Friday, December 2, 2011

How do you determine the value of baseball cards?

I recently found a box of baseball cards from the 70's in a parking lot. They don't appear to be any players that I've ever heard of. But then again, I'm not a sports fanatic at all, so I don't know if they're even worth anything. How would I determine their value?|||www.beckett.com.





You can subscribe to their database. Or as another suggested, you can buy the monthly magazine at any card shop or show.|||try looking some of them on ebay, its difficult. but usually the most effective|||well when i wana price something i go to ebay and see what the average price its going for online. but if they dont have it on ebay then go to a local hobby shop and ask them to see if they can determine what the price of it using there computer|||there are websites where you type in what card you have and they give you the price of how much it's worth|||put them up for sale....





nothing is worth more than you'll get for it when actually selling it.|||A catalog called Becketts. Has approx. worth of the cards.|||check the date and their stats in the back of the card, If its true and they are really from the seventies look at there stats person with the best stats should cost the most just like the person with the least should cost the least. But if you have someone in there named hank arron , (he broke babe ruths record back in 1974 buy hitting 715 carrer homeruns) then don't sell it hold on too it for a couple of years, then sell it if you don't get a lot of money for that card then it must be fake...|||Beckett's is definitely the best source for prices....for some of the older series of cards it will only list the star players, so if you can't find the selling price there, try ebay.

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