PSA Grading Scale Explained: Every Grade From 1-10 (2026)

Here’s the single most important concept in the entire baseball card hobby: the same card can be worth $50 ungraded and $4,500 in PSA 10. Not because the card itself is different, but because Professional Sports Authenticator put a tiny number on a plastic slab. The 1989 Upper Deck Ken Griffey Jr. is the textbook example — a $50 card raw, an $80 card in PSA 9, and a $4,500 card in PSA 10. The math seems insane until you understand the grading scale that drives it.

PSA grading is the engine that makes the modern card market work. Without it, every transaction would require trust between strangers about condition. With it, a buyer in Nebraska can confidently buy a $5,000 card from a seller in Florida sight-unseen because PSA’s grade tells them exactly what they’re getting. Here’s the complete breakdown of how PSA grading actually works.

PSA grading scale complete reference
The 1-10 scale, what each grade means, value multipliers, and how PSA compares to other grading services.
PSA grading scale: every grade explained
PSA uses a 1-10 scale with half-points from 1.5 to 8.5 (there is no PSA 9.5)
Grade
Designation
Centering Tol.
Description
10
Gem Mint
55/45
Virtually perfect. Sharp corners, flawless surface, perfect centering. Only 2-5% of modern submissions.
9
Mint
60/40
Nearly perfect with one minor flaw. Tiny print imperfection or very slight off-centering allowed.
8.5
NM-MT+
62/38
High-end PSA 8 with above-average characteristics. Half grade between 8 and 9.
8
NM-MT
65/35
Near Mint to Mint. Slightest fraying on 1-2 corners or minor printing defect.
7.5
NM+
68/32
High-end PSA 7. Half grade between 7 and 8.
7
Near Mint
70/30
Slight surface wear visible on close inspection. Minor corner fraying acceptable.
6.5
EX-MT+
75/25
Higher-end PSA 6. Half grade between 6 and 7.
6
EX-MT
80/20
Excellent-Mint. Visible surface wear or printing defect. Slight gloss loss.
5.5
EX+
82/18
Higher-end PSA 5. Half grade between 5 and 6.
5
Excellent
85/15
Minor corner rounding becomes evident. Light scratches may be visible.
4.5
VG-EX+
85/15
Higher-end PSA 4. Half grade between 4 and 5.
4
VG-EX
85/15
Slightly rounded corners. Noticeable surface wear. Light crease may be visible.
3.5
VG+
88/12
Higher-end PSA 3. Half grade between 3 and 4.
3
Very Good
90/10
Some corner rounding. Apparent surface wear and edge damage.
2.5
Good+
90/10
Higher-end PSA 2. Half grade between 2 and 3.
2
Good
90/10
Accelerated corner rounding. Several creases possible.
1.5
Fair
90/10
Extreme corner wear. Card must be fully intact (no missing pieces).
1
Poor
N/A
Heavy damage. Major creasing, missing pieces, or extreme discoloration acceptable.
The four criteria PSA evaluates
Each grade is determined by the lowest score across these four areas
Criterion
What graders look for
Centering
The single most common reason cards don’t grade PSA 10. Measured as a ratio comparing borders. PSA 10 requires 55/45 or better front, 75/25 or better back. PSA 9 requires 60/40 front. Vintage cards rarely have perfect centering due to manufacturing limitations.
Corners
Examined under magnification. Even microscopic fuzzing or rounding visible under a 10x loupe drops a card from PSA 10 to PSA 9. Touch-cap damage is the most common corner defect — handling alone can cause it.
Edges
Look for chipping, fraying, and rough factory cuts. Whitening on dark-bordered cards is a major grade killer (especially common on 1971 Topps and modern Topps Chrome black borders).
Surface
Print lines, scratches, indentations, stains, gloss wear. The hardest area to evaluate at home — surface flaws often only show under angled light. Holographic or chrome cards show scratches more easily.
Real-world value impact: 1989 UD Griffey Jr. by grade
The same card across grades shows the exponential value curve
Grade
Avg Value
vs Raw
Notes
PSA 10
$4,500
90x
The grade everyone wants. Roughly 4,000 PSA 10 copies exist.
PSA 9
$80
1.6x
Massive cliff from PSA 10. The 9-to-10 jump is the most extreme.
PSA 8
$40
0.8x
Often worth less than raw cards due to grading fee absorbed.
PSA 7
$30
0.6x
For most modern cards, not worth grading at this level.
Raw
$50
1x
Ungraded but in good condition. Baseline for comparison.
PSA 5-6
$15-25
0.3-0.5x
Authentication only. Modern cards lose money grading at this level.
Grading services compared
PSA vs SGC vs BGS vs CGC — what’s different about each
Service
Scale
Top Grade
Resale Value
Best for
PSA
1-10 (no 9.5)
Gem Mint 10
Highest
Sports cards. Industry gold standard. Most resale demand.
SGC
1-10 with 9.5
Pristine 10
High
Vintage. Strong reputation, distinctive black slab.
BGS
1-10 (with 9.5)
Black Label 10
Mid-High
Modern cards. Subgrades for centering/corners/edges/surface.
CGC
1-10 (with 9.5)
Pristine 10
Mid
Pokemon and TCG. Newer to sports cards. Lower demand.
PSA submission tiers and costs (2026)
Choose your tier based on the declared value of your card
Tier
Price/Card
Max Value
Notes
Value Bulk
$15
$200
Min 20 cards. Best for low-value cards. 65 business days.
Value
$25
$500
Standard tier for moderate-value cards. ~45 business days.
Regular
$75
$1,499
For higher-value cards. ~20 business days.
Express
$150
$2,499
~10 business days. For valuable modern rookies.
Super Express
$300
$4,999
~5 business days. For high-value vintage and modern.
Walk-Through
$600+
$9,999+
~3 business days. Premium service for record-chasers.
Premium 1
$1,000+
$24,999+
For ultra-high-value pieces. Same-day grading available.
Should you grade this card? Decision framework
Use this checklist before submitting any card
Question
Decision
Is the raw card worth $75+?
If no, it’s almost never worth grading. Submission fees + shipping erode any potential gain.
Could it grade PSA 9 or 10?
Inspect under magnification. PSA 8 or below usually doesn’t justify the cost on modern cards.
What’s the PSA 10 sold price?
Check eBay sold listings. Subtract grading fees + selling fees + shipping. Margin must justify the gamble.
Is it vintage?
Vintage gets more leeway. Even PSA 5-7 vintage cards can hold strong premiums.
Centering check?
If centering is worse than 60/40, PSA 10 is impossible. Don’t pay for a guaranteed PSA 9.
Population check?
Look up PSA 10 population for your specific card. If 10,000+ exist, premium will be modest.
Sentimental value?
If you’re keeping the card forever, grading for protection alone is reasonable regardless of math.
The reality of grading economics
The math is brutal: PSA charges $25-150 per card depending on tier, plus return shipping. For a card to be worth grading, the difference between PSA 10 and raw value must exceed $50-100 minimum to clear costs and selling fees. This is why grading concentrated on star rookies in pristine condition — the only path to clearing the math is the 50-90x multiplier on a PSA 10 of a card collectors actually want. For most cards, grading destroys value.
Sources: PSA Grading Standards, PSA Cert Pricing 2026, Card Ladder market data, eBay sold listings.

The 1-10 scale (and the half-points everyone forgets)

PSA uses a 1-to-10 grading scale where 10 represents a virtually perfect card and 1 represents heavy damage. Most casual fans know about whole-number grades (PSA 8, PSA 9, PSA 10), but PSA also offers half-points: 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5, 5.5, 6.5, 7.5, and 8.5. Critically, there is no PSA 9.5 — the jump from PSA 9 to PSA 10 is a single grade with no intermediate option, which is why that specific transition creates such a massive value cliff.

Half-grades exist to distinguish “high-end” examples within a grade band. A card that’s clearly better than typical PSA 8 examples but doesn’t quite meet PSA 9 standards gets graded 8.5. The half-points were introduced in 2008 and have become important in vintage card markets where small condition differences drive significant value differences.

The grade designations get more verbose as you go up: PSA 10 is “Gem Mint,” PSA 9 is “Mint,” PSA 8 is “Near Mint to Mint,” PSA 7 is “Near Mint,” and so on down to PSA 1 (Poor). Most collectors don’t bother with the designations once they understand the numbers — when you say “PSA 10” everyone in the hobby knows exactly what you mean.

The four criteria graders actually look at

Every PSA grade is determined by evaluating four areas: centering, corners, edges, and surface. The final grade reflects roughly the lowest score across all four — a card with perfect corners, edges, and surface but bad centering will get held back by the centering score.

Centering is the single most common reason cards don’t grade PSA 10. PSA measures it as a ratio comparing border thickness on opposite sides — a 55/45 ratio means one border is 55% larger than the other. PSA 10 requires 55/45 or better on the front and 75/25 or better on the back. PSA 9 requires 60/40 on the front. If you can see with the naked eye that your card is off-center, it cannot grade PSA 10. Vintage cards rarely achieve perfect centering due to manufacturing limitations of the era — even cards from the 1990s have widespread centering issues.

Corners get examined under magnification. PSA graders use 10x loupes to inspect each of the four corners on both sides of the card. Even microscopic fuzzing or rounding visible only under magnification will drop a card from PSA 10 to PSA 9. Touch-cap damage — small dings caused by a single careless touch — is the most common corner defect and the most heartbreaking, because it can happen in seconds and ruin a card that’s been protected for decades.

Edges are evaluated for chipping, fraying, and rough factory cuts. Whitening on dark-bordered cards is the major edge issue — 1971 Topps and modern Topps Chrome black-border cards are notoriously condition-sensitive because any edge wear immediately exposes the white cardboard underneath. A black-border card with even minor edge whitening can’t grade above PSA 8.

Surface covers everything else: print lines, scratches, indentations, stains, gloss wear, and surface texture issues. This is the hardest area to evaluate at home because surface flaws often only appear when you tilt the card under angled lighting. Holographic and chrome cards (Topps Chrome, Bowman Chrome) show surface scratches more easily than matte cards. Print lines — thin lines from the printing process — are common on certain manufacturers and years and can disqualify an otherwise pristine card from PSA 10.

Why the value cliff between PSA 9 and PSA 10 is so extreme

The chart above shows the 1989 UD Griffey across grades. PSA 10 sells for $4,500. PSA 9 sells for $80. That’s a 56x multiplier between adjacent grades — and it’s not unusual.

The cliff exists because PSA 10 represents real scarcity. PSA grades roughly 90% of modern card submissions at PSA 8 or higher, but only 2-5% of modern cards achieve PSA 10. The other 95-98% have some flaw — often visible only under magnification — that holds them back. Combined with collector demand for “the best possible version” of any card, the limited PSA 10 supply meets unlimited buyer interest, and prices reflect it.

Vintage cards have an even more extreme version of this dynamic. PSA 10 examples of pre-1980 cards are often genuinely rare — sometimes fewer than 10 PSA 10 copies exist of a given card across all submissions. A 1968 Topps Nolan Ryan rookie in PSA 10 sold for $300,000; the same card in PSA 9 sells for around $30,000. The 10x multiplier reflects how few perfect copies survive.

PSA vs SGC vs BGS vs CGC

PSA is the gold standard for sports cards but it’s not the only grading service. SGC (Sportscard Guaranty Corporation) has a strong reputation for vintage cards and uses a distinctive black slab. BGS (Beckett Grading Services) offers subgrades that break out centering, corners, edges, and surface separately, which appeals to collectors who want detailed condition data. CGC (Certified Guaranty Company) is newest to sports and is best known for Pokemon and TCG grading.

Here’s the practical reality: PSA grades sell for the highest premiums. A PSA 10 typically commands 10-30% more than the same card in SGC 10 or BGS 9.5 for sports cards specifically. The reason is collector preference — PSA has been the dominant brand for so long that buyer demand consistently favors PSA slabs, which drives resale prices up. If you’re submitting cards purely to maximize resale value, PSA is the right choice 95% of the time. SGC makes sense for vintage cards (especially T206 era) where their reputation is strongest. BGS makes sense for modern cards where you want subgrade documentation.

The brutal economics of grading

Here’s where new collectors get burned: grading isn’t free, and submission fees can quickly destroy any potential profit.

PSA’s tier structure runs from $15 per card (Value Bulk, requires minimum 20 cards) up to $1,000+ for premium tiers. For most collectors, the choice is between Value ($25/card, max declared value $500), Regular ($75/card, max $1,499), and Express ($150/card, max $2,499). The tier you choose is determined by what your card is worth — you can’t submit a $1,000 card on the $25 Value tier. PSA verifies declared values during grading and will charge the proper tier if you under-declare.

Add return shipping ($25-50 depending on insurance), and your total grading cost per card runs $50-200. For grading to make economic sense, the spread between raw price and PSA 10 price must clear that cost after selling fees (eBay takes 12-15%) and shipping when you sell. The math typically only works on cards where:

  • Raw value is at least $75
  • PSA 10 sale price is $300+
  • You’re confident the card grades 9 or 10

This is why grading is concentrated on star rookies in pristine condition. The only path to clearing the math is finding the 50-90x multiplier on a PSA 10 of a card collectors actually want. For most cards in most condition, grading destroys value rather than creating it.

How to estimate your grade before submitting

Before sending anything to PSA, do this: get a 10x jeweler’s loupe ($10-15 on Amazon) and inspect each card systematically. Check all four corners under magnification. Tilt the card under direct light to look for surface flaws. Measure border ratios with a ruler — anything worse than 60/40 on the front means PSA 10 is impossible.

If your card has visible corner damage, edge whitening, surface scratches, or off-center borders, the math probably doesn’t work. Submit only cards that look pristine to your eye and pristine under magnification. The cards that grade PSA 10 are the ones that look “too good to be true” — sharp like they were pulled from the pack yesterday.

The hobby’s open secret is that most submitted cards grade PSA 8 or 9 — close to perfect, but not perfect. Both grades are good, neither makes most submitters profit. The PSA 10 is the lottery ticket; everything else is just paperwork.


— Drew, Legion Report