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PSA Paused Value Grading: What It Means for Your Next Submission

Bayley Coleman · 2026-06-11 · 5 min read

The short answer: As of June 2, 2026, PSA paused all four Value tiers because of a roughly 10 million card backlog. The cheapest way into a PSA slab is now the Regular tier at about $79.99 per card, a 142% jump from the $32.99 Value price. For any card whose PSA 10 comps under roughly $300, SGC or CGC now net you more after fees, so reassess every raw card before you submit instead of defaulting to PSA.

If you were sitting on a stack of raw cards waiting for the next PSA Value special, that plan is on hold. On June 2, 2026, PSA paused new submissions for all four of its cheapest service levels. This is the single biggest near-term change to grading economics in years, and it quietly flips the "where should I grade this" answer on a lot of cards.

What actually happened

PSA suspended new submissions for Value Bulk, Value, Value Plus, and Value Max, its four lowest-cost tiers. The stated cause is a backlog that reached roughly 10 million cards. PSA is framing the pause as temporary and has extended Collectors Club memberships and launched a public backlog tracker while it digs out.

Why the backlog blew up

PSA announced a $200 million infrastructure investment, and that announcement itself triggered roughly a 20% spike in submissions, adding about 1.6 million cards to the queue in two months. Layer that on a company that already graded more than 19 million cards in 2025, and the Value tiers, the ones that move the most volume, were the first thing to give.

What is still open, and how slow

The faster tiers stayed open: Regular, Express, Super Express, and Walk-Through and above. But "open" does not mean "fast right now." Regular turnaround has been extended to roughly 40 to 50 days, and dual-service authentication to about 50 to 60 days, while PSA works the backlog down.

What it costs now

This is the part that matters for your wallet. With Value gone for the moment, the cheapest active PSA tier is Regular at about $79.99 per card. The old Value tier was $32.99. That is a 142% increase in the floor price of a PSA slab, overnight, not because grading got better but because demand overwhelmed supply.

What it means for flippers (the math flips)

Grading a card is worth it only when the slab's resale, minus the grading fee, beats selling it raw. PSA's whole case for an ordinary card was "costs a bit more than SGC, but the slab sells for 10 to 20% more." At a $33 Value fee, that premium usually won. At an $80 Regular fee, it often does not.

Run a typical $200 (PSA 10 comp) modern card:

PathResaleFeeNet
PSA (Regular)$200~$80~$120
SGC~$160~$20~$140
CGC~$160~$18~$142

During the pause, SGC and CGC net more than PSA on that card. PSA only pulls back ahead once the card is valuable enough that its resale premium clears the roughly $60 fee gap, a rough crossover around a $300 PSA 10 comp. Below that line, the cheaper graders win right now.

What to do while the pause is on

When does Value come back

PSA has tied the return of Value tiers to the backlog dropping from roughly 10 million to about 5 million cards, which it estimates could take up to four months. Treat that as a target, not a promise, and watch PSA's backlog tracker.

Frequently asked questions

Did PSA permanently shut down Value grading?
No. PSA paused the four Value tiers on June 2, 2026 and describes it as temporary, tied to reducing a roughly 10 million card backlog to about 5 million cards, an estimated process of up to four months.
What is the cheapest way to get a PSA slab right now?
With Value paused, the cheapest active PSA tier is Regular at about $79.99 per card, up from the $32.99 Value price. Express and above cost more.
Should I use SGC or CGC instead during the pause?
For most cards whose PSA 10 comps under roughly $300, yes, SGC (around $15 Economy) or CGC ($15 to $18) net more after fees and grade faster. For higher-value cards, PSA's resale premium can still justify the $79.99 Regular fee.
Why did PSA's backlog get so bad?
A $200 million infrastructure investment announcement triggered about a 20% submission spike (roughly 1.6 million extra cards in two months) on top of a company that graded more than 19 million cards in 2025.

Sources

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Written by Bayley Coleman, a collector in Fresno, CA. Every number above is sourced and dated; corrections welcome.