PriceSnap
Loading price intelligence...PriceSnap
Loading price intelligence...Camera Price Scanner
Use the camera to identify the item, pull market comps, and generate pricing guidance you can actually use for resale. The result includes comparable listings, confidence, and multiple pricing strategies.
Choose how to scan
A clear photo can capture labels, model details, materials, and condition clues that are easy to miss in a manual search.
Photo scan
Capture visible labels, marks, condition, and model signals.
Manual lookup
Use exact names, codes, sizes, and condition when you already know them.
Actionable result
See comps, value range, seller notes, and next steps in one flow.
Camera-first value lookup
The scanner performs best when the image includes the clues a buyer would use to verify the item. A single clear photo can often beat a vague search query.
Yes. Use a clear photo that shows the full item and the details that identify it, such as labels, model numbers, edition marks, size tags, serial plates, stickers, or condition issues.
Identifier visibility
Better matching
Labels, tags, stickers, hallmarks, and model numbers help separate lookalike items.
Full-item framing
Better category fit
Show the complete object first, then rescan closer details if the first result is uncertain.
Lighting and glare
Fewer misses
Even light helps the scanner read text, holographic finishes, and condition marks.
Condition proof
Pricing accuracy
Visible wear, stains, corner damage, cracked screens, or missing accessories should be shown honestly.
Full card, corners, set number, holo pattern
Scan one card at a time, especially for graded slabs or vintage cards.
Logo, stitching, hardware, date code, wear
Use manual lookup or extra photos when authenticity clues are not visible.
Model number, storage/spec label, condition
Exact model and configuration can matter more than the product family.
Box front, edition sticker, figure number, damage
Packaging condition often affects value as much as the item itself.
Open the scanner when the item has visible details worth capturing.
Start a photo scanShow the whole item, visible labels or hallmarks, and any features that prove condition or authenticity. Good light and less glare lead to better matches.
Yes. The scanner estimates value from the evidence available, then uses condition assumptions and comparable listings to keep the pricing grounded.