How to check Disney Lorcana card prices — where the numbers come from, how foil and Enchanted versions change value, and free ways to look them up.
Checking a Disney Lorcana card price sounds like it should take ten seconds: type the name, read the number. The reason it's not that simple is that "Belle" isn't one card. There's the normal version, the holofoil, the cold foil, and maybe an Enchanted, and they can be ten or forty times apart in value. Read the wrong one and your number is fiction.
So checking a Lorcana price properly is really three questions: which version is this, what condition is it in, and where am I getting the number from. Get those right and the price falls out easily. Here's how.
Where Lorcana prices actually come from
There's no official price list. A Lorcana card is worth what people are paying for it, and that lives in a few places:
- TCGplayer is the main US reference. It shows several numbers per card: a Market price (an average of recent sales), plus Low, Mid, and High listings. The Market price is the one to trust — a single listing can be an outlier in either direction.
- eBay sold listings show real transaction prices. This matters most for graded Lorcana cards, which trade much more on eBay than on TCGplayer. Filter to "Sold items" to see what actually changed hands, not what someone's hoping to get.
- Cardmarket is the main European marketplace, useful if you're buying or selling in the EU where prices and availability differ.
The rule across all of them: trust sold prices and market averages, not asking prices. Anyone can list a $5 card for $50. The question is what it sold for.
Read the treatment before you read the price
This is the step that trips people up, because Lorcana prints the same card in several finishes and the gap between them is huge.
- Normal (non-foil) is the baseline and the cheapest.
- Holofoil carries the rainbow shimmer and usually a modest premium over normal.
- Cold foil is a premium foil treatment that typically runs several times the normal price — often two to five times.
- Enchanted is the chase tier: full-art, alternate-illustration foils printed at very low rates. There are only 12 per main set, and they show up at roughly one per two booster boxes, which is why they carry nearly all of a set's secondary-market value.
The practical effect is dramatic. A card like Belle – Strange but Special might be a few dollars as a normal Legendary, several times that as a cold foil, and well into the triple digits as an Enchanted — same character, wildly different cards. So before you look up a price, identify exactly which treatment you're holding. The Disney Lorcana explained guide covers how to read the rarity and treatment markers on a card if you're not sure what you've got.
One thing Lorcana doesn't have, despite the rumors: a traditional numbered "first edition" of booster products. The only cards carrying a "First Edition" stamp were a small set of promos handed out at D23 in 2022. There are no first-edition booster boxes, so don't pay a premium for one.

Condition changes the number too
A price guide quotes Near Mint by default. A played card is worth less, and the discount is steeper than people expect. As a rough guide to how the market values condition:
- Lightly Played sells around 85% of the Near Mint price.
- Moderately Played around 65%.
- Heavily Played around 45%.
- Damaged around 25%.
For high-value Enchanted cards the curve is even harsher — buyers paying triple digits want a clean copy, and condition flaws cost proportionally more. So when you read a Near Mint price, mentally adjust for the actual shape your card is in. A "Belle Enchanted" at NM price isn't the right number if yours has a whitened corner.
Free ways to check a Lorcana price
You don't need to pay anything to get a solid value:
- TCGplayer price guides are free per-set tables — no signup — and they're the fastest way to look up a card's market price by treatment and condition.
- The eBay sold filter is the free way to see real graded and raw sale prices. Search the card, filter to sold items, and read the recent ones.
- Free Lorcana price trackers aggregate these sources if you want a single view with history.
These are great for one card at a time. The friction shows up when you want to know what a whole collection is worth, because now you're looking up dozens of cards, each with its own treatment and condition, and re-checking them as prices move.
Tracking value over time (without re-checking by hand)
A single price tells you where a card is today. It says nothing about where it's heading, and a number you wrote down last month is probably already wrong — Lorcana prices move with reprints, set rotations, and demand for specific characters.
This is where scanning beats manual lookups for anything past a handful of cards. Scryda reads a Lorcana card including its set and treatment, files it with the right normal/foil/Enchanted version, and attaches the current market price for that specific version — so an Enchanted doesn't get logged at common-card value. Prices then update daily on their own, with a 90-day history chart on every card, which means your collection's total stays current without you re-checking anything. For figuring out which cards are worth chasing in the first place, the Lorcana cards worth collecting guide covers what drives value.
Download Scryda free and scan your Lorcana cards to see the whole set's value at once — then let the prices keep themselves current while you go find the Enchanteds you're missing.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I check Disney Lorcana card prices for free? TCGplayer's free per-set price guides are the fastest reference for market prices by treatment and condition. eBay's "Sold items" filter shows real transaction prices, especially for graded cards. Free Lorcana price trackers combine these sources if you want one view.
Why is the same Lorcana card listed at very different prices? Because it's likely different treatments. The normal, holofoil, cold foil, and Enchanted versions of the same card can be many times apart in value — cold foils often run several times the normal price, and Enchanteds carry most of a set's value. Always confirm which treatment you're pricing.
How much does condition affect a Lorcana card's value? Quite a bit. Against a Near Mint baseline, Lightly Played sells around 85%, Moderately Played around 65%, Heavily Played around 45%, and Damaged around 25%. For high-value Enchanted cards the discount for wear is even steeper.
Does Disney Lorcana have first-edition cards? Not in the traditional sense. There are no first-edition booster boxes. The only cards with a "First Edition" stamp were a handful of promos given out at D23 in 2022, so don't pay a first-edition premium on sealed product.
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