
If you’re sitting on competitive singles from Scarlet & Violet 151, Obsidian Flames, or Paldea Evolved right now, your window to sell at full price is closing fast. The 2026 Standard rotation hits Pokemon TCG Live on March 26 and in-person play on April 10, and when player demand evaporates from a card, prices often follow within 2-3 weeks.
The key word is player demand. Not all rotation casualties are created equal. Some cards held up almost entirely by competitive play will drop 25-40% after April 10. Others, built on nostalgia, art quality, and collector appeal, will barely flinch. Knowing the difference is where the money is.
Here’s the full breakdown: what’s rotating, what to sell, what to hold, and what to buy once the dust settles.
What’s Actually Rotating Out on April 10
All cards with the G regulation mark exit Standard on April 10, 2026 (March 26 on Pokemon TCG Live). That includes most cards from these sets:
- Scarlet & Violet Base Set (SVI), released March 2023
- Paldea Evolved (PAL), June 2023
- Obsidian Flames (OBF), August 2023
- Scarlet & Violet 151 (MEW), September 2023
- Paradox Rift (PAR), November 2023
Also rotating: any card with a G regulation mark that was reprinted in later sets, like some Charizard ex reprints in Paldean Fates, if the reprint still carried the G mark.
This is a big rotation. These five sets combined represent roughly a year of competitive product. The meta staples that have kept card prices elevated, think draw supporters, energy acceleration, and tank attackers, are all leaving at once.
For players, that’s exciting. Fresh format. For investors holding competitive-heavy cards, it’s a sell signal.
The Sell List: Offload These Before March 26
These are cards where competitive play demand is carrying a significant chunk of the market price. Once those players dump their copies before rotation, you don’t want to be the one holding.
Target sell window: now through March 20. Digital rotation hits March 26, and competitive players sell 1-2 weeks ahead of that to avoid the price cliff.
Correction and update, June 2026: the original version of this table contained several wrong card numbers and set attributions, which is exactly the kind of sloppiness this site dunks on other people for. Fixed below, against verified TCGplayer listings: Gardevoir ex SIR is Scarlet & Violet base 245/198 (not Paldea Evolved), the Iono SIR is 269/193 (185/193 is the regular print), Sandy Shocks ex SIR (250/182) and Iron Valiant ex (089/182) are both Paradox Rift cards, the Roaring Moon ex SIR is 251/182, and the Paldean Fates shiny Charizard ex is 054/091 with its SIR at 234/091. One row has been removed entirely: Iron Thorns ex is a Twilight Masquerade card (077/167) with an H regulation mark. It never rotated, it should never have been on a G-mark sell list, and listing it was a straight error. The table now also shows where each card actually landed by June 11, 2026, two months after rotation.
| Card | Set | Feb 2026 Est. | June 11, 2026 | Sell call verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charizard ex (Tera SIR) 223/197 | Obsidian Flames | ~$220-230 | ~$140 | Right. Down ~38% as player copies flooded out. |
| Gardevoir ex 245/198 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet base | ~$55-70 | ~$89 | Wrong. Collector demand outbid the rotation. |
| Iono 269/193 (SIR) | Paldea Evolved | ~$35-50 | ~$68 | Wrong. Trainer SIR art held a binder-driven floor. |
| Sandy Shocks ex 250/182 (SIR) | Paradox Rift | ~$20-30 | ~$9 | Right. Pure play demand, evaporated on schedule. |
| Iron Valiant ex 089/182 | Paradox Rift | ~$15-20 | ~$0.85 | Painfully right. A 95% wipeout. |
| Roaring Moon ex 251/182 (SIR) | Paradox Rift | ~$25-35 | ~$43 | Wrong. Paradox-design collector crowd showed up. |
| Charizard ex 054/091 / SIR 234/091 (G mark) | Paldean Fates | Check TCGPlayer | ~$5.40 / ~$337 | Split. Regular shiny is cheap, the SIR mooned. |
The corrected scoreboard tells a sharper story than the original table did. Where the price was carried by decklists (Tera Charizard, Iron Valiant, Sandy Shocks), the rotation cliff was real and brutal: Iron Valiant ex at 85 cents is the single best advertisement for selling competitive staples early that this hobby has produced in years. But every card on this list with genuine binder appeal (Gardevoir, Iono, Roaring Moon, and especially that Paldean Fates Charizard SIR) blew straight through the sell thesis and climbed. The mechanism in the original post was right; the sorting of cards into the two buckets was too pessimistic about collector floors. The one-question test at the end of this post, deck or binder, turned out to be the entire ballgame.
Check eBay sold listings for recent comps before pricing, TCGPlayer market price can lag behind real sales data by 3-7 days.
What to Hold: Collector Pieces That Rotation Won’t Touch
These cards from the same sets have strong enough collector or nostalgia demand to weather the rotation without major price drops. Hold or even consider accumulating post-rotation if prices dip slightly.
| Card | Set | Feb 2026 Est. | June 11, 2026 | Hold call verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charizard ex 199/165 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet 151 | ~$230-288 | ~$490 | Right, spectacularly. Anniversary fuel on a Charizard fire. |
| Mew ex 205/165 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet 151 | ~$60-85 | ~$34 | Wrong. The one 151 SIR that gave value back. |
| Blastoise ex 200/165 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet 151 | ~$40-60 | ~$166 | Right. Starter trio demand nearly 3x’d it. |
| Alakazam ex 201/165 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet 151 | ~$35-55 | ~$83 | Right. Kanto nostalgia floor held and rose. |
| Venusaur ex 198/165 (SIR) | Scarlet & Violet 151 | not in original table | ~$137 | The starter-trio thesis applied here too. |
(Correction, June 2026: the original hold table also listed “Charizard ex 215/197 (SIR, dark art)” from Obsidian Flames at ~$225+. That was a mislabel. The dark Tera art SIR is 223/197, the same card on the sell list above, and 215/197 is the plain full-art ultra rare, which trades around $22.62 as of June 11. One Charizard, one row, and the sell side owned it: the SIR fell from the $220s to roughly $140.)
The June numbers also surface the one honest miss in the hold bucket: Mew ex SIR roughly halved while every other 151 SIR climbed. Best available explanation: Mew’s SIR had the highest February price relative to its pull difficulty, it was the default “expensive card to flex” from the set, and when anniversary money flooded toward the starter trio and Charizard specifically, Mew’s premium deflated toward the rest of the set. Even pure collector sets have internal rotation. A 151 basket still crushed it; a Mew-only position lost money in the best 151 market anyone has ever seen.
The 151 set is special because it was never really about competitive play. It was designed as a nostalgia product for collectors. Every card in the set has the original 151 Pokemon front-and-center. That demand doesn’t rotate. Current prices on TCGPlayer reflect this, 151 SIRs have been climbing since December lows, despite rotation approaching.
The Buy List: What to Snag After the Rotation Dip
Here’s the counterintuitive move: rotation creates buying opportunities in non-rotating cards. Here’s why.
When players dump rotating cards, they use that cash to upgrade their post-rotation decks. Demand spikes for the cards they need. But there’s also a second effect: collector attention and money shifts toward the newest shiny thing, in this case, Perfect Order (March 27 release) and the Ascended Heroes product cycle.
That temporary capital shift means some attractive non-rotating cards dip or stay flat while everyone else is distracted. That’s your window.
Buy targets in the post-rotation window (March 27, April 20):
- Perfect Order SIRs (Week 2 entry, April 3-10): The most valuable Perfect Order cards launch March 27 at inflated prerelease premiums. Week 2, right as rotation hits in-person play on April 10, is historically the best singles entry point. Dual timing: Perfect Order hype settles + collector cash frees up from rotation sales = dip window. Look at Mega Zygarde ex SIR and Mega Clefable ex SIR specifically.
- Ascended Heroes SIRs (10-20% dip when Perfect Order launches): When a new set drops, collector money shifts. Ascended Heroes SIRs typically dip 10-20% in the 2-3 weeks post-PO launch. Mega Gengar ex SIR at $836 dipping to $700? That’s a buy if you believe in the set’s long-term collector ceiling.
- Post-rotation staples for the new meta (H/I/J legal): Competitive players will drive demand for deck-building pieces that stay legal. If you know what the top post-rotation decks will run, buying singles before the meta settles can be profitable. Check what survives from Twilight Masquerade, Stellar Crown, and Surging Sparks.
Updated June 2026, how the buy list went: two for three, with the miss being instructive. The Perfect Order week-2 entry worked, but the star wasn’t the card I named. Mega Zygarde ex SIR (120/088) sits around $71 as of June 11, fine if you entered cheap, while the set’s Mega Hyper Rare Zygarde (124/088) is at roughly $172. The actual rocket was Meowth ex: the SIR (121/088) ran to about $191 on exactly the post-rotation Supporter-search demand this site flagged pre-launch, and even the regular print holds near $3.85. Competitive utility plus collector-bait art was the winning combination. The Ascended Heroes dip call, though? Never happened. The predicted 10-20% pullback when Perfect Order launched got steamrolled by era momentum: Mega Gengar ex SIR went from the $836 cited above to roughly $1,385 by June 11. Anyone who waited for the $700 entry I floated is still waiting, $550 further away. Lesson logged: in a market this hot, “wait for the dip” needs a fallback trigger, like “or buy half now,” because some dips simply never print.
The Two-Wave Timing Framework
This rotation creates two distinct sell windows, use them strategically.
Wave 1: Digital rotation (March 26) The competitive player market moves first. TCG Live goes to the new format on March 26. Players who care about tournament legality on the digital platform start pricing their rotating cards 1-2 weeks early, so March 10-20 is the ideal window to catch them before early sellers push prices down.
Wave 2: In-person rotation (April 10) Paper players have 2 more weeks than digital players. This extends the sell window for some cards, but the digital rotation announcement (March 26) will send a psychological price signal to all sellers. Don’t assume you have until April 10 to sell, assume March 26 is your effective deadline for any card that sees serious competitive play.
If you’re uncertain whether your cards have competitive versus collector demand, ask one question: Would someone buy this card to put in a deck, or to put in a binder? Deck cards sell now. Binder cards can wait or hold.
The 2026 rotation guide on Colorful Cardboard has the full set-by-set breakdown if you want to double-check which specific cards carry G marks.
Rotation Risk Factors: When This Goes Wrong
Before you dump everything with a G mark, consider what could disrupt this framework.
Collector demand can surprise you. Gardevoir ex SIR from Paldea Evolved has been a top-10 most popular Pokemon for decades. Even if competitive demand collapses, a subset of collectors will continue buying the SIR version for their Gardevoir binder. The price may not crater as much as expected.
Reprints change everything. If TPCi reprints Iono or Charizard ex in a future set (without the G mark), both the rotating and non-rotating versions get a ceiling effect. Keep an eye on set spoilers through April.
Perfect Order hype could be so strong it absorbs all collector capital. If PO launch is a blow-out, collector cash goes there instead of back into older sets. That could delay any post-rotation recovery in 151 or OBF cards.
The nostalgia premium is real but hard to quantify. I believe 151 collector demand holds. I’m less certain about Obsidian Flames collector floor. If you’re not sure, take half profits now and hold the rest.
Quick FAQ
Does rotation affect card value for collectors? Only if competitive play was a major price driver. Pure collector cards (151 SIRs, Charizard nostalgia plays) are largely insulated from rotation. Competitive staples take the hit.
When is the best time to sell before rotation? March 10-20 for competitive staples. The earlier wave of sellers hits right before digital rotation (March 26). Don’t wait until April 10, you’ll be behind the market.
Do I have to sell everything with a G mark? No. Sort your cards into “competitive singles” vs “collector pieces.” Competitive singles = sell window. Collector pieces = hold or buy more on dips.
Will 151 cards hold their value? Based on the collector demand pattern and 30th anniversary tailwinds, the 151 SIRs look well-supported. Check current TCGPlayer market prices for real-time comps before making any decision. If Charizard ex 199/165 is still trading near $230-280, that market is telling you collector demand is real.
What sets are NOT rotating? Cards with H, I, or J regulation marks are safe through 2026. That includes Twilight Masquerade, Stellar Crown, Surging Sparks, Prismatic Evolutions, Destined Rivals, and the new Mega Evolution sets (Ascended Heroes, Perfect Order, Chaos Rising).
Should I buy Perfect Order at prerelease? I’d wait for Week 2 (April 3-10). Prerelease pricing is always elevated, and the April 10 rotation creates a natural double dip window. More detail in the Perfect Order investment guide.
Sell or Buy Pokemon TCG Singles: TCGPlayer | eBay | Amazon
| Retailer | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| TCGPlayer | Buying and selling singles | Most accurate pricing; set price alerts on chase cards |
| eBay | Bulk lots + sealed | Check sold listings before listing your own |
| Amazon | Sealed product at MSRP | Prime eligible; avoid 3P sellers above MSRP |
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The Bottom Line
You have roughly three weeks to act on competitive G-mark singles before the rotation sell wave compresses prices. The priority order:
Sell now (March 10-20): Competitive staples, Gardevoir ex, Iono SIR, Charizard ex Tera (OBF), Roaring Moon ex SIR. Use eBay sold listings to price accurately, then list on TCGPlayer or eBay (use code
5339142051campaign for eBay Partner Network tracking).Hold through rotation: 151 SIRs (Charizard ex, Mew ex, Blastoise ex, Alakazam ex). Collector demand is real and rotation won’t kill a nostalgia card.
Watch for dips (April 3-20): Perfect Order SIRs in Week 2, Ascended Heroes SIRs as PO launch competes for collector cash.
The rotation clock is ticking. Every day you wait, more competitive players get the same idea and start listing their copies. Price it right, move it fast, and redeploy the cash into the next opportunity, which, conveniently, lands on store shelves March 27.



