Every Pokémon card, vintage to modern.
Open any card for the artwork, the print runs that matter, what each variant does to the price, and the most recent eBay comps. 4,163 Pokémon cards indexed across 35 sets. Free to read.
7 sets
The set that started everything. Released by Wizards of the Coast in January 1999, Base Set introduced the West to the Pokémon Trading Card Game and produced four print runs that collectors still chase a quarter century later.





































































The first expansion. Jungle arrived six months after Base Set, broadened the playable Pokémon pool with non-starters like Scyther, Pinsir, and the Eeveelutions, and gave the secondary market one of its quietest sleepers: the No Symbol error print.































































The third Wizards print. Fossil shipped in October 1999 and centered the new Fighting type with prehistoric Pokémon: Aerodactyl, Kabutops, and Omastar. Dragonite and the legendary birds gave it the heat that still pulls collectors to sealed booster boxes.

























































A reprint set that combined the marquee holos from Base Set and Jungle into a single release. No 1st Edition, no Shadowless. Collectors treat the holos as the budget alternative to the Wizards originals, with raw and graded prices a fraction of the Base Set equivalents.




































































































The first themed set, built around Team Rocket's stolen and corrupted Pokémon. Introduced the Dark prefix and the first Secret Rare (Dark Raichu, #83), an unannounced bonus card pulled from the printer that became one of the most-chased vintage cards.




































































The first Gym set, themed around the Kanto Gym Leaders. Each marquee Pokémon is owned by its corresponding Gym Leader (Brock's Onix, Misty's Starmie, and so on), a naming convention that became a defining feature of the Wizards era.



























































































Companion to Gym Heroes, focused on the second half of the Kanto Gym Leaders plus Giovanni. Blaine's Charizard is the marquee holo and one of the most-collected variant Charizards in the Wizards era.































































































4 sets
The first Generation 2 set. Introduced the Johto starters and the Legendary Lugia, which became the marquee chase of the entire Neo era. The 1st Edition Lugia in PSA 10 is one of the most expensive non-Base holos in vintage Pokémon.

















































































Added Generation 2's new Eeveelutions, Espeon and Umbreon, both of which sit near the top of the Neo era chase list. Pichu also gets its first appearance, drawing baby-Pokémon collector interest.













![Unown [A] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/14.png)


















![Unown [A] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/33.png)













![Unown [D] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/47.png)
![Unown [F] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/48.png)
![Unown [M] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/49.png)
![Unown [N] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/50.png)
![Unown [U] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/51.png)















![Unown [E] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/67.png)
![Unown [I] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/68.png)
![Unown [O] Neo Discovery](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo2/69.png)


Introduced the Shining mechanic: a small handful of cards with alternate-color holo treatments and a new rarity above standard holo. Shining Magikarp and Shining Gyarados are the most-collected. Ho-Oh, Suicune, and Raikou are the Johto Legendary chases.






































![Unown [B] Neo Revelation](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo3/39.png)
![Unown [Y] Neo Revelation](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo3/40.png)

















![Unown [K] Neo Revelation](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo3/58.png)



The final Neo set. Closes out the Shining mechanic with Shining Charizard, one of the most iconic vintage chases. Also introduced the Light prefix as the inverse of Team Rocket's Dark prefix.

























![Unown [G] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/27.png)
![Unown [H] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/28.png)
![Unown [W] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/29.png)
![Unown [X] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/30.png)


























![Unown [C] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/57.png)
![Unown [P] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/58.png)
![Unown [Q] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/59.png)
![Unown [Z] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/60.png)

























![Unown [L] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/86.png)
![Unown [S] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/87.png)
![Unown [T] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/88.png)
![Unown [V] Neo Destiny](https://images.pokemontcg.io/neo4/89.png)










4 sets
A best-of reprint set drawing from Base, Jungle, Fossil, and Team Rocket. Introduced the Reverse Holo treatment to the Wizards-era market, which became a permanent fixture in every TCG set that followed. Reverse Holo Charizard from this set is a meaningful collector pull on its own.



































































































The first e-Card set. Introduced cards with a dot-code strip on the bottom that could be scanned with the Nintendo e-Reader peripheral for bonus minigames and effects. Expedition holos are quietly collectible and frequently undervalued relative to Neo-era equivalents.








































































































































Introduced the Crystal Type mechanic: rare alternate-art holos with a colorless rainbow holofoil pattern. Crystal Charizard and Crystal Lugia from this set are among the most striking vintage-era cards and command meaningful premiums in graded condition.
























































































































































The final Wizards of the Coast set before the license transferred to Nintendo. Continued the Crystal Type series and produced some of the most-respected art in vintage Pokémon. Crystal Charizard from Skyridge is a marquee Wizards-era chase.




























































































































































1 sets
A modern reprint set celebrating the 20th anniversary of the franchise. Reproduces the original Base Set artwork in modern card frames. The Charizard from Evolutions has become its own collector phenomenon, with PSA 10 prices that punch far above what a 2016 set would normally command.















































































![ナッシー[Exeggutor] XY Evolutions](https://images.pokemontcg.io/xy12/109.png)



1 sets
A special expansion built around shiny Pokémon variants in a dedicated Shiny Vault subset. Charizard-GX from Hidden Fates is one of the most-pulled modern chase cards and remains an icon of the Sun & Moon era.




















































2 sets
The 25th anniversary set. A small 25-card celebration release with a parallel Classic Collection subset that reprints iconic vintage cards. Celebrations product was one of the most heavily pulled-and-flipped releases of 2021 because of the Charizard Classic Collection.























A subset of Celebrations that reprinted iconic cards from previous Pokémon TCG history in modern card frames with a special anniversary stamp. The reprinted Base Set Charizard is the marquee chase. Each Classic Collection card carries the 25th anniversary holographic stamp on the artwork.






















9 sets
The base set of the Sword & Shield era, launched alongside the Galar-region games. Introduced the V mechanic, replacing the GX mechanic of the Sun & Moon era. Zacian V is the marquee chase and remains one of the more-collected V cards of the era.













































































































































































The fourth Sword & Shield set. Famous for the Rainbow Rare Pikachu VMAX, one of the most-iconic modern Pokémon cards. The Charizard non-holo Rare from this set surprisingly outperforms the headline holos in raw market.






































































































































































The most collected Sword & Shield set by a wide margin. Introduced the alternate-art VMAX treatment, with Umbreon VMAX Alternate Art (#215) becoming the marquee chase of the entire modern era. Sealed Evolving Skies boxes have appreciated more than almost any modern Pokémon sealed product.

































































































































































































Introduced the VSTAR mechanic alongside V cards. The Charizard VSTAR is the marquee chase, and the Trainer Gallery subset added a parallel pull universe of alternate-art cards. Brilliant Stars was a heavily-opened set during the 2022 collector boom.























































































































































Introduced the Radiant rarity, a new shiny-treatment tier. Built around Pokémon Legends: Arceus content (Hisuian variants and Origin Forme legendaries). Radiant Charizard from this set has become a quiet sleeper in the secondary market.







































































































































































Centered on the Lost Zone mechanic and the Distortion World. Giratina VSTAR is the marquee competitive and collector card. The Trainer Gallery subset continues, with Rayquaza alt-art a notable chase.

















































































































































































The final main Sword & Shield set. Lugia VSTAR became one of the more-collected modern Lugias and a tournament-relevant card. The set closed out the Trainer Gallery and Radiant subsets of the era.

















































































































































































The capstone of the Sword & Shield era. A special set sold only as Elite Trainer Box and tin product, never in standard booster packs. Introduced the Galarian Gallery subset with alternate-art treatments that became some of the most-collected modern cards.



























































































































A 70-card alternate-art subset within Crown Zenith. Each card carries the Galarian Gallery treatment and is numbered GG01 through GG70. The subset contains some of the most heavily-collected modern alt arts.




























































4 sets
The base set of the Scarlet & Violet era. Introduced the ex mechanic (replacing V/VSTAR) and the Special Illustration alternate-art rarity. The Pikachu Special Illustration Rare from this set became the visual face of the new era.















































































































































































































The third Scarlet & Violet set. Charizard ex Special Illustration Rare from this set was one of the highest-velocity modern releases in years, with PSA 10 prices clearing four figures within weeks of release.


















































































































































































































A special set reprinting the original 151 Kanto Pokémon in modern Scarlet & Violet card frames. The most heavily-pulled modern Pokémon set in recent years, with Charizard ex Special Illustration Rare leading collector demand. Sealed 151 booster boxes have appreciated meaningfully since release.

























































































































































































A special Eeveelution-focused set. Built around the Eevee evolution family with new ex versions and Special Illustration Rares. Sealed Prismatic Evolutions product saw extreme demand at launch and remains one of the more sought-after modern boxes.



























































































































3 sets
Introduced the Mega ex mechanic to the modern TCG. Brings back Mega Evolution as a card type for the first time since the XY era. Mega Lucario and Mega Charizard lead collector demand from the launch set.
























































































































































The second set in the Mega Evolution era. Ghost-themed with Mega Gengar as the marquee. The Special Illustration Rares from this set have set quick collector reaction at launch.














































































































A major Mega Evolution set built around the strongest competitive and collector picks of the era. Mega Rayquaza ex Special Illustration is one of the most-talked-about modern chases.
4,163 Pokémon cards indexed so far.
The full Wizards-era catalog, plus the most-collected modern sets including Evolutions, Hidden Fates, Crown Zenith, 151, Prismatic Evolutions, and the Mega Evolution releases. Remaining Sword & Shield and Scarlet & Violet sets, the EX series, and the Diamond & Pearl through Black & White eras are next. The Binder app already covers every English set.