Top-graded sealed products across all categories, ranked by our Composite Sealed Investment Score
Products entering the transition window — supply is actively tightening
How much of a set's value lives in the top 10 cards vs. the sealed box price.
Browse all sealed products by investment category
| ☆ | Product | Grade | Price | 30d | Supply | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading... | ||||||||
Track over 1,400 Pokémon TCG sealed products across ten product types — booster boxes, elite trainer boxes, collection boxes, tins, mini-tins, blister packs, bundles, Ultra Premium Collections, cases, and specialty items. Every product in the catalog is priced twice daily using eBay Browse API with a trimmed-mean methodology that filters scam listings, bundle deals, and statistical outliers, then cross-checked against the JustTCG sealed catalog. The result is a single source of truth for what sealed Pokémon product actually costs on the open market, updated while you sleep.
Every product receives a Composite Sealed Investment Score (CSIS) grade from A to F, computed across five dimensions: Value (is it cheap relative to its own history?), Momentum (is the price moving up or down?), Supply (is listing volume tightening or loosening?), Risk (how volatile is the price?), and Significance (does the underlying set have chase cards investors want?). Grade A products show the strongest combination of these signals; grade F products fail on most of them. Use the CSIS grade as a starting point, then drill into the individual dimensions to understand why a product scored the way it did.
The Set Heat Index (SHI) measures how concentrated a set's value is. SHI is the ratio of the combined top 10 card prices to the sealed box price. SHI above 3.0 — "Chase-Heavy" — means the set's value lives in a small number of pulls, so sealed boxes trade at a discount relative to the cards inside them. SHI below 1.5 — "Box-Favored" — usually signals sealed supply scarcity or weak chase cards, and the box itself is doing the heavy lifting. SHI is a density metric only; it does NOT account for pull rates, so a high SHI does not automatically mean "open the box."
Going Out of Print (OOP) is one of the biggest drivers of sealed appreciation. When The Pokémon Company stops reprinting a set, remaining supply is absorbed by collectors and the price curve typically inflects upward. Products flagged as "Going OOP" are entering this transition — historically, this is where the strongest multi-year returns in sealed Pokémon have come from.