Collectors often remember the moment when a player stops being a name that looks good in a binder and starts being a market signal. That change didn’t happen all at once for Josh Allen. It got stronger over time, which is how Buffalo usually does things: by being consistent, being strong, and refusing to give up.
The card market was wary of Allen when he was picked seventh overall in the 2018 draft. People were skeptical about his college completion rate, and his early rookie prices showed that. For a few thousand dollars, you could get a 2018 Panini National Treasures RPA that is in good shape. These days, those cards regularly sell for well over six figures. In competitive auctions, top-graded examples and numbered parallels come close to and sometimes go over $300,000. It’s hard to ignore that path.
Allen’s card market is interesting because it shows how the NFL quarterback landscape is changing as a whole. The market started to change around a new question: who will be the next big player? This was after Tom Brady’s historic Playoff Contenders Championship Ticket from 2000 sold for $3.1 million and Patrick Mahomes’ 2017 National Treasures Platinum RPA set the new record at $4.3 million. There is no doubt that Mahomes is the current king. But Allen has made himself look like the most trustworthy answer, and collectors have started to price that belief into wax.
One thing that makes Allen’s cards unique is that they bring in a certain kind of investor. His buyers seem to be more the kind of people who plan to stay in their homes for five years instead of flipping them after the Super Bowl. Even during market drops that hurt other quarterbacks more, his 2018 Panini Prizm Rookie Silver PSA 10 has kept its value. That level of stability is important in a hobby where prices can change a lot based on one game performance or injury report. It’s still not clear if Allen can fully close the value gap with Mahomes, but Allen’s market has gotten a lot better over the last few seasons.

How collectors think about Allen is also affected by how he looks as a player. He’s not built like most quarterbacks; his body can take a beating and keep running. Collectors don’t often get to see him lower his shoulder through a linebacker or throw a ball 70 yards from the hash. When players are that good at being durable and athletic, their careers tend to last longer. Long careers are what keep card values high over time. That was shown by Brady. This is now being shown by Mahomes.
Allen might have his real “card market moment” when he finally wins a Super Bowl. There’s a pattern in the history of this hobby: a championship acts as a confirmation event, putting cards whose prices were already going up into a new price range. Allen has been very close, and each time it seems to add support rather than doubt in the eyes of the competition. Collectors who are keeping an eye on his Playoff Contenders Rookie Ticket parallels and numbered National Treasures RPAs seem to bet on just that outcome.
People who collect things have learned that Josh Allen is more than just a great quarterback to collect. He’s more or less become a point of reference. When people talk about investing in a rookie quarterback like Jayden Daniels or whoever comes next, they almost always bring up Allen’s story. His sales didn’t go through the roof because of hype. What made it grow was results, season after season. That’s how the most durable card values are made.
That’s the thing about test scores. They don’t make themselves known. They become the standard against which everyone else is judged.
