Disney Value Guide
Park exclusives, limited-edition dolls, pins, and figures - valued on edition size, the certificate, and whether it ever left the box. This is how Disneyvalues are actually set — not a price-guide average, but the real sold comps, the variants that matter, and the condition calls that move the number. When you want a real read on your own pieces, the appraisal below is free.
How we set the number
Every Disneyvalue we quote is anchored to actual eBay sold listings — the exact prices matching pieces closed at, in matching condition. Active asking prices are wish prices; an automated estimate is a shrug. We start from what people genuinely paid, then adjust for the specifics of your piece.
Disney spans vintage through modern - park exclusives, limited editions, and theatrical tie-ins. These are the factors that separate a common piece from a genuine find — and the things to look at before you trust any number:
Limited-edition size and the numbered certificate (COA) - a low LE number with paperwork is the whole ballgame
Park-exclusive and event pieces that never hit general retail
Mint-in-box with all inserts versus displayed-and-faded, especially for porcelain and designer dolls
Pin-trading rarities - limited-release and cast-exclusive pins with intact backs
Some of the Disneypieces whose values come up most often — though every piece is worth identifying, because the value lives in the details:
The #1 mistake on Disney: pricing off a high active listing instead of a real sold one, and assuming condition is better than it is. A clean grade against the sold comps is the difference between a number that holds and a number that disappoints.
Grab the checklist to run a first pass yourself, then send your Disneyover for a free, no-obligation appraisal — researched by hand and priced against real sold comps.
The same hand-research walk-through we use on every Disney piece - boiled down to a checklist you can run yourself. Stop guessing and start with a number you can actually defend.

Send photos and we’ll do the research — identify each Disney piece, pull the matching sold comps, and give you an honest number with the receipts behind it. Free, and no obligation to sell.
By real eBay sold listings - the prices Disney pieces in matching condition have actually closed at recently, not active asking prices and not an automated estimate. An asking price is a wish; a sold price is a receipt. We start every appraisal from the sold comps.
Limited-edition size and the numbered certificate (COA) - a low LE number with paperwork is the whole ballgame. Park-exclusive and event pieces that never hit general retail. Two pieces that look identical to a casual buyer can sit at very different numbers once you account for these, which is exactly why a by-hand read beats a price-guide average.
Yes - more than almost anything else. Mint-in-box with all inserts versus displayed-and-faded, especially for porcelain and designer dolls. We grade against pristine, not against the last beat-up copy we saw, and when it's a close call we grade down. The honest grade is what keeps the number defensible.
Yes, and it's free with no obligation. Send photos and we'll identify each piece (vintage through modern - park exclusives, limited editions, and theatrical tie-ins), pull the matching sold comps, and give you a number with the receipts behind it. Grab the appraisal checklist below to do a first pass yourself, or send it over and we'll do the research.
Looking at a different line? Browse all value guides.