The PSA Population Report — the "pop report" — is a public database showing how many copies of every card PSA has ever graded, and at what grade. It's free. It's authoritative. And it's the single most important data source for any collector serious about value.
This guide shows you how to read it and how to use it.
Where to find it
Go to psacard.com → "Population Report" in the top menu. Search for a card by player, year, brand, or set. You'll land on a page showing the card's full population breakdown.
Anatomy of a pop report entry
Here's a simplified version of what you'll see for the 2018 Topps Update #US1 Ohtani:
| Grade | Total |
|---|---|
| PSA 10 Gem Mint | 15,847 |
| PSA 9 Mint | 22,394 |
| PSA 8 NM-MT | 8,221 |
| PSA 7 NM | 1,508 |
| PSA 6 or lower | 891 |
| Total graded | 48,861 |
(Note: these are illustrative numbers; the actual pop changes daily.)
Three things matter here:
- Total graded population. How many copies exist in graded form. The bigger this number, the more liquid the market — easy to buy, easy to sell.
- The pop at each grade. Shows distribution. For most cards, PSA 9s are the largest group, PSA 10s are scarcer.
- The gem rate. PSA 10s ÷ total graded = the percentage of submissions that achieve gem mint. For the 2018 Update #US1, it's around 32% — high, meaning the card was well-printed and conditions hold up.
How to use pop data when buying
Question 1: Is this card actually rare?
A "1 of 1" sounds rare. But a card with population 50,000 in PSA 10 isn't rare at all — even though each copy is technically unique. Compare populations across similar cards to understand relative scarcity:
- 2018 Topps Update #US1 base in PSA 10: ~16,000 (common).
- 2018 Topps Chrome Update HMT55 in PSA 10: ~3,500 (uncommon).
- 2018 Topps Chrome Refractor in PSA 10: ~800 (legitimately scarce).
- 2018 Topps Chrome Gold Refractor /50 in PSA 10: ~12 (very scarce).
Question 2: Is the gem rate going to compress?
If a card's gem rate is dropping over time (newer submissions getting fewer 10s than older ones), the existing PSA 10 population is becoming relatively more valuable. Look for pop reports that track historical submission data — some third-party tools (GemRate, CardLadder) chart this.
Question 3: Where is the "wall"?
Many cards have a population "wall" — a point where the pop count slows dramatically because most existing copies have already been graded. After that point, supply is essentially fixed. Cards near or past their wall are better long-term holds than cards still getting heavy submissions.
How to use pop data when selling
Time the listing
If you've got a PSA 10 of a card that's been getting heavy submissions lately, the population is growing — meaning supply is increasing while demand stays the same. That puts downward pressure on price. Better to sell sooner.
Conversely, if you've got a card whose population has barely moved for a year, supply is stable. You can be patient and wait for the right buyer.
Price relative to pop, not just last comp
The "last comp" tells you what one buyer paid for one card. The pop report tells you how the broader market looks. If the last comp was $2,000 but there are 50 active listings of the same card and the pop just jumped 200 in a month, $2,000 isn't a reliable price — it's an outlier on a softening market.
Common mistakes when reading pop data
- Ignoring qualified grades. PSA assigns "qualifiers" (OC = off-center, MK = mark, ST = stained) on slightly imperfect cards. A "PSA 10 OC" is not a true PSA 10 — it's worth significantly less. Pop counts usually separate qualified from unqualified.
- Confusing total pop with available supply. A pop of 16,000 doesn't mean 16,000 are for sale today. Many copies are in long-term collections and won't see the market for years. Active listings > pop count is the better real-time indicator.
- Treating pop as static. Pop reports update daily. A card with pop 100 last year may have pop 400 today.
- Ignoring cross-grading service pops. PSA dominates but BGS and SGC also grade cards. Total graded supply includes all of them.
Tools that build on pop data
- PSA's own pop report — free, authoritative, updated daily.
- GemRate.com — charts historical pop growth and gem rate trends. Free tier covers most needs.
- CardLadder.com — combines pop data with sales history for chart visualizations. Paid.
- Sportscard Investor (app) — combines pop + sales for portfolio tracking. Paid.
For most collectors, the free PSA pop report + eBay sold comps + 130point.com is enough to make informed decisions. The paid tools become worth it when you're managing a portfolio worth six figures.