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Whats a good rule of thumb for grading?
Hello all.
I have not ever submitted anything for grading. I also don't collect anything graded and have cracked out hundreds. Just personal preference. However, I see so much for sale on the various platforms that is graded. I have a friend who invited me into an SGC submission if I can come up with 10 cards. These would be cards to sell to fund other purchases. On what basis do you get some graded? Is it only if you think it's a blazer? What if it is a 52 high number that won't grade high but might help it sell? Or just a high-end card, but you know it would grade low. Etc. Thanks in advance for the responses, Chris |
The only thing that really matters is if you can sell the graded card for more than you could sell the raw card plus the grading fee. That is how I have always decided on what to grade.
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The following is an oversimplification:
When deciding to sell sports cards, you may want to get some or all of these cards graded. In the modern marketplace, it makes them more liquid (easier to sell) and often causes them to sell for more money than their raw (ungraded) counterparts. This difference in price is a key part in determining which cards to grade. If you're reasonably accurate with grading your own cards, you can help yourself by doing the following:
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Brad |
I usually say 3x the grading fee is the increased value I'm looking for to make it worthwhile.
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Thanks, everyone, for the input; it's been great.
I have found some to send, and I am more curious than anything. I will definitely write down my grade guesses and post them here, then reveal what they are when they come back. I just wish it was simplified, as I saw a pic of a nine and a seven 59' Aaron, and they were indistinguishable. All we need is what we always had: Mint Excellent Very Good Good Poor (authentic but beat to death) |
Good luck!
Hopefully you don't get the grader of death... I will observe that I do grade cards, but rarely for resale with a need for a specific grade, so my approach tends to be different. Almost all of my graded cards have been rare oddball pieces with only a very few ever having been graded, and where I needed them to round out my personal set registry collection. In a few cases, I do acquire some rare oddball pieces not for my own collection, but because I figure I can use them as trade bait for a similarly rare piece that I actually need, or else make some money off of them, assuming the right player collector comes along who is willing to pay handsomely for it. But usually the grade isn't that important, since usually the stuff that I pick up with this strategy is difficult to find in any condition. Whether I get a 3 or a 5 often doesn't make a huge difference in the price if there are only 3 others that have ever been graded, and they all graded at a 1. |
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