Sold comps
Start with recent sales when the match quality is strong enough. Thin samples and mixed parallels should lower trust.

Sports cards
Compare exact single-card lanes using recent sold prices, active floors, grades, and CollectAIO confidence before you buy, sell, or hold.
Live examples
Images and market reads from CollectAIO
Single-card market examples
Use recent sold comps as the anchor, then check the exact grade or ungraded lane, active floor, and confidence before treating a price as market value.

A current star and high-volume modern rookie where the base card must stay separate from silver, logo, and other parallels.

A cornerstone modern football rookie where base-card identity and the exact PSA lane matter more than a broad player-name comp.

A current football rookie with enough recent sales to test whether a lower-priced, liquid single earns clicks and tracking actions.

An earlier Caitlin Clark card that lets collectors compare demand across two distinct products without blending their comps.

A recognizable quarterback rookie with a liquid price band that can produce a cleaner behavioral test than trophy cards alone.

A higher-value football single with deep recent evidence, useful for comparing buyer intent against lower-priced quarterback cards.

A current baseball rookie that broadens the cohort beyond football while retaining a clean base-card and grade definition.

A global soccer star and higher-value card that tests demand outside the North American football and baseball lanes.

A liquid modern football rookie near the cohort’s lower price band, suitable for measuring browsing and listing-click behavior.

An established quarterback rookie with recent sold depth and a mid-range price point for cohort comparison.

A lower-priced PSA 10 rookie that helps reveal whether accessible cards outperform trophy cards on downstream actions.

An iconic hockey rookie with a liquid ungraded market and separate PSA tiers that should never be blended into one comp.

A recognizable baseball rookie with a deep raw-card market, plus graded lanes whose scarcity changes the value dramatically.
Market read
A box, raw rookie card, graded card, and short-print parallel can all need different treatment. The tracker keeps the item page grounded in sold evidence and confidence.
Start with recent sales when the match quality is strong enough. Thin samples and mixed parallels should lower trust.
Use the active floor to understand replacement cost and seller expectations, especially for sealed wax and new releases.
For sealed products, retail MSRP is a useful second number because it shows how much market premium is already priced in.
Confidence keeps low-sample rookies and noisy listings from looking as reliable as high-volume sealed products.
Sports card entry points
The same CollectAIO item pages support release boards, category search, and individual card-market checks.
Track hobby boxes, mega boxes, cases, and notable rookie singles from the Topps Chrome Football lane.
Browse football, basketball, baseball, UFC, sealed wax, singles, and other sports-card lanes.
Compare a listing price against CollectAIO value when a box or card looks underpriced.
Open current release boards and watch high-demand drops across cards and collectibles.
FAQ
Yes. CollectAIO supports sealed wax item pages when product identity, listing filters, and market data are available.
Yes, but singles need tighter matching. Player, set, card number, parallel, autograph, grade, and condition can materially change the comp.
Retail MSRP helps separate normal resale pricing from a large premium on a recent sealed product.
No. Treat low confidence as a prompt to inspect the evidence before using the value as a cash or trade anchor.
Start with a product name, player, set, or card number. The item page will show the market evidence that is currently available.