Manga collecting has exploded in popularity, and certain volumes — especially out-of-print titles, first editions, and complete sets — command strong prices. From Dragon Ball to Berserk to One Piece, our AI identifies your manga and estimates its current market value.
What do you want to value?

Most manga volumes are worth $3-$8 (roughly cover price), but out-of-print titles and first printings can be worth $30-$500+ per volume. Complete sets of popular series in good condition carry premiums over individual volumes. Certain titles have become expensive due to licensing changes, publisher closures, or simply going out of print: Berserk singles, Slam Dunk, 20th Century Boys (original Viz run), Vagabond singles, and Gantz are all examples of manga where individual volumes can be worth $30-$100+.
Understanding what drives the price of manga collections helps you get the most accurate valuation.
In-print (currently available): near cover price. Recently out of print: 1.5-3x cover. Long out of print: 3-50x cover. The key driver is availability — once a title goes out of print, prices rise as demand exceeds shrinking supply.
Most valuable out-of-print titles: Berserk singles ($15-$60/vol), Slam Dunk ($20-$80/vol), 20th Century Boys (Viz) ($30-$100/vol), Vagabond singles ($15-$50/vol), Gantz ($20-$100/vol), Battle Royale ($15-$40/vol). Popular in-print titles: One Piece, Naruto, Dragon Ball ($5-$10/vol).
Complete series sell for 10-20% premium over individual volume prices combined. A complete Berserk (40 vols) in good condition: $600-$2,000+. Complete Dragon Ball (42 vols): $200-$350. Buyers prefer complete sets over partial collections.
First printings of popular titles: modest premium (10-30%). Special editions (hardcover, deluxe, box sets): higher value than standard paperback. Japanese originals: niche collector market, generally less valuable than English except for rare editions.
Like New (spine uncracked, no yellowing): full value. Good (minor shelf wear): 80-90%. Fair (yellowed pages, worn covers): 50-70%. Poor (water damage, broken spine): 20-30%. Manga condition degrades with reading, so unread copies command premiums.
Get the most accurate valuation by following these tips when photographing your manga collections.
Check if your title is still in print — out-of-print manga is where the real value lies
Complete sets sell for more than individual volumes — sell as a set if possible
Note the condition honestly — spine condition and page yellowing are the main factors
Check if a new anime adaptation is coming — this can temporarily boost manga prices
The manga market has grown dramatically with the global anime boom. Manga sales in the US exceeded $1 billion annually. Out-of-print titles have seen sharp price increases as new fans discover series through anime adaptations and can't find physical copies. The market is cyclical — when a series gets a new anime adaptation, related manga prices spike. Omnibus and deluxe editions can reduce demand for original singles but don't always kill prices for collectors who prefer the original format.
Out-of-print singles: Berserk ($15-$60/vol, $600-$2K+ complete), Slam Dunk ($20-$80/vol), 20th Century Boys original Viz run ($30-$100/vol), Vagabond ($15-$50/vol), Gantz ($20-$100/vol). First printings of early Dragon Ball, Naruto, and One Piece volumes also carry modest premiums.
If you have complete sets of popular series in good condition: probably yes, especially if any titles are out of print. A collection of 200+ volumes could easily be worth $500-$2,000+ depending on titles. Check out-of-print status for your most popular series.
Complete sets sell faster and for a premium. Individual volumes only make sense for high-value out-of-print titles worth $30+. For common in-print manga, selling as lots or sets is more time-efficient and gets better overall returns.
eBay for individual valuable volumes and complete sets. Mercari for mid-range sales. r/mangaswap on Reddit for community sales. Facebook manga groups. Local used bookstores (pay 20-40% of value). Half Price Books as a last resort (pays very little).
For currently out-of-print titles: prices tend to stay elevated unless reprinted. For in-print titles: they'll stay near cover price. When titles get new printings or omnibus editions, original single prices may soften. Anime adaptations create temporary price spikes that can settle 20-30% after the hype.