizard

$200 - $1,500

Evolutions

Modern nostalgia play that has already proven its appreciation potential. PSA 10 copies are increasingly scarce.

6 Pikachu from Vivid Voltage

Pikachu

$150 - $400

Vivid Voltage

Iconic "Chonkachu" rainbow rare. Meme appeal plus Pikachu popularity creates strong long-term demand.

7 Charizard from Base Set

Charizard

$150 - $400

Base Set

Unlimited holo is the most accessible entry to vintage Charizard. Supply only decreases as condition degrades over time.

8 Mew ex from Pokemon 151

Mew ex

$60 - $150

Pokemon 151

Gold Mew from 151 — currently undervalued relative to the Charizard SAR from the same set. Room to appreciate as 151 supply dries up.

9 Giratina V from Lost Origin

Giratina V

$60 - $150

Lost Origin

Alternate art from a set that is approaching out-of-print status. Ghost/Dragon typing and striking artwork drive collector demand.

10 Miraidon ex from Scarlet & Violet

Miraidon ex

$40 - $100

Scarlet & Violet

Flagship card of the SV era. As the base set goes out of print, this SAR should appreciate as the defining card of the generation.

Pokemon Card Investment Fundamentals

The three pillars of Pokemon card investing are: popular Pokemon (Charizard, Pikachu, Umbreon, Rayquaza), limited supply (out-of-print sets, low PSA 10 populations), and high rarity (alternate arts, SARs, 1st Editions). Cards that check all three boxes have historically outperformed. Avoid speculating on sealed product unless you have deep pockets — singles with confirmed condition are more predictable investments.

Timing Your Purchases

The best time to buy modern chase cards is 6-12 months after a set releases, when initial hype has faded and prices reach a natural floor. For vintage cards, prices dip during market corrections (typically every 2-3 years) but trend upward over decades. Use Pokex to track price trends and buy when you see cards at or below their recent lows. Patience is the most valuable tool in card investing.

Risks to Consider

Pokemon card investing is not risk-free. Reprints can tank modern card values overnight. Market sentiment shifts can cause 30-50% drawdowns. Grading costs eat into returns for mid-value cards. Counterfeits are a growing concern for vintage cards. Always buy graded for cards over $200 and verify authenticity through reputable sellers. Diversify across eras and Pokemon rather than going all-in on a single card.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1 Are Pokemon cards a good investment in 2025?

Pokemon is the highest-grossing media franchise in history, and the TCG market has grown steadily for 25 years. Chase cards from popular sets have outperformed many traditional investments over 5-10 year periods. However, only top-tier cards reliably appreciate — bulk and mid-tier cards tend to lose value.

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Q2 Should I invest in vintage or modern cards?

Both have merits. Vintage (Base Set through Neo era) has fixed supply and proven appreciation but high entry costs. Modern (SWSH/SV) is more accessible with strong appreciation potential but carries reprint risk. A balanced portfolio includes both.

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Q3 How long should I hold Pokemon cards as investments?

The best returns come from 3-5+ year holding periods. Short-term flipping is possible but unreliable. Vintage cards have shown consistent 10-20% annual appreciation over long periods. Modern cards need time for sets to go out of print before appreciation kicks in.

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Q4 Where should I store investment-grade Pokemon cards?

Graded cards in PSA/BGS cases should be stored in a cool, dry environment away from direct sunlight. Use a fireproof safe or safety deposit box for high-value cards. For raw cards pending grading, use penny sleeves inside rigid toploaders, stored upright in a card box.

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