Market Trends

Japanese Pokemon Card Prices: What's Hot in 2026

15 May 2026 by Jake · @mrmagikarp 10 min read
Pokemon card price trends

Every few months I put together a market snapshot based on prices I've actually seen in Japanese shops. Not eBay, not TCGPlayer, not last-sold data from six months ago. Real prices, from real shops, noted down on real visits.

Here's what I'm seeing on the ground right now.

Art Rares: Still Climbing

The Art Rare (AR) phenomenon shows no signs of slowing down. These full-illustration cards, introduced in the Scarlet & Violet era, have become the most-collected card type in Japanese shops. Prices on popular ARs from sets like Shiny Treasure (SV4a) and Crimson Haze have risen steadily since release.

Charizard ex SAR from SV4a is the bellwether. It's roughly doubled from release price across Tokyo shops, with Osaka shops consistently pricing 15-20% lower. The gap between cities is widening.

Mew ex SAR has held steady with a solid price floor. It's a safer hold than Charizard because demand is consistent without the speculative spikes.

Vintage: Base Set Plateau, Neo Rising

Japanese Base Set cards have plateaued after years of strong growth. A Near Mint holo Charizard (no rarity mark, Japanese version) has stabilised after years of growth. The speculation wave has passed and we're seeing genuine collector demand setting prices.

What IS rising is Neo series cards. Neo Genesis, Neo Discovery, Neo Revelation, and Neo Destiny were printed in smaller quantities for the Japanese market. Neo Genesis Lugia has seen strong appreciation in recent years. Typhlosion and Pichu from the same set have followed a similar trajectory.

My Sleeper Pick: e-Series Cards

The e-Series (Expedition, Aquapolis, Skyridge equivalents in Japanese) is undervalued. These cards have stunning artwork, genuine scarcity, and prices that haven't caught up to their Western equivalents. Japanese e-Series Crystal cards remain significantly cheaper than their English equivalents — often a third of the price or less.

Sealed Product: The Reprint Effect

Pokemon Company Japan has been more aggressive with reprints lately, and it's keeping sealed product prices in check. Recent sets are generally available at or near MSRP, which is great for collectors and terrible for speculators.

Older sealed product is a different story. Anything pre-2020 that's still sealed commands significant premiums. Sealed Tag Team GX All Stars and Shiny Star V boxes have appreciated significantly — both now sell for multiples of their original retail price.

What's Overpriced Right Now

Controversial opinion: modern graded cards at PSA 10 are overpriced in Japanese shops. The population numbers are high, the cards are modern prints with good quality control, and the premium for a PSA 10 over a raw Near Mint copy often exceeds 300%. Unless you're buying a genuinely rare card, you're paying for plastic, not scarcity.

I'd also flag English-language cards in Japanese shops as overpriced. Japanese shops price English cards higher than eBay market rates because they're novelties for local collectors. If you want English cards, buy them at home.

The Japanese Pokemon card market is maturing. Wild speculation is fading, genuine collector demand is setting prices, and knowledge of the local market gives you a real edge over casual buyers.

J

Jake · @mrmagikarp

UK collector based in Singapore. 500+ card shops visited across Japan over the past decade. Building Cardo Compass to help other collectors navigate Japan's incredible Pokemon card scene.

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