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Rayquaza (Japanese) Pokemon card from EX Battle Boost

Rayquaza (Japanese)

EX Battle Boost · 077/093 · None

Current Prices

Market Price $20.05
Low $20.05
High $20.05
PSA 10 $226.25
PSA 9 $87.72
30-Day Trend

Number

077/093

Rarity

None

Variant

1st_Edition

Market

US (TCGplayer)

Last Updated

Jun 9, 2026

What Is Rayquaza (Japanese) Worth?

Rayquaza (Japanese) (1st_Edition variant) is a Common card from the EX Battle Boost set, card number 077/093. On PokeCardWorth we focus on one question — what is it actually worth — and at its current valuation, it carries real mid-range value and is worth keeping protected in a sleeve and top-loader.

Rayquaza (Japanese) Value Breakdown

As of 2026, Rayquaza (Japanese) (EX Battle Boost, 077/093) is worth around $20.05 in Near Mint condition. Condition drives the price hard: a Near Mint copy is worth about $20.05, while a Damaged one drops to roughly $9.00. The full condition ladder runs Near Mint $20.05, Lightly Played $16.00, Heavily Played $6.99, Damaged $9.00 — so grading the condition correctly before you buy or sell matters more than almost anything else. A PSA 10 (Gem Mint) example is valued near $226.25 — about 11x the raw price, which is the single biggest swing in this card's value. PSA 9 copies sit around $87.72.

Is It Worth Grading Rayquaza (Japanese)?

Grading Rayquaza (Japanese) can pay off concretely: the gap between its raw value ($20.05) and a PSA 10 ($226.25) is about $206.20 — a 11x uplift before grading fees. Other graded tiers we track: PSA 9 $87.72, PSA 8 $15.50. Grading is worth considering if your copy looks clean — the PSA 10 premium can comfortably clear the fee.

Detailed Price Breakdown

SourceCondition / GradeAverage
ebayDAMAGED$1.98
ebayHEAVILY PLAYED$6.99
ebayLIGHTLY PLAYED$28.00
ebayNEAR MINT$20.05
ebayPSA 10$226.25
ebayPSA 8$15.50
ebayPSA 9$87.72
tcgplayerDAMAGED$9.00
tcgplayerLIGHTLY PLAYED$16.00

Is Rayquaza (Japanese) a Good Buy?

As a common, Rayquaza (Japanese) holds little standalone value, but clean copies still matter for set completion. Mid-value cards from popular sets tend to hold up well over time. Whatever you decide, recheck Rayquaza (Japanese)'s value on PokeCardWorth before buying or selling — the 2026 market shifts with set releases, nostalgia cycles, and demand.

Frequently Asked Questions

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