Pokemon cards debuted in 1996 and were an astonishing success. Overnight, they took the world by storm as children became invested in collecting, trading, and playing with Pokemon cards. 

Almost 20 years later, the cards haven’t lost their edge, and people continue to trade them. However, they’re now much more expensive and rare than when they were released. Of course, not all Pokemon cards are equally valuable; some sell for higher prices than others. 

Here are the ten highest-priced Pokemon cards in circulation. 

10 Tamamushi University Magikarp Trophy Promo

Card released: 1998

Sold for: $66,1000

No one who followed the Pokemon TV show in the 1990s, which ran concurrently with the popular Pokemon cards, could have anticipated that Magikarp would become one of the top ten highest-priced Pokemon cards. 

On air, Magikarp was notoriously unhelpful in battle, especially out of its water habitat where it flopped, well, like a fish out of water. 

However, in 1998, a Japanese magazine ran a competition in the heyday of the Pokemon card craze. The competition featured various tests for school-aged students and ran through the magazine. Anyone who completed them could submit their results for grading. 

This competition was the Tamamushi University Hyper Test, lasting two days. When it ended, a select 1,000 students received invitations to join a Pokemon card tournament in Osaka. The winners received this Magikarp trophy card as a sign of their success. 

Curiously, Tamamushi’s promotional Magikarp can perform Dragon Rage, which isn’t your standard Magikarp attack. If you received the original card during the competition, you also received a downloadable version of the same enhanced Magikarp in video games. 

9 1999 Pokemon Japanese Promo Tropical Mega Battle Tropical Wind

Card Released: 1999

Sold for: $65,1000

Another of the ten highest-priced Pokemon cards isn’t of a Pokemon. Instead, it works a bit like a chance card in Monopoly. Players toss a coin, and if it comes up heads, your Pokemon party’s health improves as you dock two damage counters from each Pokemon. 

If you lost the coin toss and tossed tails, all your Pokemon fell asleep. This card ranks as one of the top 10 highest-priced Pokemon cards because only 12 were issued as part of the Tropical Mega Battle. 

The Tropical Mega Battle was the Pokemon card prelude to a world champion competition between 50 players from different countries. Players joined only after winning a local competition and receiving an invitation to participate in the tournament based in Honolulu, Hawaii. 

Because of the invite-only policy of the tournament, many of the cards released remain among the most exclusive Pokemon cards on the market. 

8 Umbreon Gold Star Holo 

Card released: 2005

Sold for: $70,000

Eevee and her many evolutions have always been fan favorites with Pokemon devotees. 

This hologram Umbreon card is no exception. The scarcity of cards in circulation also contributes to it being one of the ten highest-priced Pokemon cards. 

Like other Pokemon cards on this list, the Umbreon Gold Star Holo became available to players who participated in a tournament. Players earned this card by participating in the Pokemon Players’ Club’s fourth season. However, you had to do more than participate to earn it.

If you wanted an Umbreon Gold Star Holo card, you also had to score 70,000 points or higher throughout the competition. 

Possibly because of the effort needed to acquire the card or possibly because of the low number of cards distributed, this card isn’t often for sale. When it is, it sells for the kind of money that quickly makes it one of the highest-priced Pokemon cards doing the rounds. 

The condition of the card is also essential. Mint or near-mint condition means this Umbreon Gold Star Holo card will sell for more. 

7 1999 Super Secret Battle No. 1 Trainer

Card Released: 1999

Sold for: $90,000

This card is another of the highest-priced Pokemon cards that don’t feature a Pokemon, though it does have a picture of Mewtwo, a factor that adds to its value. Despite the image of a Pokemon, the Super Secret Battle No. 1 Trainer has nothing to do with Mewtwo

The Super Secret Battle No. 1. Trainer card gave players access to the final round of a Japanese tournament held in 1999. You received this card if you won your regional competition round and were deemed eligible to advance to the final. 

Finalists participated in the card’s titular Super Secret Battle. There was a lot of cloak and dagger surrounding the competition. Since you needed to win regionally to enter and only seven regions participated, the belief is that only seven copies of the card were issued. 

Six of the seven have shown up for sale in mint condition as per the grading system that judges the cards on:

  • Quality
  • Condition 
  • Value 

6 2006 Pokemon World Championships Promo No. 2 Trainer

Card Released: 2006

Sold for: $110,000

This card is considered one of three Pokemon cards of its kind. It is one of the three sold for an eye-watering $110,000 in February 2021. 

Like many of the ten highest-priced Pokemon cards, the 2006 Pokemon World Championships Promo No. 2 Trainer went to competition winners. 

Competitors interested in obtaining the card needed to do several things, including:

  • Score a set number of points 
  • Reach final divisional round 

Despite not being a card of a Pokemon, it prominently features Pikachu on a holographic background. The Pokemon holds a silver trophy and the text on the card says that anyone who received the card can compete in the 2007 competition. 

A combination of high card quality and limited availability make this one of the highest-priced Pokemon cards and one of the hardest to find and purchase.  

5 First Edition Neo Genesis Lugia 

Card Released: 2000

Sold for: $144,300

Lugia, the mythical bird Pokemon, first appeared on the Gameboy Pokemon Silver. He returned when technology shifted to Nintendo DS on Pokemon Soul Silver and has remained a fan favorite ever since. In both games, the bird is extraordinarily rare and challenging to catch. 

The Pokemon card is similarly difficult to find because many of its early printing runs were faulty. Later editions were revised. However, various expansions for the card game set it ran in continued to include unedited misprints of the Lugia card. 

Consequently, grading Neo Genesis First Edition Lugia is exceptionally challenging. To date, there are an estimated 41 cards in circulation without fault or error, but of those 41, only three qualify as being in mint condition. 

Still one of the highest-priced Pokemon cards, the New Genesis First Edition Lugia first took the internet by storm when a copy sold for $129,000. Since then, the price has only increased. 

In addition to the card’s scarcity, various other factors contributed to its steep price. One of these is that the psychic bird featured prominently in the second Pokemon movie alongside Ho-Oh

Another thing that affects the value of the Neo Genesis First Edition Lugia is that by the time of its release, the Pokemon card craze had subsided. There were still collectors, competitors, and players. Still, the fever-pitch enthusiasm of the mid-to-late nineties had diminished, and the cards didn’t sell with the intensity of previous decks. 

Finally, Neo Genesis cards still had a TCG license. Subsequent cards and merchandise reverted to Nintendo, and the TCG label added extra value for Pokemon card collectors.  

4 Kangaskhan Holo Family Event Trophy 

Card Released: 1998

Sold For: $150,000

In our Pokemon card days, Kangaskhan was never one of our favorites, but this might be why we never mastered the game. 

The Kangaskhan Holo Family Event Trophy is aptly named. Pokemon distributed this high-priced Pokemon card to contestant winners in a Japanese tournament. 

However, in keeping with the mum-and-joey design of Pokemon, entrants consisted of family teams. A child and parent had to play alongside each other to be eligible for the competition. 

This Pokemon card is as expensive as it is because of the handful of copies circulating. Only 11 have been graded. Consequently, it is one of the rarest trophy cards in circulation. 

One of the distinguishing features that helps drive the price of this particular Pokemon card up is that it features the original – and long since retired – Pocket Monsters Card Game logo on the back and front. 

This card was the original Japanese name for the game, but it didn’t catch on, so it was changed with time and replaced with the more familiar TCG logo. The atypical logo adds to the card’s rarity. 

Combined with the holographic background, the price of this Pokemon card quickly skyrocketed. If people continue collecting it, it will likely keep climbing in cost.   

3 Blastoise Wizards of the Coast Presentation Galaxy Star Holo

Card Released: 1998

Sold for: $360,000

Despite its 1998 issue date, many fans were unaware this Pokemon card existed until an auction in 2021. Supposedly, this Blastoise Presentation Galaxy card wasn’t intended to be sold. Instead, the makers intended to show retailers what the completed cards would eventually be like. 

The owner sold the Card at Heritage Auctions early in 2021. Because of the card’s sudden discovery, no one knows much about it. The current belief is that only two prints of the Blastoise Presentation Galaxy Star Holo Card exist. One has been accounted for at the auction, but the whereabouts of the other is undetermined. 

It’s one of the earliest North American Pokemon cards we know of, which explains why it’s one of the highest-priced Pokemon cards out there. It features Magic: The Gathering on the back, which is a testament to its vintage label, as this brand of Pokemon card didn’t last long. 

However, the manufacturer successfully sold the concept of an English-language version of the Pokemon card game. 

Because of the extreme rarity of this card and the fact that the other copy can’t be located, it wouldn’t be surprising if the price continued to climb and it rose the charts to take the place of the most expensive Pokemon card on offer. 

2 Charizard 1st Edition Shadowless Base Set

Card Released: 1999

Sold for: $369,000

Charizard, like Blastoise, is one of the original 150 Pokemon, and he crops up several times on this list. It was a popular card back when it was released, and twenty-odd years later, that’s still true. 

It’s also true that there are many permutations of Charizard in circulation, even of first edition Charizards. What makes this unique and one of the highest-priced Pokemon cards is Charzard’s lack of shadow. 

Curiously, the lack of shadow isn’t intentional. It’s a printing error. However, that only makes it more popular and more valuable with collectors. 

Previously the card sold for as much as $350,000, but that record broke in October 2020 when the price increased to $369,000. 

1 Illustrator CoroCoro Comics Promo Pikachu 

Card Released: 1998

Sold for: $375,000

Narrowly beating out the Shadowless Base Set Charizard is the Illustrator Card depicting lovable, electric Pikachu

In 1997, CoroCoro comics ran a promotional competition where artists submitted artistic Pokemon-inspired drawings. The winning submissions appeared in the magazine, and winners received 20 copies of a Pokemon card featuring their illustration and a single copy of the Pikachu Illustrator card

Twenty other competitors also received the card alongside a card acknowledging their artistic excellence. The card recognizes recipients as officially authorized Pokemon illustrators. Since its release in 1998, the card has consistently attracted a high price. 

Since 2017 the price of this Pokemon card has increased from $195,000 to $200,000 to the more recent $375,000. 

Since fewer than 20 cards exist, the price will likely keep climbing. Suppose we continue to unearth other rare, unseen cards like the Blastoise Presentation Galaxy card. In that case, the Pikachu Illustrator’s card may be in for a steep competition if it wants to hold the spot as the highest-priced Pokemon card. 

Conclusion 

Pokemon might have aged, but that hasn’t lessened demand for the cards. What has changed is the prices. Many cards you could get in packs from the corner store have soared to astronomical prices. 

So have many even rarer cards, especially those from competitions. A card’s scarcity, as well as its holograph background, also affects its value. It’s time to dust off those binders and go through your old Pokemon cards. You might be sitting on a fortune.

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