
The most expensive One Piece Card Game cards (2026)
From championship cards sold for tens of thousands of euros to the rare manga cards within reach of collectors, here is the very top of the One Piece Card Game. Two clearly distinct worlds, not to be confused.
The One Piece card market splits into two worlds. On one side, the tournament grails, all but unobtainable, that change hands for tens of thousands of euros. On the other, the top of the collector market (Cardmarket), made up of rare manga cards you can actually buy. We keep them apart to avoid misleading comparisons. Prices seen through 2026 and very volatile: these are ballpark figures, not firm quotes.
The tournament grails (tens of thousands of euros)
These cards almost never pass through the usual platforms. Serialized and handed to championship finalists, they exist in only a handful of copies worldwide. Their price is a matter of auctions and prestige.
| Card | Type | Price range |
|---|---|---|
| Roronoa Zoro (manga alt-art) | Reported sale record | up to ~$100,000 (single sale, to be confirmed) |
| Kaido (Championship, serialized) | Tournament trophy | ~$40,000 – 48,000 |
| Gol D. Roger (winner promo) | Serialized promo | ~$40,000+ |
| Monkey D. Luffy (Super Pre-Release gold) | Serialized gold | ~$15,000 – 35,000+ |
| Shanks (Treasure Cup, serialized gold) | Tournament prize | ~$5,000 – 10,000 |
At this level, the value rests on three things: a print run of a few dozen copies worldwide, the prestige of the competition, and very low serial numbers (the 001, 002...) that get fought over at auction.
The top of the collector market (Cardmarket, in euros)
Here are the most expensive cards you can actually buy in euros. The common thread: the manga treatment, which reproduces Eiichiro Oda's linework and consistently outperforms the classic versions.
| # | Card | Version | Price range (EUR) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Monkey D. Luffy (OP13-118) | Manga Red | ~€12,000 – 12,500 |
| 2 | Gol D. Roger (OP09-118) | Gold Secret Rare | ~€6,500 |
| 3 | Monkey D. Luffy Gear 5 (OP05-119) | Manga | ~€3,000 – 5,250 |
| 4 | Sabo (OP13-120) | Manga Red | ~€4,500 |
| 5 | Portgas D. Ace (OP13-119) | Manga Red | ~€3,500 – 8,500 |
| 6 | Roronoa Zoro (OP06-118) | Manga | ~€2,700 |
| 7 | Marshall D. Teach (OP09-093) | Manga | ~€1,400 |
| 8 | Shanks (OP01-120) | Manga | ~€800 – 1,200 |
| 9 | Koby (EB04-044) | Manga (recent) | ~€600 – 800 |
| 10 | Nami (OP01-016) | Manga | ~€500 – 900 |
Why these cards are worth so much
The manga treatment. Inserted at an extremely low rate in booster packs, it turns an ordinary card into a collector's piece. It's the main driver of the accessible high end of the market.
Tournament rarity. The serialized championship cards exist in only a few copies, which explains the gap between the €12,000 collector cards and the tens of thousands of euros of the grails.
Character popularity. Luffy, Zoro, Ace or Roger concentrate demand: at equal rarity, an iconic character commands a higher price.
Conclusion
The very high end of the One Piece Card Game reads at two speeds: the tournament grails, out of reach, and the rare manga cards of the collector market, ambitious but real. To understand what sets all these rarities apart, read our rarities guide. And remember: at these price levels, condition and grading can swing the value several times over.
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