PSA grading is worth it when your card is worth at least $50-$100 raw, in genuinely mint condition, and the PSA 10 version sells for at least 2x the total cost of grading (card + fees + shipping). For lower-value cards, common cards, or anything in less than near-mint condition, PSA grading will typically cost you more than it adds in value. After the February 10, 2026 PSA price increase, the basic math has gotten harder — the cheapest Value Bulk tier is now $24.99 per card (requires $149+ Collectors Club membership), Regular service is $79.99, and Express is $149. Here’s exactly when PSA grading is worth the money in 2026, when it’s not, and how to do the math on any individual card before you submit.
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When PSA grading IS worth it
PSA grading is clearly worth it for vintage cards (pre-1980) regardless of grade. A 1952 Topps Mickey Mantle raw might sell for $5,000-$15,000 depending on condition; the same card graded PSA 6 sells for $30,000+, PSA 8 for $200,000+, and PSA 9 for over $1 million. Even a graded PSA 3 or PSA 4 with provenance dramatically out-sells raw because vintage collectors universally demand authentication. The grading fee ($25-$80 depending on tier) is essentially rounding error compared to the value lift. The same principle applies to vintage Pokemon (Base Set Charizard, first-edition holos), vintage basketball (1986-87 Fleer Jordan, 1996-97 Topps Chrome Kobe rookie), and any pre-2000 Topps Chrome rookies of Hall of Fame players.
PSA grading is also worth it for modern rookie cards of established stars when the raw card is worth $50+ and the card is genuinely centered, sharp-cornered, and clean-surfaced. Examples include modern Topps Chrome rookies of Mike Trout, Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani; Bowman Chrome 1st autograph cards of top prospects; Panini Prizm rookies of Patrick Mahomes, Ja’Morant, Trae Young; and select Pokemon ultra-rares like alternate art Charizards or chase Pokemon. The “2x rule” applies: if your raw card is worth $80 and the PSA 10 sells for at least $200, the grading math works after fees and shipping. The PSA 10 premium varies dramatically by card — some cards see 5-10x lift, others barely 1.5x — so research recent eBay sold listings before submitting.
Bulk submissions of modern card lots can also be worth it if you batch carefully. The Value Bulk tier at $24.99 per card (with Collectors Club membership) brings the per-card cost down enough that even moderate value lifts make economic sense. A submission of 20 cards through Value Bulk costs $499.80 in grading fees plus shipping — meaning each card needs to gain $30+ in value after grading to justify the cost. For modern Topps Chrome refractors, Bowman 1st parallels, or Panini Prizm color variations of name-brand players, this math often works at scale.
When PSA grading is NOT worth it
PSA grading is not worth it for common cards, low-value cards under $30 raw, or cards in less than near-mint condition. The math is simple: a $10 raw card needs to gain $25-$50 in graded value just to break even on grading fees, shipping, and supplies. Most common cards will not see anywhere near that lift even at PSA 10. Cards with visible whitening on the borders, off-centering worse than 60/40, surface scratches, soft corners, or any print defect will likely grade PSA 7 or lower — at which point the grading fee exceeds any value added. PSA reports that approximately 70% of submitted cards grade PSA 8 or 9, with PSA 10s being the rare exception that drives the premium. If your card looks like a 9 or 10 to the naked eye and has perfectly square corners, it might be worth grading. If you have any doubt, it’s probably not worth the fees.
PSA grading is also not worth it for cards where you can’t easily verify recent PSA 10 sales. The market for graded cards is liquid for popular players and sets, but illiquid for fringe players, obscure sets, or non-rookie veteran cards. Submitting a 2018 Topps Series 1 base card of a journeyman outfielder is going to cost you $25+ to grade and produce a slabbed card that might sell for $10-$15 if you can find a buyer. Check completed eBay sales for PSA-graded versions of your specific card before submitting — if there are no sales or sales prices are below your total cost basis, skip the grading.
The grading math: how to calculate worth-it for any card
The standard formula for whether to grade a card is: (Expected PSA 10 sale price × 0.85) – Total cost basis (raw card + grading fee + shipping in + shipping out + supplies) = Profit. The 0.85 factor accounts for eBay/PWCC selling fees, PayPal fees, and shipping costs to the buyer. For a $50 raw card you want to grade at Regular service ($79.99): total cost basis is roughly $50 + $79.99 + $20 shipping + $5 supplies = $154.99. The PSA 10 needs to sell for at least $182.34 ($154.99 ÷ 0.85) just to break even. For most modern cards, you want a 2-3x potential return to justify the time investment and risk of grading lower than expected. If the PSA 10 of your card sells for less than 2x your total cost basis, the math doesn’t work.
Pre-screening is the single biggest hack for grading economics. Services like CardGrade.io, GradingMetric, and CardGrading.app use AI to estimate the likely PSA grade of your card from photos before you submit. A free or low-cost pre-screen that identifies a card as a likely PSA 7 saves you $80+ in grading fees on a card that won’t earn back the cost. The major card grading subreddits and Facebook groups also offer crowdsourced pre-screening — post a clear photo with good lighting, and experienced graders will give you their grade estimate. The cost of pre-screening (free to $3 per card) is far less than the cost of grading the wrong cards.
For continuously updated PSA pricing, current turnaround times, and the latest grading tier requirements, PSA’s official grading services page is the authoritative source — they publish current pricing and processing time estimates for every tier. For independent PSA grading economics analysis and pre-screening tools, Card Ladder publishes detailed sold-price data for PSA-graded cards across thousands of sets, making it easy to research the PSA 10 premium for any specific card before submitting.
The honest summary on whether PSA grading is worth it: it depends entirely on the specific card and your total cost basis. PSA grading is essentially always worth it for vintage cards, valuable rookie cards of established stars, and any card where the raw value exceeds $100 and the card is genuinely near-mint or better. PSA grading is essentially never worth it for common cards, cards with visible flaws, low-value cards under $30 raw, or cards you can’t easily verify recent PSA 10 sales for. The 2026 PSA price increases have raised the bar for what makes economic sense — the cheapest tier is now $24.99 (with $149+ membership), Regular is $79.99, and you need to be confident the PSA 10 will sell for at least 2x your total cost basis. Pre-screen your cards before submitting, batch your submissions to spread fixed costs, and focus on cards where the math is obvious rather than marginal.
— Drew, Legion Report