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Tutorial|2026-04-09|7 min read

Disney Lorcana Rarity Tiers Explained (2026 Guide)

Common, Uncommon, Rare, Super Rare, Legendary, Enchanted — every Disney Lorcana rarity tier with what each symbol looks like, how pull rates work, and what the rarity actually means for card prices.

Disney Lorcana Rarity Tiers Explained

Disney Lorcana uses one of the cleanest rarity systems in modern trading card games. There are only six standard tiers plus one premium "Enchanted" rarity and a handful of event-exclusive promo variants. Once you know what to look for, identifying a Lorcana card's rarity takes about two seconds — the symbol in the bottom-right of the card tells you everything.

This guide walks through each Lorcana rarity tier, explains how to identify them visually, gives pull rates, and shows what each rarity means for secondary market pricing. If you're sorting a Lorcana collection or deciding which cards to pull for individual pricing, this is the reference.

How Lorcana Shows Rarity on the Card

Every Disney Lorcana card has a rarity symbol in the bottom-right corner of the card frame, just above the set number. The symbols are color-coded and shaped distinctly enough that you can identify them without reading any text:

  • Common — filled circle (white or grey)
  • Uncommon — filled triangle (silver)
  • Rare — filled pentagon (gold)
  • Super Rare — multi-pointed star (light blue holographic)
  • Legendary — diamond or crown (purple holographic)
  • Enchanted — rainbow foil treatment (entire card is alternate art)

The symbol and the color coding make rarity identification fast once you're familiar with them. Let's go through each tier.

Common

Symbol: Filled circle, typically grey or white Pull rate: Roughly 6 per booster pack Price range: $0.05–$0.50 per card

Commons are the bulk of a Lorcana booster. Most commons are worth only pennies individually and are priced as bulk when sold in quantity. Foil commons exist and trade at a slight premium (typically 2-3x non-foil), but even foil commons rarely exceed $2.

When to care: Almost never, except for a few specific cases where a common sees tournament play or becomes meta-relevant in competitive formats. In those cases, a common might briefly trade at $1-$3 before the next set brings reprint pressure.

Uncommon

Symbol: Filled triangle in silver Pull rate: Roughly 3 per booster pack Price range: $0.10–$1.50 per card

Uncommons are slightly rarer than commons and typically trade at double the common price. Foil uncommons can trade at $2-$5 for tournament-relevant cards. Most uncommons are still functionally bulk from a valuation perspective.

When to care: Tournament-staple uncommons occasionally spike to $5-$10 when a competitive deck uses multiple copies and the printing is limited. These opportunities pass quickly as reprints catch up.

Rare

Symbol: Filled pentagon in gold Pull rate: Roughly 1-2 per booster pack Price range: $0.50–$5 per card

Rares are the workhorses of competitive Lorcana decks. Most rares trade between $1 and $3 unless they become meta-relevant, in which case they can spike to $10-$20. Foil rares typically trade at 1.5-2x non-foil.

When to care: Any Lorcana rare that's seeing current tournament play is worth individual pricing. Otherwise they're low-priority.

Super Rare

Symbol: Multi-pointed star in light blue holographic Pull rate: Roughly 1 per 2-3 packs Price range: $1–$20 per card

Super Rare is the first tier where collector demand becomes a meaningful price driver. Chase Super Rares from popular sets can trade at $15-$40. Foil Super Rares add another premium on top.

When to care: Worth individual pricing across the board. Super Rares are where the first real "is this card worth something?" question gets asked in a Lorcana collection.

Legendary

Symbol: Crown or diamond in purple holographic Pull rate: Roughly 1 per booster box (around 1 per 24 packs) Price range: $2–$60 per card

Legendary is the highest pack-pullable rarity below Enchanted. These are the cards that drive most of the price volume in Lorcana's secondary market. Chase Legendaries from iconic Disney characters can trade at $40-$100 raw Near Mint. Meta-relevant Legendaries can trade even higher during peak tournament relevance.

When to care: Always. Every Legendary pulled is worth looking up individually.

Enchanted (Chase Rarity)

Symbol: No dedicated symbol — the entire card is an alternate-art rainbow foil treatment Pull rate: Roughly 1 per case (6 boxes / 144 packs) Price range: $40–$800+ per card

Enchanted rares are Lorcana's chase tier. They're full-art alternate versions of cards that also exist at lower rarities (typically Legendary or Super Rare), reprinted with premium rainbow foil treatment. The gameplay text is identical; only the art and foiling change.

Every Lorcana set has a small number of Enchanted rares. Chase Enchanteds from popular characters (Elsa, Mickey, Ursula, Maleficent) trade at $300-$600 raw Near Mint. The most iconic ones from First Chapter have crossed $1,500 in PSA 10.

When to care: Always. Enchanted rares are where the real Lorcana secondary market money lives.

For the complete list of Enchanted rares across all sets with current price ranges, see Disney Lorcana Enchanted Rares: Complete List.

Special Illustrations and 1 / Set Promos

Symbol: Varies — typically numbered at the bottom Pull rate: Not pack-pullable; event or promotional distribution only Price range: $500–$15,000+

Special Illustration variants and 1 / Set promos aren't standard rarity tiers — they're numbered event-exclusive releases that Ravensburger distributes through Worlds championships, conventions, and retailer programs. Populations are in the low hundreds or lower.

These aren't cards you'll pull from a pack. If you have one, it came from an event, a trade, or a purchase. Their value is set by auction dynamics rather than normal marketplace supply.

When to care: If you have one, yes — these are the top of the Lorcana market. For normal collection valuation, they're a separate category.

Foil vs Non-Foil Treatment

Most Lorcana rarity tiers (Common through Legendary) come in both non-foil and foil versions. The foil version has a holographic shimmer across the card art (not the entire card — just the illustration area) and a distinct visual look compared to non-foil.

Foil premiums in Lorcana are smaller than in most other TCGs:

  • Common / Uncommon foils: 2-3x non-foil price
  • Rare foils: 1.5-2x non-foil
  • Super Rare foils: 1.5-2x non-foil
  • Legendary foils: 1.3-1.8x non-foil

This is notably lower than Magic (where foil premiums can be 5x+) or Pokemon (where specific foil treatments command large premiums). The Lorcana foil premium is modest because the holographic treatment is consistent across cards and doesn't have the scarcity or visual distinction that drives bigger foil markets elsewhere.

Enchanted rares don't have a non-foil equivalent — they are themselves the "foil" treatment, just elevated to a new rarity tier with alternate art. There's no "Enchanted non-foil" category.

The Full Pull Rate Math

Putting the pull rates together into a per-booster-box expectation:

A Lorcana booster box has roughly 24 packs (plus or minus depending on product configuration). Per box, you can typically expect:

  • Commons: ~140 cards (most of your pack volume)
  • Uncommons: ~70 cards
  • Rares: ~25-30 cards
  • Super Rares: ~8-12 cards
  • Legendaries: ~1 card (maybe 2 if you're lucky)
  • Enchanted rares: Roughly 1 in every 6 boxes

Those numbers explain why Enchanted rares are so valuable relative to Legendaries despite both being visually premium: the ratio of Enchanted pulls to Legendary pulls is roughly 1:6 per case. That scarcity difference compounds into a 10-50x price difference.

Rarity-to-Price Translation

For a quick reference on how Lorcana rarity typically translates into raw Near Mint prices:

RarityNon-foil typicalFoil typicalChase ceiling
Common$0.05–$0.50$0.25–$2$3
Uncommon$0.10–$1.50$0.50–$3$8
Rare$0.50–$5$1–$8$25
Super Rare$1–$20$3–$30$60
Legendary$2–$60$5–$80$150
Enchanted$40–$800n/a$2,500+
Special Illustration$500–$15,000n/a$30,000+

Specific cards vary from these ranges based on tournament relevance, character popularity, and set dynamics. Check live prices at tcgpricelookup.com/lorcana.

Quick-Reference: What to Pull From Your Collection

If you have a Lorcana collection and want to efficiently find the cards worth individual pricing, here's the priority order:

  1. Enchanted rares — every single one needs to be identified and priced individually
  2. Legendary cards — all of them, from every set
  3. Super Rare foils from chase sets — these can sneak up on you if the character is popular
  4. Rare foils from current tournament-relevant cards — spot checks only if you play competitively
  5. Everything else — bulk

The 80/20 rule is even more extreme in Lorcana than in most TCGs. A handful of Enchanted rares will account for more than 80% of the value in a typical collection. Pull those first and the rest can be priced as bulk without losing meaningful value.


Track Disney Lorcana prices by rarity tier at tcgpricelookup.com/lorcana. Every set, every printing, non-foil and foil — with live TCGPlayer and eBay market comps.