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Where you list a card matters as much as what condition it’s in. The four major US sports card auction houses charge wildly different fees, attract very different bidders, and reach very different price levels for identical cards. Here is the 2026 head-to-head comparison.
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Collectibles Multiverse Editorial
Collectibles research desk · Market data refreshed regularly

Where you list a card matters as much as what condition it’s in. The four major US sports card auction houses charge wildly different fees, attract very different bidders, and reach very different price levels for identical cards. Here is the 2026 head-to-head comparison.

The Big Four

Heritage Auctions

Best for: High-end vintage, anything above $5,000, museum-quality pieces.

Buyer’s premium: 25%. Seller’s commission: Negotiable; often 0% for premier consignments.

Reach: The largest serious-collector audience for vintage. Cards above $50,000 typically belong here.

Goldin (now part of eBay)

Best for: Mid-to-high modern, especially basketball, football, and post-2000 cards.

Buyer’s premium: 20%. Seller’s commission: Tiered.

Reach: Strong celebrity backing and social-media presence make this the destination for cards with cultural cachet.

PWCC Marketplace

Best for: Weekly auctions of $200–$15,000 cards.

Buyer’s premium: ~20%. Seller’s commission: Tiered.

Reach: Liquid, frequent, transparent. The “always-on” venue.

Memory Lane

Best for: High-end vintage with a strong baseball-card community lean.

Buyer’s premium: 22.5%. Seller’s commission: Negotiable.

Reach: Smaller than Heritage but with very serious vintage bidders.

Quick Compare

Venue Sweet spot Buyer’s premium
Heritage $5,000+ vintage 25%
Goldin $500–$50,000 modern 20%
PWCC $200–$15,000 anything ~20%
Memory Lane $1,000+ vintage baseball 22.5%

For Sellers: How To Choose

  1. Match the card to the venue’s audience. A vintage Mantle goes to Heritage; a modern PSA 10 Trafford Trout goes to Goldin or PWCC.
  2. Negotiate seller’s commission. Premier consignments often pay 0%; commodity cards pay 10–20%. Negotiate.
  3. Watch the calendar. Heritage’s premier catalog auctions in February and August attract the most attention.
  4. Mind the reserves. Reserve-not-met cards take a reputational hit. Set a private minimum, not a public reserve.

For Buyers: How To Get Value

The eBay Question

For cards under $500, eBay’s volume and standardized seller protection often beats auction-house economics. The break-even is roughly: under $500 → eBay BIN; $500–$5,000 → weekly auctions; above $5,000 → quarterly premier catalogs.

Hidden Costs

Cost Typical
Shipping to auction house $25–$100 insured
Photography (if required) Usually free
Insurance during auction Typically included
Payment processing Some withhold 1–2%
Return shipping if unsold Seller’s cost

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