There is a time in every market cycle when something out of the ordinary causes things to change. In February, a Pikachu Illustrator card owned by Logan Paul sold at auction for $16.492 million. That was the moment for most people. It sold for more than any other trading card ever. It’s not the most expensive baseball card. These sports memorabilia are not the most expensive. This is without a doubt the most expensive trading card.
At that number, it’s hard not to stop. It’s shocking not because of itself, but because of what’s around it. About five years ago, Paul bought the same card for $5.275 million. Since then, its value has almost tripled. It’s not a lucky flip. That looks like the start of a pattern.
The Pikachu Illustrator is very rare. It is one of only 39 copies that were made in Japan in the late 1990s for a Pokémon drawing contest. Collectors kept calling it the “holy grail” of the hobby for years. Professional Sports Authenticator gave Paul’s copy an extra boost by giving it a perfect 10 grade, which is the highest level of card authentication. His was the only copy out of the 39 known to get that score. Just that one difference sets it apart from almost everything else on the market.
Ken Goldin, the auctioneer whose store handled the sale, said the card might never show up again in anyone’s life. When there is that much scarcity, things change in ways that are hard to model using normal financial logic. Prices don’t act the way textbooks say they should when supply is really fixed and demand keeps growing.

Card Ladder, a website that values collectible cards, says that trading card indexes that track Pokémon sales have had returns that were much higher than the S&P 500’s long-term average annual gain of ten to twelve percent during times like the pandemic boom and a new surge in 2025. This is not a fair comparison. The data from the stock market covers decades, but the data from Pokémon cards is much shorter and much more volatile. But the better performance in some windows is still something to keep in mind, especially since more buyers are starting to see these cards less as nostalgic items and more as assets.
Market research firm Circana says that between 2020 and 2025, spending on trading cards that aren’t sports related, like Pokémon, rose by 350%. Part of that was stimulus spending during the pandemic to look for other returns. Some of it was the attention of famous people, like Post Malone, Kevin O’Leary, and Steve Aoki, who made the hobby more well-known after it had been mostly hidden for 20 years. All of these things made collectors go back to binder books they hadn’t opened since middle school. Sometimes, what they found was valuable.
But the risks are still real. Goldin himself said that a card with a perfect score of 10 doesn’t mean much if the card below it is just as important. At the highest level, condition is very important. An unharmed copy of an important card could sell for a hundred times as much as a damaged copy of the same card. But condition alone won’t get you a card that no one really wants. The market likes things that are both rare and important, and it’s harder than it looks to get both right.
It’s possible that this category will grow up and become something that is more widely accepted over time. Indeed, Goldin has said that, but even he thinks that path is not certain. For now, it’s clear that a new type of buyer has entered the market. These buyers are wealthier, more strategic, and less emotional. They have started taking the best homes off the market. When someone with enough money to never sell has the only perfect copy of the rarest card in the world, it’s almost impossible to figure out the price.
It’s still not clear if the Pokémon market as a whole will follow the path of its rarest cards. A Pikachu Illustrator won’t be kept in a drawer by most collectors. However, the sale is more important than its headline amount. At that point, a childhood hobby turned into a place where big money and pop culture met, and it happened in a way that made it hard to write off as a one-time event.
