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Welcome to the Vinyl Records hub

From first-pressing Beatles butcher covers to original Blue Note jazz pressings and modern audiophile reissues, vinyl is collecting’s most listenable category. Mono vs stereo, deep groove, gatefolds, matrix codes — every detail matters.

What collectors chase

How vinyl is graded

The Goldmine Standard dominates: Mint (M), Near Mint (NM/M-), Very Good Plus (VG+), Very Good (VG), Good (G), Fair, Poor. NM jacket + NM disc command exponentially more than VG/VG.

Where to dig

Tokyo (Disk Union, Face Records), London (Sister Ray, Sounds of the Universe), New York (Academy Records, A1 Records), Berlin (Hard Wax), Paris (Born Bad), and Discogs marketplace globally for international finds.

Featured items

Start here

New collector? Start here → · Vinyl glossary terms →

How we researched this

This piece on Vinyl Records draws on published auction house results, professional grading service population reports, dealer price lists, hobby trade publications, and historical sale records current to May 2026. Where price ranges are provided, they represent observed realized sales across multiple independent venues rather than a single asking price or speculative valuation.

Our editorial process involves cross-referencing realized auction prices against grading service population data and dealer price guides before publication. The collectibles market is illiquid, condition-sensitive, and subject to taste shifts; figures change continuously and should always be confirmed with current auction comparables before any transaction.

Key takeaways for collectors and sellers

Frequently asked questions

How current is the information on this page?

This page was last reviewed in May 2026. Realized prices fluctuate continuously; we recommend pulling the most recent auction comparables from at least two major venues before making any transaction decision.

Where does the underlying data come from?

Underlying data is sourced from published auction archives, professional grading service population reports, hobby trade publications, and dealer-published price lists. We do not republish proprietary subscription-only price guides.

Should I treat collectibles as an investment?

Collectibles are illiquid, condition-sensitive, and subject to taste cycles. Storage, insurance, authentication, and transaction costs are material. We do not provide investment advice; consult a qualified financial professional before allocating meaningful capital to any collectible category.

Related coverage on CollectiblesMultiverse

CollectiblesMultiverse maintains editorial independence from auction houses, dealers, and grading services. If you spot an inaccuracy, please use the contact link in the footer to report it.

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