Pokemon collection tracker

Use a Pokemon card database tracker for collections, duplicates, sets, and portfolio value.

Use CollectAIO as a Pokemon card database tracker when you need exact item pages, duplicate card tracking, set-gap checks, market values, sold comps, active asks, and collection organization in one workflow.

Tracker workflow

A Pokemon card database tracker only works when the item match is exact.

Start with the item page, then add the card or sealed product to a collection. That keeps set, number, variation, market evidence, and notes close enough to audit later.

Step 1

Start with exact Pokemon card identity

Search by Pokemon name, set, card number, promo stamp, sealed product name, grade, or retailer tag before adding anything to a collection.

Step 2

Separate collection value from sell value

Portfolio value, active listing floors, sold comps, and estimated payout are different reads. Use the one that matches the decision you are making.

Step 3

Mark duplicates before pricing a trade

Duplicate Pokemon cards can make a collection look larger than it is. Group duplicates, quantities, and condition notes before comparing offers.

Step 4

Use set pages for gaps and variants

A Pokemon set tracker should keep you close to the exact card page, because reverse holos, promos, graded copies, and sealed products can split into different markets.

What to track

Use the right tracker view for the job.

Database tracker

Find the exact card first

Use search and category pages as the Pokemon card database layer before tracking anything. Set, card number, promo stamp, sealed format, grade, and variant identity should be settled before value is trusted.

Collection tracker

Track what you own

Use collections for cards and sealed Pokemon products you actually hold, then separate long-term holds from cards you are preparing to sell or trade.

Portfolio tracker

Read value with evidence

Use CollectAIO Value with confidence labels, sample size, sold comps, and active asks so a portfolio total does not hide weak or ask-only markets.

Duplicate tracker

Clean up repeat copies

Track quantity and item identity before deciding which duplicates are trade bait, grading candidates, or cards to keep in a master set.

Set tracker

Find gaps by set and variant

Browse Pokemon set categories and item pages when you need exact card numbers, sealed formats, promo versions, or graded/raw distinctions.

FAQ

Pokemon tracker questions.

What should a Pokemon card database tracker include?

A useful Pokemon card database tracker should keep exact card identity, set, card number, variant, quantity, condition, current market value, sold comps, active asks, and notes together. Collection value is easier to trust when the tracker shows the evidence behind each item.

How do I track duplicate Pokemon cards?

Track duplicates as quantities on the exact card or as separate rows when condition, grade, language, or variant differs. That keeps a duplicate card tracker from mixing trade copies with higher-condition keepers.

Is a Pokemon portfolio tracker the same as a price guide?

No. A price guide shows market evidence for an item. A portfolio tracker applies those item values to what you own, including quantity, cost basis, confidence, and estimated payout context.

Can I use CollectAIO as a Pokemon set tracker?

Use CollectAIO category and item pages to find Pokemon set cards and variants, then add the cards you own to collections. Exact item matching matters because promos, reverse holos, graded cards, and sealed products can have separate values.