ANSWERS: 7
  • The Overstreet Price Guide, published yearly, shows comic book values as per their condition (mint, very fine, fine, very good, good, etc). The current volume is the 32nd edition, available at Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0609808214/104-5042390-4686312 Also, you can visit any comic dealer as to their policy in grading and buying comic books.
  • go ask a dealer
  • There is a magazine that is called Scrye, among many others...I know that they do Magic Cards,pokemon and many, many others, Look on the internet...there are a LOT of other magazines that rate comix, you can also ask at a comix store for info, or trading cards store! I have also asked ,others about collecting comic books, it depends on how you have kept it over the days that you have had it...in plastic, or if the pages are ripped, or how "well preserved" it looks to a collector....Also, sometimes it is the label, or the story, or color of the pages...but, another thing to know is, if a person is willing to "shell" out that amount to get your comic or not, is another thing...it depends on looks, quantity, quality, availability, etc...
  • Comic book values are readily available on the Internet. You just need to look where comics are being sold. Ebay - Look in the Ebay comics section and search for the title and issue number. You won't have the sold price, but you can track comics there. http://www.ebay.com ComicSeeker.com - This site has exact comic book values from multiple online dealers. Type in the comic title and issue, click search and view the exact price dealers are asking. http://www.comicseeker.com/ ComicLink - This site is a trade site. You can find prices and comic values here based on what an individual collector is asking for it. http://www.comiclink.com/
  • EITHER ANTIQUE, OR COIN DEALERS, THEIR'S A BOOK THAT TELLS HOW MUCH EACH ARE WORTH.
  • http://www.comic-book-collection-made-easy.com/comic-book-price-guide.html
  • I used to own a comic book store and we used 2 things for pricing. the comics price guide, which was published twice a month and the Official Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide (published once a year). Overstreet had every comic book ever published and could provide info for insurance carriers. The comic price guide, which I believe has a website now, followed trends and kept you up to date on how recent books or key books (like X-Men 94) were doing. If you are trying to sell, count on getting no more than 50% of the guide value for "HOT" books. others will be much less, as the retailer will be sitting on these for a while and most likely doesn't even need them. For insurance purposes, buy a copy of the overstreet guide and grade your books and log them. even video tape them so you can prove what you have. I hope this helped.

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