Understanding card and memorabilia authentication has gotten complicated with all the competing services and standards flying around. As someone who’s submitted to every major authenticator, I learned everything there is to know about what authentication actually means. Today, I will share it all with you.
What Authentication Is and Isn’t
That’s what makes authentication endearing to us collectors seeking confidence — it provides expert opinion backed by guarantee. But it’s not infallible proof.
Authentication services examine items and render opinions on genuineness. They stake their reputation on accuracy and typically offer guarantees backing their determinations.
The Major Services
Probably should have led with this section, honestly. The authentication landscape:
- PSA – Largest grading and authentication company
- BGS/BAS – Beckett’s grading and authentication arms
- SGC – Growing alternative with vintage strength
- JSA – Autograph authentication specialist
- MEARS – Game-used equipment experts
What They Examine
Depending on item type, authenticators look at:
- Cards – Paper stock, printing patterns, aging characteristics
- Autographs – Pen type, flow, consistency with exemplars
- Memorabilia – Tags, construction, era-appropriate materials
Limitations to Understand
No authentication is absolute:
- Sophisticated forgeries occasionally fool experts
- Authenticators disagree with each other
- Some items are genuinely ambiguous
- Historical records have gaps
Authentication improves odds dramatically but doesn’t eliminate all risk.
The Value Bump
Authenticated items command premiums over raw equivalents:
- Third-party encapsulation prevents switching
- Buyers trust expert opinions
- Liquidity improves for certified items
- Insurance and estate planning prefer documentation
When to Authenticate
Submit items when:
- Value justifies authentication cost
- You plan to sell and want maximum price
- Provenance is unclear and expert opinion helps
- Insurance requires third-party documentation
For low-value items, authentication costs more than the value bump justifies.