Data-driven verdicts.
No guesswork.
Slabit tells you whether a card is worth sending to PSA for grading — based on real market prices, real population data, and an honest look at your card's condition.



Real prices, not guesses
Every verdict starts with real market data sourced from PriceCharting — raw ungraded prices alongside PSA 8, PSA 9, and PSA 10 values for each specific card. Prices are refreshed regularly to reflect current market conditions, not last year's numbers.
Real population data
We pull PSA population data directly — how many copies of each card have been graded and at what grades. A card with 50,000 PSA 10s behaves very differently in the market than one with 200. Population data informs the grade distribution model that underlies every verdict.
Your honest condition assessment
This is the part only you can do. Slabit asks you to rate the condition of your card on a scale. The math only works if you're straight with yourself — a card you think is a 10 but is really a 7 will produce a verdict that costs you money.

The verdict
Slabit combines the price data, population model, and your condition input to calculate an expected value — what you'd realistically expect to get back from grading after PSA fees. The result is one of three verdicts:
The numbers work in your favor. Grading is likely to be profitable at your card's current condition.
The math doesn't add up. You'd likely lose money after PSA fees at current market prices.
It's close. Sentiment, set completion, or long-term holding strategy may tip the scales for you.
A note on accuracy
Slabit is a decision-support tool, not a guarantee. Market prices fluctuate, PSA turnaround times vary, and grading outcomes can surprise even experienced collectors. The verdicts reflect the best available data at the time of calculation — always apply your own judgment before submitting.