Before you go
- Check exclusive lists weeks ahead — many require pre-orders or lottery
- Map the floor plan and prioritize must-visit booths
- Set a budget and stick to it (yes, really)
- Charge backup batteries, download the official app
- Print or save signed-up tickets and schedule
What to bring
- Comfortable shoes (you’ll walk 12+ miles per day)
- Water bottle and snacks
- Cash AND multiple cards — vendors sometimes have outages
- Plastic sleeves and toploaders for cards/comics
- Bubble mailer or hard case for fragile finds
- Backpack with reinforced straps
Day-of tactics
- Arrive 30+ min before doors for exclusive drops
- Hit your top 3 booths first, then explore
- Negotiate respectfully — many dealers will move 10-15% on Sunday
- Take photos of items you’re considering, return after lunch with a clearer head
- Save business cards and Instagram handles of dealers you like
Shipping your haul home
Many conventions have on-site UPS or FedEx desks. For valuable items, ship insured and signature-required. Never check valuable cards or comics in airline luggage.
Major 2026 conventions to know
- San Diego Comic-Con (July, USA)
- New York Comic Con (October, USA)
- Anime Expo (July, USA)
- Lucca Comics & Games (Oct/Nov, Italy)
- Japan Expo (July, France)
- Comiket (Aug & Dec, Japan)
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this comic books guide suitable for beginners?
Yes — this guide is written to be accessible to new collectors while remaining useful for intermediate enthusiasts. We layer foundational concepts with practical examples, expected price ranges, and authentication checkpoints so you can read once and reference repeatedly. If you are completely new, we recommend reading our beginner’s roadmap (/start-here/) alongside this material.
How current is the information in this comic books guide?
This guide reflects 2026 market conditions, grading standards, and authentication best practices. We periodically refresh content as auction records, grading-service criteria, and counterfeit techniques evolve. The guide’s last-updated timestamp shown by your browser corresponds to our most recent factual review.
What’s the most common mistake collectors make in comic books?
Buying before learning. The hobby rewards patience: collectors who spend the first 60-90 days reading, attending shows, watching auction results, and asking questions in established communities consistently outperform those who buy aggressively from day one. Education compounds; impulse purchases rarely do.
Where can I get items in comic books authenticated?
For most categories, established third-party authenticators include PSA, BGS, CGC, and SGC for cards; PCGS and NGC for coins; BBCE for sealed Pokémon and sports wax; AFA for toys; and recognized industry experts or auction-house specialists for watches, autographs, and fine collectibles. Independent verification typically costs $20-$200 and is well worth it for any item over $500. See our /authentication-hub/ for category-specific recommendations.
How do I sell comic books for the best price?
Match the venue to the value. Items under $100: eBay or Facebook collector groups. Items $100-$1,000: eBay with strong photography and detailed descriptions, or category-specific platforms (StockX, Discogs, Catawiki). Items over $1,000: established auction houses (Heritage, Goldin, Christie’s, Phillips) or vetted dealer consignment. Avoid pawn shops (typical offers: 20-40% of fair value) and unverified buyers offering instant cash.

