The Most Expensive One Piece Cards Right Now, Priced From Live Data
The top of the One Piece market is one character wearing five different price tags. The interesting part is what moves underneath him.

Ranked price and pull-value boards with snapshot dates, price basis, and collector caveats.
The most expensive One Piece card on the BinderDex board is Monkey.D.Luffy (SP) (Gold) from A Fist of Divine Speed, OP05-119, at $14,944.22 in the Near Mint row — and it added $2,511 of that in the last seven days. Below it sits a top ten where Luffy appears five times, an anniversary set from 2025 owns three slots, and one card is priced at exactly $6,969.69 because somebody listing it has a sense of humor.
That second clause is why this list is worth reading instead of skimming. Anyone can rank prices. The movement column tells you which of these prices is a market and which is a number somebody typed.
- Monkey.D.Luffy (SP) (Gold) OP05-119 leads at $14,944.22, up $2,511.16 over seven days.
- The 3rd Anniversary trio — Luffy $8,950, Ace $6,150, Sabo $4,781.50 — holds three of the top six slots and all three are up over thirty days.
- Boa Hancock (SPR) OP07-038 sits at a meme-perfect $6,969.69 after a $3,897 seven-day jump — the thinnest number on the board, and we treat it that way.
- Gol.D.Roger (Manga) OP09-118 gave back $1,000 this week to $4,500, the only big red number in the top ten.
- Data: BinderDex Near Mint rows, updated June 6–9, 2026, across 3,457 priced One Piece cards in 20 sets.
The Top Ten, Ranked
All prices are BinderDex Near Mint rows, June 6–9, 2026. "Flat" means the row reported no seven-day or thirty-day change at snapshot time, which on cards this thin usually means no recorded movement rather than a calm market.
One Character, Five Price Tags
Half this list is the same pirate. The gold-stamp SP from A Fist of Divine Speed, the 3rd Anniversary print, the manga rare from Awakening of the New Era, the Premium Booster manga reprint, and the silver-stamp SP are all Monkey D. Luffy, and together they hold five of the top ten slots.
That concentration is the first thing a Pokemon collector should understand about One Piece prices: the market's ceiling is character-driven to a degree Pokemon grew out of years ago. Charizard is a tax bracket, but Pokemon's top board still rotates between Pikachu promos, trainer art, and old holos. The One Piece top board is Luffy, then the people standing next to Luffy.
The practical consequence: when one Luffy printing moves, the others tend to get repriced by sellers within days, whether or not their own sales support it. The silver SP's +$450 week right behind the gold SP's +$2,511 week reads exactly like that chain reaction.
The 3rd Anniversary Trio Is the Quiet Strength
Carrying On His Will — the 3rd Anniversary set — put three cards in the top six: Luffy at $8,950, Ace at $6,150, and Sabo at $4,781.50. All three are up over thirty days. None of them spiked.
This is the shape collectors should actually want: steady climbs with both the seven-day and thirty-day columns positive and proportionate. The brothers-in-arms theming does the demand work, the anniversary print run does the scarcity work, and the chart does not need a story to explain itself.
The gold Luffy is the headline, but the 3rd Anniversary trio is the market — three cards climbing on demand instead of drama.
About That $6,969.69 Hancock
Boa Hancock (SPR) from the Anime 25th Collection jumped $3,897 in seven days to land on a number that is obviously a joke. We are listing it at #3 because the row is real and the data basis is the same as every other card here. We are also telling you directly: a price this thin, moving this fast, to a number this cute, is one or two listings talking — not a market finding consensus.
If you hold this card, the honest read is that its real range lives somewhere between the pre-spike level and the current print. If you want this card, wait for the number to stop being funny.
The same caution applies in reverse to Gol.D.Roger (Manga), the board's one big decline at -$1,000 this week. On a $4,500 card, that is most likely one undercut listing, not a verdict on Roger.
What Grading Does to These Prices
BinderDex also carries graded rows for One Piece, sourced from PriceCharting. The multiples are steeper than most Pokemon equivalents:
These graded rows come from the PriceCharting side of the BinderDex data, June 10, 2026, so the raw column here differs slightly from the Near Mint board above — two sources, two rows, and we would rather show you both than quietly average them. The takeaway survives either way: a PSA 10 on a top One Piece card carries a 2x to 4.7x premium, because the modern foil stock on these sets is notoriously hard to grade clean.
How This Board Differs From Pokemon's
Three structural differences, visible directly in the data:
- Anniversary and special sets dominate. Pokemon's top board is mostly vintage. One Piece has no vintage — its scarcity comes from short anniversary print runs and SP/manga-rare chase slots in modern sets. The 3rd Anniversary set is fourteen months old and already owns three of the top six slots.
- Manga rares are the signature asset. The black-and-white manga-panel treatments (Roger, Luffy OP05, Zoro, Nami, Sanji further down the board) are the most "One Piece" thing in the hobby — there is no Pokemon equivalent, and they hold four of the top fifteen slots.
- The board is young and thin. BinderDex prices 3,457 One Piece cards against tens of thousands of Pokemon rows. Thin boards move fast in both directions, which is why every entry above carries its movement columns instead of a bare price.
The Read
The expensive end of One Piece is not a bubble and not a blue-chip shelf — it is a young market doing both at once. The anniversary trio climbing $250 to $760 a month is real demand compounding. The Hancock doing +$3,897 in a week to a joke number is a thin market doing stand-up. The skill, as ever, is telling those two apart before you pay either price.
BinderDex will keep this page pointed at the live board. The prices in the cards above update with the data; the prose gets revisited when the board changes shape. If the gold Luffy is still adding five hundred a week by July, that is a different article — and we will write it.
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Theo Park

