Let’s break it down, then pour a stiff drink.
Slow Burn: The New Wait Times
Because the backlog is now “unprecedented,” PSA is sliding extra days into its service windows. Expect to see patience (and mood swings) tested:
Standard Card Grading
Value Plus: 20 → 25 business days
Value Max: 15 → 20 business days
Regular: 10 → 15 business days
Express: 5 → 10 business days
Dual Service (Grading + Autograph Auth)
Because why just wait for one thing when you can wait for two:
Value Plus: 30 → 35 business days
Value Max: 25 → 30
Regular: 20 → 25
Express: 15 → 20
Comics & Magazines
Because slabbing paper is equally dramatic:
Modern: 20 → 35 business days
Vintage: 30 → 45 days
(Plus tiers also get bumped proportionally)
The Fine Print: Receiving Delays & When the Clock Truly Starts
PSA warns that receiving time—the stretch between “hey, we got your box” and “we entered your submission into the system”—is averaging 15 business days for Bulk and Value orders. The grading clock only starts once your submission is in the system. So yes, you could be waiting before the official waiting even begins.
Forum whisperings suggest even worse: orders stuck in “QA” for weeks, “Research” phases stretching forever. Some Value orders submitted to meet a 20-day target ended up returning after 40+, 50+ business days.
In other words: PSA’s “estimates” are turning into faint suggestions, like “maybe your turkey will be done by dinner.”
Show Me the Money: Fee Hikes
You liked the service? You’ll love the new prices:
Card Grading (Standard)
Value Bulk: $19.99 → $21.99
Value: $24.99 → $27.99
Value Plus: $39.99 → $44.99
TCG Bulk remains untouched for now.
Dual Service (Grading + Auth)
Value Bulk: $25.99 → $27.99
Value: $34.99 → $37.99
Value Plus: $54.99 → $59.99
This marks the second price hike already in 2025 for Popular/Value Bulk tiers, which earlier in January moved from $18.99 → $19.99.
Also worth flagging: PSA is planning new grading facilities (Toronto in fall 2025, full-scale in Frankfurt in 2026), and expansions in Boca Raton and Plano, to “improve capacity.”
Macro Context & Metrics: Why Now?
In the first six months of 2025, PSA reportedly graded 8.89 million cards, which is a steep load.
In 2024, PSA handled over 15.3 million items overall.
Earlier in July, they tried some damage control: they reduced the turnaround estimate for Value submissions from 65 to 45 business days. (Yes, they are at war with time itself.)
Even with those tweaks, collectors are vocal—and angry—that PSA delivered far slower in reality than its “revised” promises.
Meanwhile, competitors like SGC and Beckett are quietly watching. If PSA keeps this up, higher price and longer wait, it could push more folks to peel off.
Hot Takes (Because You Want Them)
PSA is monetizing the backlog.
This is less “we’re overwhelmed” and more “demand is so high we can squeeze more margin out of it.” It's the age-old trick: raise prices, slow service, and let the urgency of collectors do the rest.The “estimate starts when it’s in the system” clause is pure contract trickery.
It’s like Starbucks telling you to wait, but only once the barista remembers your order. For high-volume, low-value submissions, that 15 day receiving lag becomes part of your hidden fee.Slab loyalty is fragile.
PSA arguably built its dominance on perceived liquidity, prestige, and reliability. But stretch the wait times too far, and the “brand tax” becomes unjustifiable. Some cards, especially marginal ones, might not need to be graded if buyers can’t get them back in a marketable timeframe.This might be PSA’s turning point.
Collectibles markets live on hype and scarcity. If PSA becomes synonymous with “slow and expensive,” that aura fractures. The next grading company that nails low cost + relatively fast turnaround will eat their lunch.