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Created page with "'''Comp:''' Short for "comparison," a comparable sale or value of a similar baseball card. For example, if you're trying to determine the value of a specific card you own, you..."
 
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'''Comp:''' Short for "comparison," a comparable sale or value of a similar baseball card. For example, if you're trying to determine the value of a specific card you own, you might look at recent sales of similar cards (in terms of player, card year, condition, etc.) to get an idea of its market value. Comps help collectors gauge how much their cards might be worth based on current market trends.
''Comp:'' Short for “comparison price,” but really just a fancy way of saying, “What have other people paid for something kinda-sorta like this?” When you’re trying to figure out what your own card is worth, you dig up recent sales (usually from eBay) of similar cards—same player, same year, same condition, same general vibe—and use those numbers as your reality check.
 
Comps are The Hobby’s way of preventing you from declaring your 1991 Donruss Bip Roberts “worth at least a hundred bucks” just because you feel spiritually connected to it. They anchor your expectations to what the market is ''actually'' doing, not what your inner optimist wishes it were doing.
 
Also, a comp is what a card sold for ''in the past,'' not necessarily what it sells for now, or what it will sell for in the future.


[[Category:Hobby Definitions]]
[[Category:Hobby Definitions]]

Latest revision as of 18:01, 12 January 2026

Comp: Short for “comparison price,” but really just a fancy way of saying, “What have other people paid for something kinda-sorta like this?” When you’re trying to figure out what your own card is worth, you dig up recent sales (usually from eBay) of similar cards—same player, same year, same condition, same general vibe—and use those numbers as your reality check.

Comps are The Hobby’s way of preventing you from declaring your 1991 Donruss Bip Roberts “worth at least a hundred bucks” just because you feel spiritually connected to it. They anchor your expectations to what the market is actually doing, not what your inner optimist wishes it were doing.

Also, a comp is what a card sold for in the past, not necessarily what it sells for now, or what it will sell for in the future.