There is a certain kind of tiredness that teachers bring home from work. You don’t just have to work sixty-hour weeks, finish lesson plans at the kitchen table, and grade papers between dinner and bedtime. It’s the weight of knowing that all of it, every bit of effort poured into a classroom full of other people’s children, still doesn’t add up to enough. Not when there are student loans growing slowly in the background, like something no one wants to think about for too long.
It wasn’t big news when an Ohio teacher started grading Pokémon cards on the side, checking for damage, guessing how much they were worth, and buying and selling them online. It most likely should have.
The story is simple on the surface. A teacher, like most teachers in this country, was deep in student loan debt when she found Pokémon cards. She quickly realized she had some skills that could be useful: an eye for detail, patience honed by years of grading students’ work, and a surprising amount of market knowledge gained in her spare time. It turns out that card grades reward the same skills that a good teacher already has. Pay attention. Sticking to it. Being able to tell the difference between something that looks fine and something that is fine.

Perhaps people who aren’t into the hobby don’t realize how important this market has become. A single Gold Star Pokémon card from fifteen years ago, the kind that might have been in a kid’s binder, can fetch prices that make adults gasp. The card’s condition—whether the corners are sharp, the surface is clean, and the edges are free of marks—can make the difference between $30 and $300. There is real money to be made by graders who can help collectors decide which cards should be sent to a professional for certification and which ones shouldn’t.
For this teacher, the side income wasn’t life-changing overnight. It doesn’t happen very often. But as it happened more often in the evenings and on the weekends, it started to make a difference on loans that seemed like they would last forever. It’s possible that what made her good wasn’t some special skill but the discipline she already used at her main job. One thing that teachers do for a living is evaluate students. All day long, they do it. Redirecting that skill toward a card market with actual monetary stakes isn’t a leap — it’s more of a natural extension.
What makes this feel like more than a curiosity is the broader pattern it sits inside. In Reddit threads and YouTube comments, adults are rediscovering the things they used to collect as kids and finding real value where they thought they would find nostalgia. Someone takes a binder from a parent’s closet and finds a Mew that is worth more than a month’s rent. Another person posts a video of themselves paying off their loans by selling things on eBay. It’s not a new market for Pokémon cards, but the way they’re linked to the student loan crisis is a unique and very 2020s story.
In American culture, teachers are in a strange place. Valued in speeches but not paid enough in real life. When you think about how much it cost to get licensed, credentialed, and into that classroom in the first place, the average teacher’s salary seems fair. The loans don’t care how many students got better at reading. They just keep adding up.
It’s kind of satisfying to think of a teacher who, when she’s not working, gives a different kind of grading—one that actually pays off—the same careful attention she gives to her students’ work. The system is already broken, so this is not a fix. But it’s a real person who’s getting ahead in one, and they’re doing it with a skill that most people wouldn’t think to turn into money.
It is hard not to notice that the cards she is using to pay off her loans are likely the same ones her students are trading at recess. On the other hand, that feels very much like what it’s like to be a teacher right now—somewhere between funny and sad.
