Baseball Card Appraisal

Every appraisal is handled personally, with care, clarity, and professional rigor — free from pressure or incentive — so clients can understand what they have, what it’s worth, and why it matters.

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Expert Valuations for Your Baseball Card Collection

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Michael Osacky

Whether it’s a 1933 Goudey Babe Ruth you’ve held onto for years, a rare rookie you pulled as a kid, or a modern low-population parallel that’s suddenly taken off in the hobby — whatever you’re holding, when it’s time for a professional baseball card appraisal, you want one that’s thorough, independent, and dependable. 

That’s where Baseball in the Attic comes in.

We provide standards-based sports card appraisal services accepted by attorneys, courts, the IRS, insurance carriers, auction houses, and museums. The practice is led by Michael Osacky — ISA-accredited, USPAP-compliant, and Lead Appraiser at PSA, the largest third-party authentication and grading company in the world.

Recent Valuations

1948 Leaf #1 Joe DiMaggio
Item

1948 Leaf #1 Joe DiMaggio

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1948

Appraisal Value:

$1,500

1914 Cracker Jack #65 Tris Speaker
Item

1914 Cracker Jack #65 Tris Speaker

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1914

Appraisal Value:

$3,500

1955 Topps #123 Sandy Koufax PSA 7
Item

1955 Topps #123 Sandy Koufax PSA 7

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1955

Appraisal Value:

$7,500

T3 Turkey Red Nap Lajoie (Checklist Back)
Item

T3 Turkey Red Nap Lajoie (Checklist Back)

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1911

Appraisal Value:

$2,300

1954 Topps Complete Set (250)
Item

1954 Topps Complete Set (250)

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1954

Appraisal Value:

$6,000

Goudey #53 Babe RuthSGC 3
Item

Goudey #53 Babe RuthSGC 3

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1933

Appraisal Value:

$14,000

T206 Ty Cobb Bat Off Shoulder SGC 2.5
Item

T206 Ty Cobb Bat Off Shoulder SGC 2.5

Type

Baseball Card

Year

-

Appraisal Value:

$4,500

Tip Top Bread Honus Wagner PSA 2
Item

Tip Top Bread Honus Wagner PSA 2

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1910

Appraisal Value:

$125,000

Bowman #253 Mickey Mantle VG (O/C)
Item

Bowman #253 Mickey Mantle VG (O/C)

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1951

Appraisal Value:

$15,000

1962 Jell-O Baseball Complete Box #109 Sandy Koufax
Item

1962 Jell-O Baseball Complete Box #109 Sandy Koufax

Type

Baseball Card

Year

1962

Appraisal Value:

$4,000

Meet Michael, the

“Dean of Cracker Jack Baseball Cards”

Michael Osacky logo

Michael Osacky.

PSA’s Lead Appraiser, USPAP-compliant, Accredited Member of the International Society of Appraisers (ISA)

Michael Osacky’s love for the hobby began with a shoebox of baseball cards passed down from his grandfather — cards tucked away, saved carefully, and cherished long before anyone thought about market value. That early spark grew into decades spent immersed in sports history, handling rare collections, and understanding how condition, context, and provenance shape worth. Today, he is known as the “Dean of Cracker Jack Baseball Cards,” a title given by Forbes Magazine, and is arguably the world’s leading sports memorabilia appraiser.

The Appraisal Process

Step 1

Every appraisal begins with a conversation. Michael asks a few key questions and reviews photos to understand the collection and its purpose. For large collections, a photo of every single item is not required.

Step 2

Michael photographs and evaluates each item for surface quality and condition. If provenance is key, all details are obtained. Population data and prior grading history are reviewed where applicable. For ungraded items, careful condition analysis supports accurate value estimation.

Step 3

A formal, standards-based appraisal report is prepared using market comparables, auction data, grading references, and accepted valuation methodology. Reports are suitable for legal, tax, insurance, or estate purposes.

Start Your Appraisal

Why Choose Our Sports Card
Appraisal Service?

Independent, standards-based sports card appraisal services led personally by Michael Osacky — ISA-accredited, USPAP-compliant, and Lead Appraiser at PSA.

Accredited & Standards-Based

Every sports card appraisal adheres to USPAP and nationally recognized standards accepted by attorneys, courts, the IRS, insurance carriers, auction houses, and institutions.

Nationally Recognized Expertise

Michael Osacky serves as Lead Appraiser at PSA and has decades of experience in card grading, vintage sports card appraisal, and high-value collectible sports cards.

Direct, Conflict-Free Evaluation

Each sports card valuation is completed personally. There is no sales incentive or transactional pressure — only independent, research-based card valuation.

Our Appraisal Services: What We Evaluate

Baseball in the Attic provides professional appraisal services focused exclusively on vintage and modern baseball cards, with particular depth in material from the 1870s through the 1970s. Michael Osacky personally handles each appraisal — whether evaluating a single high-value card or reviewing a multi-generation collection assembled over decades. Types of baseball cards appraised include:

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  • Pre-war and post-war baseball cards
  • Hall of Fame rookies and key vintage issues
  • Complete or partial vintage baseball card sets
  • Large, bulk baseball card collections
  • 1/1 modern signed and unsigned cards
  • Scarce regional issues and low-population cards
  • Ungraded and professionally graded baseball cards requiring detailed condition and market analysis

As Seen In

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Sports Collectors logo
Forbes logo
Chicago Tribune logo
Premiere logo
Los Angeles Times logo
The Realest logo
WSJ logo
Sports Cards Live
Berkley One logo
Marquee logo
WSJ logo
Parade logo
Citrus County Chronicle logo
Tampa Bay Times logo
Gaston Gazette logo
WGN 9 logo
NYT Logo
Green Bay Press Gazette logo
MLB logo

Who We Serve: Tailored Appraisal Services for Every Card & Collection

Baseball in the Attic works with people facing important decisions around baseball card collections — from inheritance and insurance to legal matters and long-term planning.

Baseball card appraisals for inherited or long-held collections.

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Documented baseball card valuation for policy updates or claims.

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Independent, well-documented baseball card appraisal prepared for formal review.

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Valuations for charitable contributions of vintage or modern baseball cards.

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Sports card appraisal support for attorneys, fiduciaries, and financial professionals.

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Objective baseball card value estimation for portfolio clarity and long-term planning.

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What Our Clients Are Saying

Start Your Appraisal Now and Know Your Collection’s Worth!

From shoebox finds to PSA-graded Hall of Fame rookies, work directly with Michael Osacky to receive a formal sports card appraisal grounded in recognized standards and real market data.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    Yes. Condition is one of the most significant factors in determining value. Centering, corners, edges, surface quality, alterations, and whether a card is professionally graded all influence the final appraisal. Even small differences in condition can meaningfully impact value.

    To begin, clear photographs of the front and back of the card are typically sufficient. For graded cards, images of the holder and certification number are helpful. If available, any prior grading reports, purchase records, or provenance details can provide useful context, but formal documentation is not required to start the process.

    Market values can fluctuate over time based on demand, population data, and broader hobby trends. An appraisal reflects fair market value as of the effective date of the report. If significant time has passed or the market has shifted, an updated appraisal may be recommended for insurance or estate planning purposes.

    Grading fees are set by third-party grading companies and vary based on service level, turnaround time, and the declared value of the card. Higher-value cards typically carry higher grading fees. For current pricing, it’s best to review the published fee schedules of the grading company you plan to use.

    Turnaround times depend on the grading company and service level selected. Expedited services may take a few weeks, while standard submissions can take several weeks or longer, particularly during periods of high submission volume.