Volver al Blog
Analisis|2026-04-09|9 min read

Disney Lorcana Card Prices: How Much Is Yours Worth? (2026)

A practical guide to figuring out what your Disney Lorcana cards are actually worth in 2026 — from Enchanted rares to Special Illustrations, with the real market prices that actually matter.

How Much Is Your Disney Lorcana Card Worth?

Disney Lorcana launched in August 2023 and immediately became one of the fastest-growing trading card games of the decade. Ravensburger's gamble on a Disney-branded TCG worked — retail sold out for months, secondary market prices on Enchanted rares shot past $500, and collectors who had never touched a card game suddenly cared about pull rates.

Two and a half years later, the market has matured. Most cards have found their price floor, hype has cooled on some early staples, and a handful of sets have become quiet sleepers. If you're staring at a pile of Lorcana cards and wondering what they're actually worth in 2026, this guide walks you through how to check prices properly — and what to look for before you sell, trade, or send them for grading.

The First Thing You Need to Know

Not every rare is valuable. Lorcana prints a lot of cards at each rarity tier, and most of them — even Super Rares and Legendaries — are worth under $3 raw. The money is concentrated in a small subset: Enchanted rares, the 1 / Set "Special Illustration" cards, promo variants that were only handed out at specific events, and a handful of early First Chapter Legendaries that became meta staples before being reprinted.

Before you check prices, identify what you actually have. Lorcana rarities, from most common to rarest:

  • Common (white rarity symbol)
  • Uncommon (silver)
  • Rare (gold)
  • Super Rare (blue foil symbol)
  • Legendary (purple foil symbol)
  • Enchanted (rainbow foil, alternate art — pull rate roughly 1 per case)
  • Special Illustrations and 1 / Set promos (numbered, extremely limited)

Anything Common through Rare is generally worth cents, even in foil. Super Rares and Legendaries are where the playable chase cards live, and prices vary wildly depending on whether they see tournament play. Enchanted rares are where almost all of the collector money sits.

How to Check a Lorcana Card Price in Under a Minute

Here's the workflow I use:

  1. Search the card name on tcgpricelookup.com/lorcana — type the exact card name, pick the set if there are multiple printings.
  2. Check the TCGPlayer market price — this is the moving average of recent sales on TCGPlayer, the biggest US marketplace for Lorcana singles.
  3. Check the eBay sold range — look at the last 30 days of actual completed sales, not the active listings. Active listings are what sellers hope to get; sold listings are what buyers actually paid.
  4. Check the condition — is it Near Mint? Any whitening on the back? A card with a scuff drops two condition tiers and loses 30-60% of value immediately.
  5. Identify the printing — foil vs non-foil, Enchanted vs regular art, promo stamp vs retail. Foils of the same card can trade for 2x to 10x non-foil depending on demand.

The gap between TCGPlayer market and eBay sold is your clue about liquidity. If they're within 10% of each other, the card is actively traded and the price is trustworthy. If TCGPlayer shows $40 and eBay sold shows $22, you've got an illiquid card and the "real" price is closer to the eBay number.

Real 2026 Price Ranges by Rarity

These are live market ranges we're seeing for Lorcana cards as of early 2026. Specific prices change weekly — use the live catalog for current numbers — but the ranges below are directionally accurate:

RarityRaw NM rangePSA 10 rangeNotes
Common / Uncommon$0.10 – $0.50Not worth gradingEven foils rarely clear $2
Rare$0.50 – $3Rarely gradedException: rotation-relevant staples
Super Rare$1 – $20$15 – $80Playable ones hold value better
Legendary$2 – $60$25 – $250Meta Legendaries spike with tournament results
Enchanted (chase)$40 – $800+$150 – $2,500+The entire collector market
1 / Set Special Illustration$500 – $5,000+$2,000 – $15,000+Auction-only territory

The top end of each tier is set by the most-demanded cards — everything else clusters closer to the bottom.

Cards to Actually Care About

Across the sets released through early 2026, these are the categories driving the most price action:

First Chapter (1TFC) Enchanted rares — the original Enchanted set from August 2023. Elsa - Spirit of Winter, Mickey Mouse - Brave Little Tailor, and Maleficent - Monstrous Dragon were the chase cards at launch and despite several months of print runs, still anchor the high end of the 1TFC Enchanted market. Expect $150-$500 raw Near Mint depending on which card and current demand.

Rise of the Floodborn (2ROF) Enchanteds — the second wave. Ursula - Deceiver of All became the most valuable Enchanted rare of this set, with PSA 10 copies crossing $1,000 at auction. The set also introduced alternate-art treatments that have held up well.

Into the Inklands (3ITI) promo variants — cold foils and event exclusives from this era are under-tracked and occasionally spike hard when someone posts a sale to Twitter.

Ursula's Return, Shimmering Skies, Azurite Sea — later sets have more Enchanted rares per case because Ravensburger adjusted print runs. That means more supply, lower ceilings on most chase cards, but the genuine showcase pulls (Illustration variants) still clear four figures.

Promo cards with event-only distribution — pre-release stamps, League promos, Disney store exclusives. These are the hardest to price because they trade infrequently. When they do trade, it's almost always on eBay auctions rather than TCGPlayer marketplace.

Condition Grades and Why They Matter So Much for Lorcana

Lorcana cards have a reputation for whitening on the back edges — the printing process at launch wasn't kind to sharp corners, and a huge number of "pack-fresh" cards came out with microscopic edge wear. This matters enormously for grading economics.

A Near Mint raw card at $80 might grade PSA 10 and be worth $300. Sounds great. But if the back edges have even minor whitening, it'll grade a 9, worth roughly $110 — barely more than the raw. Factor in grading fees and return shipping, and you've lost money sending it in.

The practical rule for 2026: only grade cards where the gap between PSA 9 and PSA 10 is large enough to cover a 9. For most Lorcana Legendaries that means raw prices need to be above $50 before grading makes economic sense. Below that, the downside (getting a 9) often equals the upside (getting a 10).

Specific things to check before grading:

  1. Back edges under a bright light — any white lines along the border kill a 10
  2. Print lines across the card face — Ravensburger had QA issues with early sets
  3. Surface scratches on the foil layer — extremely common, extremely punishing at grading
  4. Corner sharpness under magnification — even a tiny ding drops to 9 or 9.5

If you're looking at a card with any of those issues, it's a raw sell.

Foil vs Non-Foil: The 2026 Spread

One thing that surprised a lot of collectors coming from other TCGs: the foil premium on Lorcana is much smaller than it is on Magic or Pokemon. A non-foil Legendary at $20 often has a foil version worth $25-$35 — a 25-75% premium, not the 2x-5x you'd see on a Modern Masters MTG card or a Pokemon holo.

The exception is Enchanted rares, which are themselves alternate-foil treatments and don't have a non-foil equivalent. Their "foil premium" is baked into the rarity tier.

This means if you're sorting through bulk and wondering which foils to pull out: the marginal value of a Lorcana foil is usually small. Don't spend hours sleeving up Common foils hoping they're worth money. They're not.

Cards to Watch in 2026

A few categories are quietly appreciating that most people aren't tracking:

Competitive meta cards that rotated out — when Lorcana introduces set rotation for Core format, cards that were tournament staples become nostalgia items. Look at what happened to Magic Modern staples after Standard rotation. The same pattern applies.

Original Mickey and Elsa variants — Mickey Mouse and Elsa appear in multiple sets, but the First Chapter versions have cultural and collector weight that newer printings don't. The 1TFC Enchanted Elsa is Lorcana's equivalent of Charizard — priced on identity, not utility.

Short-print promos from early tournaments — cards handed out at the first Ravensburger-sanctioned events. Populations are tiny, demand grows as the game matures.

Card art alternates from comics and promotional tie-ins — Ravensburger has distributed Lorcana promos through magazines, comic book shops, and convention exclusives. These are scattered, under-cataloged, and routinely underpriced because sellers don't know what they have.

The Practical Valuation Checklist

Use this when you're figuring out what a card is worth:

  1. Identify the exact printing — set, rarity, foil state, promo stamp
  2. Look up the TCGPlayer market price
  3. Cross-check with the last 10 eBay sold listings (not active)
  4. Adjust for your card's condition (NM → LP → MP, each tier drops roughly 25-40%)
  5. If it's a candidate for grading, inspect the back edges, corners, and surface in direct light
  6. Decide: raw sell now, hold, or grade

That's it. This workflow turns "I have no idea what this is worth" into a real number in under two minutes per card.

Where the Market Goes From Here

Lorcana is past the launch bubble. The cards that held value through 2024-2025 have stabilized into the real long-term market. New sets will keep producing new chase cards, but the pace of price discovery is slowing down as the market matures.

If you pulled your cards between 2023 and early 2025, the hype-driven peaks are behind you for most singles — but the genuine chase cards (Enchanted rares, 1 / Set specials, event promos) have either held their value or continued to appreciate. The middle tier of "rare but not chase" is where most of the softness is.

If you're holding: the best collectibles on the list should be fine long-term. Iconic Disney characters don't suddenly stop being valuable.

If you're selling: check current prices, pick the right marketplace for the card class (TCGPlayer for singles under $100, eBay for anything above, auction houses for true grails), and ship fast before the next set drops.

If you're buying: second-wave sets from 2024 that got less coverage than First Chapter are quietly underpriced. Look there first.


Check live Lorcana card prices, market trends, and graded sales at tcgpricelookup.com/lorcana. We track every printing across every set — raw and graded.