Last updated: March 2026

How Much Are Funko Pops Worth?

Check current market values, learn what affects pricing, and get tips for buying and selling.

← All Funko Pops valuations

What do you want to value?

Valuable Funko Pops Price Guide

Current market values based on recent sales data and market trends.

ItemConditionPrice Range
Blue Metallic Batman (SDCC 2010)Mint Box$10,000 - $15,000+
Holographic Darth Maul (SDCC 2012)Mint Box$4,000 - $6,000
Planet Arlia Vegeta (2014)Mint Box$2,500 - $4,000
Headless Ned Stark (SDCC 2013)Mint Box$1,500 - $2,500
Alex DeLarge (2012, Vaulted)Mint Box$800 - $1,200
Flocked Tony the Tiger (Funko Shop)Mint Box$400 - $700
Common Chase Variant (Recent Release)Mint Box$25 - $60
Standard Common Pop (In Production)Mint Box$8 - $15
Vaulted Common Pop (2-5 Years Old)Mint Box$15 - $50
Convention Exclusive (SDCC, NYCC, ECCC)Mint Box$30 - $150

What Determines Valuable Funko Pops Value

Valuable Funko Pops valuation guide

Funko Pop vinyl figures have become one of the most popular collectibles of the 2020s, with over 1 billion figures produced across thousands of licenses. While most Funko Pops retail for $10-$15 and hold modest resale value, rare vaulted figures, convention exclusives, and limited chase variants can be worth hundreds or thousands of dollars. The most valuable Funko Pop. The Metallic Blue Batman SDCC 2010 exclusive. Has sold for over $15,000. The Funko market is driven by scarcity (production numbers, vault status), franchise popularity (Star Wars, Marvel, Disney, and anime lead), and condition (box condition is critical since most collectors display Pops in-box). The Pop Price Guide (PPG) and Funko app are essential tools for tracking values.

Funko Pop values depend on production quantity (fewer pieces = higher value, with pieces under 1,000 being most valuable), vault status (vaulted Pops can no longer be produced, creating fixed supply), convention exclusivity (SDCC and NYCC exclusives carry the highest premiums), chase variant status (1-in-6 metallic, glow, or flocked variants), franchise and character popularity (Marvel, Star Wars, Disney, and trending anime command top dollar), and box condition (a crushed or damaged box can reduce value by 40-60% since most collectors display in-box). Funko provides piece counts on stickers for limited editions, and the Pop Price Guide database tracks market values across thousands of figures.

Buying & Selling Tips

Buying

1.

Use the Funko app or Pop Price Guide (PPG) to check values before buying. Many sellers price above market.

2.

Inspect box condition carefully. Window scratches, dents, and creases significantly impact value for in-box collectors.

3.

Convention exclusives shared with retailers (Hot Topic, Target) are worth less than true convention-only pieces.

4.

Chase variants have a distinctive sticker and usually a metallic, glow-in-the-dark, or flocked variant. Verify the sticker is authentic.

5.

Buy vaulted Pops from franchises with upcoming movies or shows. Values typically spike around release dates.

Selling

1.

Ship in Pop protectors (hard plastic cases). Damaged-in-transit boxes lead to returns and negative feedback.

2.

Photograph all four sides of the box plus the figure through the window for complete buyer confidence.

3.

Sell rare Pops ($100+) on eBay for widest audience. For commons and low-value vaulted, sell in lots on Mercari or Facebook groups.

4.

Include the original sticker (convention, chase, exclusive). Sticker-swapped or sticker-less Pops sell for significantly less.

5.

List during peak franchise hype. A new Marvel movie can spike related Pop values 50-200% temporarily.

Valuable Funko Pops FAQ

What does 'vaulted' mean for Funko Pops?

When Funko 'vaults' a Pop, it means they will no longer produce that specific figure. The existing supply becomes fixed, and if demand exceeds supply, prices rise. Funko vaults figures regularly as new designs are released. You can check vault status on the Funko app or Pop Price Guide. Not all vaulted Pops become valuable. Only those with strong character demand and low existing supply appreciate significantly.

How do I know if my Funko Pop is rare?

Check for: limited edition stickers (piece count like 'LE 480' or 'LE 1000'), convention exclusive stickers (SDCC, NYCC, ECCC), chase stickers (1-in-6 variant), Funko Shop exclusive stickers, or retailer-specific exclusives (Target, Hot Topic, Walmart). Then cross-reference the Pop Price Guide for current market value. Age and vault status also contribute. A common Pop from 2012 may be valuable simply because few survive in good box condition.

Should I keep Funko Pops in the box?

For collectible value, yes. In-box Pops are worth 30-60% more than out-of-box. Most serious collectors display Pops in-box or in protective cases. However, if you bought a common Pop to enjoy on your desk, taking it out is perfectly fine since the resale value is minimal anyway. For valuable Pops ($50+), always keep them in-box with a hard protector case.

Are Funko Pops a good investment?

Most Funko Pops are not good investments. The vast majority of commons lose value or stay flat. However, targeted buying of convention exclusives, low-production runs, and Pops from trending franchises can yield returns. The key is buying at retail and selling during peak demand. The most valuable Pops were almost all purchased at $10-$15 retail and appreciated over years due to vaulting and sustained character popularity.

Got Valuable Funko Pops to Value?

Upload a photo and get a free AI-powered valuation in seconds. No sign-up required.

Also available on

App StoreGoogle Play