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Loading price intelligence...Check Chase, vaulted, convention exclusive, grail, and boxed Funko Pop prices with a free value scanner and calculator
Last updated June 13, 2026
Tip: Show the box front, Pop number, sticker, and window/corner condition for the strongest estimate
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Funko Pops have transformed from simple vinyl figures into one of the hottest collectibles markets in the world. Since their debut in 2010, Funko has produced thousands of different figures spanning pop culture franchises from Marvel and Star Wars to anime and video games. While most Pops retail for $10-15, rare variants can sell for hundreds or even thousands of dollars, which is why a quick value check before you buy, sell, or trade can save you from leaving real money on the table.
The Funko market is driven by scarcity, nostalgia, and passionate fandom. Chase variants packed at a 1:6 ratio, convention exclusives limited to a few hundred or thousand pieces, and vaulted figures no longer in production create natural supply constraints that drive prices upward. Grails like Holographic Darth Maul and Planet Arlia Vegeta have become legendary among collectors, while everyday store exclusives quietly appreciate once they leave shelves.
Our free Funko Pop value checker works like a value calculator built around a photo. Artificial intelligence identifies your figure instantly, reading the Pop number, line name, and any Chase or exclusive sticker, then searches real market data from eBay completed sales, collector marketplaces, and price databases. Instead of guessing from old price guide listings or inflated asking prices, you see what comparable Pops have actually sold for recently.
Whether you are cataloging a shelf of common figures, deciding if a Chase is worth listing individually, or evaluating a grail that needs authentication, accurate values are essential in today's dynamic market. The same figure can be worth $10 with a crushed box and several times that mint in a protector, so condition-aware estimates matter as much as identification. Start with one clear box-front photo and work through your collection one Pop at a time.
Photograph your Funko Pop showing the box front with the figure number, line name, and any special stickers (Chase, exclusive, etc.) clearly visible.
Our scanner recognizes the character, line, Pop number, and any special variants including Chase, exclusive, flocked, glow-in-the-dark, or metallic versions.
We search recent completed sales on eBay, collector marketplaces like Whatnot and Mercari, plus established price guide databases for comprehensive valuations.
Receive an instant value estimate with price ranges based on box condition. We show values for mint, near mint, and damaged box conditions.
Chase Pops are packed at a 1:6 rarity ratio and feature unique designs, poses, or finishes. A Chase can be worth 2-10x or more than the common version, making them instant collector targets.
SDCC, NYCC, ECCC, and other convention exclusives are produced in limited quantities. True convention pieces command higher prices than shared retailer exclusives of the same figure.
When Funko retires a figure from production, it becomes vaulted. As supply diminishes and demand remains, vaulted Pops typically appreciate in value over time.
Funko collectors are particular about box condition. Mint boxes with no dents, creases, or window damage command premium prices. Damaged boxes can reduce value by 30-50% or more.
Retailer exclusives from Hot Topic, Target, Walmart, GameStop, and others feature unique variants. Special finishes like flocked, glow-in-the-dark, or diamond add collector appeal.
Popular franchises like Marvel, Star Wars, Disney, anime, and DC tend to hold value well. Iconic characters and fan favorites within these lines are particularly desirable.
Pops signed by the actor, voice artist, or creator behind the character can sell for a premium, but only when the signature is authenticated by services like JSA, PSA/DNA, or Beckett. Unverified signatures often add little and can even make a Pop harder to sell.
Factory errors like missing paint, wrong heads, or misprinted boxes appeal to a niche of error collectors, and documented prototypes are genuinely scarce. Values vary widely, so error pieces should always be priced against actual sold examples rather than asking prices.
These are some of the most sought-after Funko Pop grails in the current market. Values shown are for mint condition figures with mint boxes.
Limited 2017 SDCC exclusive, vaulted
2012 SDCC exclusive, Star Wars grail
2014 NYCC exclusive, only 1000 made
Fundays exclusive, very low piece count
Funko Fundays exclusive, extremely rare
2013 SDCC exclusive, Game of Thrones
2013 SDCC exclusive, limited to 480
Early HBO exclusive, Game of Thrones
2013 SDCC exclusive, Disney grail
2010 SDCC exclusive from the first Pop wave
Values fluctuate based on market conditions and recent sales. Scan your Pops for current prices.
Pick the kind of Pop and its condition to see a typical resale range, then scan it for a live, comps-backed valuation of the exact figure.
Pick an option from each group to see a typical value range.
Editorial estimate from typical resale ranges — the scanner checks your exact Pop against live listings.
Most Funko Pops fall into a few broad price bands. This quick price guide shows what typically lands in each tier and what to verify before you trust an estimate, whether it comes from our value calculator or a sold-listing search.
| Tier | Typical range | Examples | What to check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common Pops | $5 - $20 | Recent mainline releases, widely stocked waves, and figures still available at retail. | Confirm there is no Chase or exclusive sticker, then consider selling in lots since shipping can eat the margin on single commons. |
| Exclusive & chase | $20 - $150+ | Chase variants, retailer exclusives from Hot Topic or GameStop, flocked, glow-in-the-dark, and metallic versions. | Sticker type matters most. Shared exclusives price below true convention pieces, and box condition moves the number quickly at this tier. |
| Vaulted grails | $150 - $5,000+ | Early SDCC and NYCC exclusives, low-run Freddy Funko figures, and long-vaulted fan favorites. | Authenticity first. Compare multiple sold comps, photograph the sticker and box from several angles, and be wary of deals that look too good. |
| Signed & graded | Varies widely | Autographed Pops with certificates of authenticity and professionally graded, encapsulated boxes. | The authentication is the value. Look for JSA, PSA/DNA, or Beckett certification on signatures and read the grade label carefully on slabbed pieces. |
Funko was founded in 1998 by Mike Becker in Snohomish, Washington, initially focusing on nostalgic bobbleheads. The company was acquired by Brian Mariotti in 2005, who transformed it into a pop culture powerhouse. The iconic Pop! Vinyl line launched in 2010 with figures based on DC Comics characters, setting the stage for a collecting phenomenon.
The Pop! design, with its distinctive oversized head, small body, and black button eyes, proved universally appealing. Funko quickly expanded into every corner of pop culture, securing licenses for Marvel, Star Wars, Disney, anime, video games, sports, and more. By the mid-2010s, Funko Pops had become ubiquitous in retail stores and a staple of fan conventions.
The collector market developed organically as fans sought rare variants. Chase figures, introduced with their 1:6 rarity ratio, created excitement at retail. Convention exclusives became must-have items, with lines forming outside booths at San Diego Comic-Con. The concept of vaulting figures added another layer of scarcity, turning retired Pops into collectible commodities.
Today, Funko has produced over 10,000 unique Pop figures with more announced weekly. The secondary market thrives on platforms like eBay, Mercari, and Whatnot. What started as simple vinyl figures has evolved into a global collecting community with dedicated price guides, trading groups, and passionate enthusiasts hunting for their next grail.
Invest in Pop protectors (soft or hard plastic cases) to keep boxes in mint condition. Store away from direct sunlight to prevent fading. Box condition significantly impacts resale value.
Check stores early when new releases arrive. Some collectors befriend store employees for restock notifications. Online retailers also sell Chases, though at premium prices.
Watch for counterfeits, especially on high-value grails. Check box print quality, figure paint details, and compare to verified authentic examples. Buy from reputable sellers with good feedback.
Follow Funko's official channels for vault announcements. When a popular figure is vaulted, prices often spike. This can be a selling opportunity or a last chance to buy at retail.
Funko values are quoted for the box as much as the figure inside it. Collectors describe boxes on a rough 10-point scale, and the difference between a mint box and a crushed one can be the difference between a strong sale and a clearance price. Use this guide to place your Pop before trusting any estimate.
| Grade | Condition | What it means | Value impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mint in box | 9.5-10/10 box | Sharp corners, flat panels, clear scratch-free window, vibrant print with no fading, and intact tabs. Often stored in a protector since purchase. | Full market value. These are the prices most guides and sold-comp searches quote by default. |
| Near mint | 8-9/10 box | Minor shelf wear such as a soft corner, light edge rubbing, or a small crease. Window is clean and the box displays well from the front. | Typically 10-25% below mint comps. Casual buyers rarely notice; serious collectors will. |
| Box damage | 5-7/10 box | Visible dents, crushed corners, creases across the print, window scratches or cracks, sticker tears, or sun fading. Box is intact but clearly worn. | Often 30-50% below mint comps. Always photograph and disclose the damage when listing. |
| Out of box | Loose figure | Figure displayed or stored without its original box. Condition of the vinyl itself, paint quality, and any fading now carry the valuation. | Often 50-70% below mint-in-box prices, though loose grails and Chase figures still find buyers. |
High-value Pops can also be professionally graded and encapsulated. A high grade on a verified grail typically strengthens the price, but grading fees rarely make sense for common figures.
Before you list a Pop or make an offer on one, run through these checks. They separate genuinely valuable figures from lookalikes and protect you from the fakes that circulate around popular grails.
The sticker on the box front is the single fastest value signal. Chase, SDCC, NYCC, ECCC, Funko Shop, and retailer stickers all carry different premiums, and a missing or peeled sticker usually drops the price toward the common version. Authentic stickers have crisp printing and consistent placement.
Counterfeits cluster around high-demand grails and Chases. Compare box print sharpness, font spacing, and color saturation against verified photos, and inspect the figure's paint application and vinyl quality. Suspiciously cheap listings for rare Pops are the most common red flag.
A Pop that is genuinely vaulted is no longer in production, which supports its price floor. Check whether the figure is still listed at major retailers or on Funko's site before assuming scarcity. Sellers sometimes describe in-print figures as vaulted to justify high asking prices.
Some exclusives state a piece count on the box, such as a limited edition of 480 or 1,000. Verifiable low piece counts typically support stronger prices than vague claims of rarity, so photograph the edition marking when you list or scan the Pop.
Flocked, glow-in-the-dark, metallic, diamond glitter, and black-light variants are distinct releases from the standard figure, often with their own Pop numbers or stickers. Identifying the exact variant prevents pricing a premium finish against common-version comps, or the reverse.
Funko Pop value calculator
Funko searches in Google are often asking for a calculator, not just a general guide. Use these checks to decide whether a Pop is a common shelf figure, a premium exclusive, or a grail that needs closer authentication before you set a price.
Most common Funko Pops sell close to retail or below retail when opened or box-damaged. Chase variants, vaulted figures, convention stickers, store exclusives, and mint boxes can push values much higher. A clear scan should show the box front, Pop number, sticker, and window condition.
Pop number and line
Identity match
The character name is not enough. The same character can have many releases, so the Pop number and series line help separate common figures from rare variants.
Sticker type
High impact
Chase, SDCC, NYCC, ECCC, retailer exclusive, and shared-exclusive stickers can change demand. True convention stickers usually price above shared retailer stickers.
Vaulted status
Demand signal
Vaulted Pops are no longer produced, but value still depends on franchise demand, condition, and recent sold comps rather than vaulted status alone.
Box condition
High impact
Collectors pay more for clean corners, flat panels, clear windows, and no fading. Dents, crushed corners, torn tabs, and window scratches can sharply reduce value.
No exclusive sticker, widely available, mint box
Common Pops often need bundled shipping or collection lots to sell efficiently.
Official Chase sticker and clear variant difference
The multiplier depends on franchise demand and whether recent sold comps show consistent buyer interest.
Retailer sticker, retired release, clean box
Vaulted exclusives can do well, but box damage and shared-sticker versions should be priced more conservatively.
Limited convention sticker, older release, verified authenticity
High-value Pops should be checked against multiple sold comps and authenticated before accepting a quick offer.
Ready to calculate a value? Start with a box-front photo, then compare the result against the condition notes.
Scan a Funko PopYes. This page includes a Funko Pop price trends and market tracker section built from aggregated PriceSnap scans, showing the median estimated value and typical range month by month. To track one specific Pop, scan it and save the result to your history to compare values over time.
Upload a photo of your Funko Pop and our AI will identify the figure, line, number, and any special variants. We search recent eBay sales, collector marketplaces, and price guides to give you an accurate market value based on condition and current demand.
Yes. PriceSnap works as a free Funko Pop value calculator: snap a photo of the box front and the tool identifies the Pop number, line, and sticker, then calculates an estimated price range from recent sold listings. You get values for mint, near mint, and damaged-box conditions without paying or creating an account.
Photograph the box front so the Pop number, series line, and any Chase or exclusive sticker are readable, then upload it to the scanner. The AI identifies the exact figure and variant and returns a value range based on recent market sales. Including the window and corners in the shot helps the condition-based estimate.
The most valuable Funko Pops are typically vaulted (retired) figures, convention exclusives (SDCC, NYCC, ECCC), Chase variants with 1:6 rarity, store exclusives, Freddy Funko figures, and early releases from popular franchises like Star Wars, Marvel, and Disney.
Chase variants have a distinctive "Chase" sticker on the box, usually in gold or silver. They feature different designs from the common version, such as alternate poses, glow-in-the-dark features, metallic finishes, or different expressions. Chase Pops are packed at a 1:6 ratio.
Absolutely. Box condition is crucial for Funko Pop values. A mint condition box can add 30-50% or more to the value. Collectors look for boxes without dents, creases, window damage, or fading. Many serious collectors only buy "mint in box" (MIB) figures.
A vaulted Pop is one that Funko has officially retired from production. Once vaulted, no more will be manufactured, making existing inventory increasingly scarce. Vaulted Pops often appreciate in value over time, especially for popular characters.
Grails are highly sought-after, rare Funko Pops that collectors dream of owning. Examples include Holographic Darth Maul, Planet Arlia Vegeta, Clockwork Orange Alex, and early convention exclusives. Grails typically sell for hundreds to thousands of dollars.
Convention exclusives from events like San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC), New York Comic-Con (NYCC), and Emerald City Comic Con (ECCC) are produced in limited quantities, making them more valuable. Shared exclusives sold at retailers are worth less than true convention pieces.
Store exclusives from retailers like Hot Topic, Target, Walmart, GameStop, and Entertainment Earth often have added value due to limited distribution. Some exclusives feature unique variants like flocked, glow-in-the-dark, or metallic finishes that increase desirability.
The Pop number is displayed on the front of the box, usually in the bottom corner. This number identifies the specific figure within its line. Our scanner reads this number automatically to ensure accurate identification and pricing.
For maximum value retention, keeping Pops in their original boxes is recommended. Most collectors prefer "mint in box" figures. If you choose to display out-of-box, keep the empty box stored safely. Some collectors buy duplicates to display one and keep one sealed.
eBay is the largest market and the best source of sold-price data, while Whatnot live auctions work well for collectors moving volume. Mercari, Facebook collector groups, and local comic shops are practical for common Pops where shipping and fees matter. High-value grails typically do best with auction exposure and authentication.
Compare the box print quality, fonts, sticker sharpness, and the figure's paint application against verified authentic photos. Counterfeits are most common among expensive grails and Chase variants, and a price far below recent sold comps is the biggest warning sign. Buying from reputable sellers with strong feedback is the safest approach.
Often, yes, but only when the autograph is authenticated by a service like JSA, PSA/DNA, or Beckett. A verified signature from the actor or creator tied to the character typically adds a meaningful premium. Unverified signatures usually add little and can make some collectors pass on the Pop entirely.
Want the full breakdown of what makes Pops valuable?
Read our complete Funko Pop Value GuideGuide
What makes Funko Pops valuable: vaulted status, chases, stickers, and condition.
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