Could your unwanted toys earn you millions?


05 January 2021
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You may be sitting on a goldmine and didn’t even know it.
Could your unwanted toys earn you millions? Images

Out with the old and in with the new. Decluttering in the new year has become a ritual habit for some families, but as we go through old photo albums, clothes that no longer fit, and childhood toys… you may be sitting on a goldmine and didn’t even know it. 

Although toys might not seem by some as likely contenders for items to invest in, if you are able to come across the right ones and keep them in perfect condition, you may have hit the jackpot. 

Although ‘trading cards’ is only searched online roughly 24,900 times a month on average, the highest amount recorded for the purchase of a trading card was made early last year when a rare signed Mike Trout rookie card sold for a record-setting £2.9m.

Other specific Trading Cards of value include Magic: The Gathering Alpha Black Lotus card, Yu-Gi-Oh Black Luster Soldier card and a Pokémon Holographic First Edition Charizard. 

Comic Books have the fourth largest global search volumes at 280,100 and continue to be a profitable option. In 2014, a first edition of Action Comics from 1938 sold on eBay for just over £2.4m ($3.2m) when the bidder had only put it up for 99 cents (76p). 

Other comics of similar value include Detective Comics, Amazing Fantasy and Marvel. 

With 163,300 average global monthly searches, the most expensive sold bundle of Beanie Babies in the world was a known as Wallace and his Squad (1 large Wallace and two regular sized Wallace’s, Cashew and Huggy). The bundle sold for £450,000 ($600,000),

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Other valuable Beanie Babies include Rainbow, Valentino, Princess the Bear, Bubbles and Piccadilly Attic. 

The most expensive Barbie doll ever sold was the Stefani Canturi doll, which went for £226,000 ($302,500) in 2010 due to the necklace the doll sported - having been designed by Stefano Canturi and featured emerald-cut pink diamonds. Barbies unsurprisingly are also the most searched with nearly 4 million average searches around the world every month!

Other dolls worth value include Original Barbie (1959), Marie Antoinette Barbie and Pink Jubilee Barbie.

‘Hot Wheels’ have the second highest number of average global monthly searches (1,200,000) and one of the rarer finds is said to be worth £131,000 ($175,000) the 1969 Pink, Rear-Loading Beach Bomb. 

With ‘board games’ reaching 726,300 average global monthly searches, the original Monopoly Atlantic City, made in 1933, was sold at an auction for £109,000 ($146,500). 

Lastly with the least amount of average global monthly searches, the most successful Disney VHS tape was sold on eBay for £11,478 and it was the Beauty and the Beast Black Diamond. 

Certainly something to think about if you’re using this latest Lockdown to do a spot of Spring cleaning….

Information and data gathered by OnBuy.com