Top 10 Most Expensive Mewtwo Cards of All Time
The most powerful psychic Pokemon has some of the most powerful price tags.
By Misprint Editorial | Published Mar 9, 2026 | 20 min read

Updated pricing as of March 2026
Mewtwo has occupied a singular position in the Pokemon universe since the very beginning. Created by scientists experimenting on the DNA of the mythical Mew, engineered to be the ultimate weapon, and driven to existential crisis by the nature of its own existence, Mewtwo was designed to be the most powerful Pokemon alive, and that narrative of terrifying, uncontrollable power has resonated with fans for nearly thirty years. As the final boss of the original Red and Blue games, the star of the first and arguably best Pokemon movie, and one of the most feared competitive battlers in every generation it has appeared in, Mewtwo carries a weight of cultural significance that very few Pokemon can match. It is the rare character that manages to be simultaneously cool, tragic, and menacing, a combination that has proven irresistible to fans across every demographic and every era of the franchise.
That cultural gravity translates directly and powerfully into the trading card market, where Mewtwo cards consistently rank among the most valuable and sought-after in the hobby. What separates Mewtwo from many other high-value Pokemon is the remarkable consistency of its market presence across every era of the TCG. While some Pokemon spike in popularity when a single chase card is released before fading back into the pack, Mewtwo has produced genuinely valuable, genuinely sought-after cards in Base Set, the Wizards-era Gym sets, the ex era of the mid-2000s, the EX era of XY, the GX era of Sun and Moon, the V/VSTAR era of Sword and Shield, and now the modern Scarlet and Violet era. That kind of sustained, multi-generational relevance across three full decades of card design is remarkably rare in a market where most Pokemon cycle in and out of collector consciousness based on set themes, competitive viability, and social media trends, and it speaks to the enduring, almost primal appeal of a character that represents everything intimidating, mysterious, and awe-inspiring about the Pokemon world.
What follows is our countdown of the ten most expensive Mewtwo cards of all time, from number ten down to the most valuable printing at number one. We have also included a handful of honorable mentions that fell just outside the top ten but remain significant and noteworthy pieces of Mewtwo collecting history that are well worth understanding and potentially adding to your collection.
Honorable Mentions
Before we dive into the main ranking, several Mewtwo cards deserve recognition for their important place in the hobby's history and their continued relevance in the collector market, even if they did not quite crack our top ten in terms of current market value.
Mewtwo Movie Promo (#3) was one of the very first promotional Pokemon cards many American collectors ever owned, and for that reason alone it holds an outsized place in the collective memory of the hobby. Distributed in sealed foil packs at screenings of Pokemon: The First Movie in November 1999, this card was the tangible souvenir that connected the movie-going experience to the card-collecting hobby for millions of young fans. There was something magical about sitting in a darkened theater, watching Mewtwo wreak havoc on screen, and then opening a foil pack to find the very same character staring back at you as a holographic card you could hold in your hand. The artwork, by the legendary Mitsuhiro Arita, depicts Mewtwo charging a devastating psychic blast in a composition that perfectly captures the character's intimidating raw power and aggressive posture. In raw ungraded condition, the Movie Promo Mewtwo is not particularly expensive given the massive number of copies distributed at theaters across North America. But the card's sentimental value is enormous, and PSA 10 copies, which are surprisingly uncommon given that most copies were immediately ripped open and handled with sticky fingers by excited children in movie theater lobbies, command a nostalgic premium that has been climbing steadily year over year.
Mewtwo (Black Star Promo #12 and #14) represent the early promotional era of the Pokemon TCG, when cards were distributed through an eclectic and sometimes bewildering array of channels including magazines, mail-order promotions, league participation rewards, and retail partnerships. The distribution methods for these early promos were often so convoluted that many collectors are still discovering cards they never knew existed, and the Black Star Promo series as a whole has become an increasingly popular collecting niche for enthusiasts who appreciate the era's charm and variety. Both Mewtwo promos feature unique artwork that was not available in any standard booster set, giving them a distinct collectible identity that has held up remarkably well over the past two and a half decades. For collectors who are drawn to the variety and quirkiness of the early promotional landscape, these Mewtwo promos offer an accessible entry point with genuine historical significance and strong display appeal.
Mewtwo EX and Full Art Mewtwo EX (XY Evolutions) occupy an interesting middle ground in the Mewtwo market. The Evolutions set was an explicit nostalgia play by The Pokemon Company, reprinting Base Set cards with modernized EX mechanics and updated rarity tiers, and the Mewtwo cards from the set served as premium alternatives to the vintage originals. The Full Art Mewtwo EX in particular has appreciated steadily as Evolutions has increasingly been recognized as a modern classic in its own right, a set whose value is driven by the same nostalgic impulses that power the vintage market but at a more accessible price point.
Mewtwo EX (Paradox Rift) brought Mewtwo back to competitive prominence in the Scarlet and Violet era, and the various rarity tiers from the set offer modern collectors multiple price points for acquiring a current-generation Mewtwo card. The Paradox Rift expansion explored the concept of Pokemon existing outside normal time and space, a thematic framework that aligned perfectly with Mewtwo's character as an artificially created being that exists outside the natural Pokemon ecosystem. While not as premium as some of the entries on our main list, the Paradox Rift Mewtwo represents the character's ongoing relevance in both the competitive meta and the collecting community.
Rocket's Mewtwo EX (EX Team Rocket Returns) is a deep cut that appeals to collectors with a taste for mid-2000s ex-era cards. Released in 2004, this card revisited the Team Rocket ownership of Mewtwo with updated mechanics and artwork for the ex generation. The ex-era as a whole has been undergoing a significant reappraisal by collectors, with prices for many cards from this period climbing steadily as the market recognizes the era's relatively low print runs and the genuine quality of its card designs. The Rocket's Mewtwo EX is a prime beneficiary of that trend.
Now, the main event. Here are the ten most expensive and sought-after Mewtwo cards of all time, counting down from number ten to number one.
#10. Mewtwo VSTAR (Full Art, Crown Zenith Galarian Gallery)
Crown Zenith served as the grand finale of the Sword and Shield era, and its Galarian Gallery subset became one of the most beloved collections of alternate art cards in modern Pokemon history. The Galarian Gallery cards featured extended-art illustrations that placed Pokemon in richly detailed, atmospheric environments rather than the standard isolated battle-pose compositions, and the Mewtwo VSTAR was one of the most impressive entries in the entire subset. The artwork places Mewtwo in a dramatic cosmic setting that emphasizes the character's otherworldly origins and solitary nature, with deep purples and blues creating a sense of vast, empty space around the Psychic-type powerhouse. It is a card that captures Mewtwo's emotional core, that sense of being immensely powerful yet profoundly alone, in a way that few other card illustrations have managed to achieve across the entire history of the TCG. The artwork is a masterclass in visual storytelling, conveying narrative depth and emotional weight without a single word of flavor text. Crown Zenith's relatively limited print run compared to mainline sets has kept supply constrained across the board, and the Galarian Gallery cards in particular have proven to have real staying power in the secondary market as collectors increasingly recognize the subset as one of the high points of modern Pokemon card design. For modern Mewtwo collectors who want a card that combines genuine artistic quality with strong collectible value and the prestige of a special set printing, the Crown Zenith Galarian Gallery VSTAR is one of the best options available in the current market.
#9. Mewtwo & Mew GX (Unified Minds)
Tag Team GX cards were one of the most popular, most creatively ambitious, and most collector-friendly mechanics ever introduced in the Pokemon TCG, combining two Pokemon on a single card with powerful combined attacks, elevated HP totals, and artwork that told a story about the relationship between the featured Pokemon. The Mewtwo & Mew GX from Sun and Moon Unified Minds paired two of the most iconic Psychic-type Pokemon in franchise history on a single card, creating a piece that resonated powerfully on both the collecting and competitive levels simultaneously. The standard art version features Mewtwo and Mew together in a dynamic composition that plays on the genetic connection between the two characters, a relationship that has been central to Pokemon lore since the original games. But it was the card's competitive impact that truly elevated its status. Mewtwo & Mew GX became the centerpiece of one of the most dominant and versatile decks in the 2019-2020 tournament format, with its Perfection ability allowing it to copy the attacks of any GX or EX Pokemon in the discard pile. That flexibility made it the ultimate toolbox card, capable of adapting to virtually any matchup, and it remained a fixture of the competitive metagame until it rotated out of Standard format. That dual identity as both a collector piece and a competitive staple has given the card unusual market resilience, as demand comes from two distinct groups of buyers who value it for entirely different reasons. The standard art version is accessible, but the alternate art and Secret Rare variants command significantly higher premiums that reflect the card's exceptional status.
#8. Mewtwo GX (Shiny Vault, Hidden Fates)
Hidden Fates is one of the most beloved and consistently valuable special sets in the history of the modern Pokemon TCG, and its Shiny Vault subset has produced some of the most enduringly sought-after cards of the entire Sun and Moon era. The Shiny Vault concept was deceptively simple but commercially brilliant: take popular Pokemon and present them in their alternate "shiny" colorations, the rare color variants that Pokemon video game players have spent hundreds of hours hunting since Generation II introduced the mechanic. The connection between the video game shiny hunting experience and the trading card shiny treatment creates a bridge between two major segments of the Pokemon fan base, drawing in collectors from both sides.
The Shiny Mewtwo GX features a dramatic color shift that replaces Mewtwo's signature purple with a striking green-tinged palette, creating an immediately eye-catching card that looks completely distinct from every other Mewtwo printing in the TCG. The visual impact is significant, as Mewtwo in green feels both familiar and alien, the same imposing figure rendered in colors that signal rarity and exclusivity to anyone who recognizes the shiny convention. Shiny Pokemon have always carried a premium in both the video game and trading card communities, and combining a shiny treatment with one of the most popular and recognizable Pokemon in the entire franchise proved to be a formula that collectors simply could not resist. Hidden Fates as a set has continued to appreciate in value for years after its initial 2019 release, defying the typical pattern where modern sets peak quickly after release and then gradually decline as the market moves its attention to the next new product. The sustained demand is driven by a combination of relatively limited print runs for a special set that was only available through specific product configurations, exceptional card quality across the entire Shiny Vault subset, and the enduring universal appeal of the shiny concept. The Mewtwo GX has been one of the primary drivers of that sustained market interest, and it remains one of the best options available for collectors who want a visually distinctive, high-end Mewtwo card from the modern era that carries both collectible prestige and genuine aesthetic impact.
#7. Mewtwo GX (Secret Rare, Shining Legends)
Shining Legends was a small, limited-print special set released in the fall of 2017 that has consistently punched far above its weight class in terms of producing long-term collectible value and maintaining secondary market relevance. The set was notable for its unique and deliberately constrained distribution model: rather than being sold as standalone booster boxes through normal retail and hobby channels, Shining Legends packs were available exclusively through special collection boxes, pin sets, premium collections, and other bundled products. This distribution method effectively capped the total number of packs opened, since collectors could not simply buy sealed cases of booster boxes and rip through them the way they could with mainline expansions. The result was a reduced supply of chase cards relative to the total collector demand, and the market has rewarded that scarcity consistently over the years. The Secret Rare Mewtwo GX from Shining Legends features a gold-bordered, textured treatment that gives the card a premium, almost metallic feel that standard set cards simply cannot replicate. The tactile quality of the card is notable, with a raised texture on the artwork that is satisfying to examine and that photographs beautifully, creating strong demand from both in-hand collectors and online buyers. Mewtwo's inherent market demand as one of the most popular Pokemon in the franchise, combined with the supply constraints created by Shining Legends' distribution model and the premium quality of the Secret Rare treatment, has kept this card climbing steadily over the years with no indication of slowing down. It is a card that benefits from multiple converging positive factors, each of which reinforces the others.
#6. Mewtwo & Mew GX (Secret Rare Alt Art, Unified Minds)
While the standard Mewtwo & Mew GX from Unified Minds is a valuable card in its own right, the Secret Rare alternate art version sits in a completely different price tier, and for good reason. The alternate artwork takes a fundamentally different approach to depicting the relationship between these two legendary Psychic-types. Where the standard art emphasizes power and dynamism, the Secret Rare alternate art features a more intimate, contemplative composition that shows Mewtwo and Mew together in a way that emphasizes their complicated genetic relationship rather than their combat abilities. The result is a card that tells a story: Mewtwo, the clone, existing alongside Mew, the original, in a moment of quiet coexistence that fans of the first Pokemon movie will find deeply resonant. This kind of narrative-driven, character-focused illustration is exactly what has driven the explosive growth of the alternate art market over the past several years, and the Mewtwo & Mew GX was one of the cards that helped establish that market in the first place. Collectors have responded with sustained, aggressive demand that has kept the card's value at a premium level well above what a typical Secret Rare from the same era commands. The rainbow rare version from the same set also performs well, but it is the character-driven alternate art that truly captures collector imagination and commands the highest prices. For anyone who cares about storytelling through card art, about illustrations that convey emotion and narrative rather than just depicting Pokemon in battle poses, this is one of the most compelling Mewtwo cards ever produced.
#5. Team Rocket's Mewtwo EX (Special Illustration Rare, Destined Rivals)
The Destined Rivals expansion, released in early 2025, brought Team Rocket back to the forefront of the Pokemon TCG with a thematic focus on the iconic villain organization and its most powerful weapon. The Team Rocket's Mewtwo EX Special Illustration Rare instantly became the most talked-about card in the entire Scarlet and Violet era, generating a level of hype and secondary market demand that rivaled even the biggest chase cards from Prismatic Evolutions. The artwork is spectacular, depicting Mewtwo under the control of Team Rocket in a composition that channels the character's tortured origin story with cinematic intensity. The Special Illustration Rare treatment gives the card an extended art layout that fills the entire surface with dramatic imagery, creating an immersive visual experience that pulls the viewer into the scene. What makes this card resonate so powerfully is its connection to one of the most emotionally charged storylines in all of Pokemon. Mewtwo's creation by and subsequent rebellion against Team Rocket is a narrative that has captivated fans since the first movie, and seeing that story referenced in a modern, premium card format has struck a deep chord with collectors across every generation. Destined Rivals has been one of the strongest-performing sets in recent memory from a secondary market perspective, and this Mewtwo sits firmly at or near the top of the set's value hierarchy. The Japanese equivalent from the Glory of Team Rocket set has also performed exceptionally well, with the Special Art Rare commanding strong prices in the Japanese singles market. For collectors who connect with Mewtwo's narrative of captivity, power, rebellion, and self-determination, this card hits every emotional note with precision and artistry.
#4. Rocket's Mewtwo (Holo, Gym Challenge)
Gym Challenge was one of the final sets released during the original Wizards of the Coast era of the Pokemon TCG, and Rocket's Mewtwo was its undisputed marquee card, the pull that every collector who opened packs from the set was hoping and praying to find. The card depicts Mewtwo as a weapon of Team Rocket, restrained and controlled, radiating Psychic energy in an artwork composition that tells a story of power and subjugation that feels genuinely dark and complex by the standards of a franchise aimed primarily at children. The illustration does not shy away from the disturbing implications of a sentient being held captive and weaponized by a criminal organization, and that willingness to engage with the more mature and morally ambiguous aspects of Mewtwo's character gives the card an emotional weight and narrative gravity that most Pokemon cards do not attempt.
From a market and supply perspective, Gym Challenge had a notably limited print run compared to the massively produced earlier sets like Base Set, Jungle, and Fossil. The set arrived at a time when the initial Pokemon craze was beginning to cool slightly, which meant that production volumes were not ramped up to the same extraordinary levels that characterized the first wave of English-language Pokemon releases. The result is that the total number of Gym Challenge holo copies in circulation is significantly smaller than many collectors assume when they compare it to the seemingly endless supply of Base Set cards. That supply constraint has become increasingly relevant and financially significant as demand for Wizards-era holos has surged across the board, driven by the broader resurgence of interest in vintage Pokemon cards and the recognition that later Wizards sets like Gym Challenge represent genuinely scarce collectibles. High-grade copies of Rocket's Mewtwo are hard to come by, and PSA 9 and PSA 10 examples command prices that place the card firmly among the most valuable vintage Mewtwo printings in the market. The card has also received a significant boost from the recent Team Rocket renaissance in the modern TCG, with the Destined Rivals and Glory of Team Rocket sets renewing mainstream interest in the original Team Rocket-themed cards from the Wizards era. Rocket's Mewtwo occupies a unique narrative space in the Pokemon TCG, representing a version of the character at its most vulnerable and most dangerous simultaneously, and that compelling duality gives it an emotional resonance and sustained collector appeal that simple rarity metrics alone cannot fully explain.
#3. Mewtwo Gold Star (EX Holon Phantoms)
Gold Star cards occupy a legendary tier in the Pokemon TCG collecting hierarchy, representing the pinnacle of rarity from an era that many veteran collectors consider the golden age of Pokemon card design. The Mewtwo Gold Star from EX Holon Phantoms is one of the most sought-after cards in the entire Gold Star subset, rivaled only by the Charizard, Umbreon, and Espeon Gold Stars in terms of collector demand and market value. Introduced during the mid-2000s ex era as the rarest possible pull from booster packs, Gold Star cards featured alternate-color artwork, visually similar to shiny Pokemon from the video games, with a distinctive gold star symbol printed next to the Pokemon's name that has become one of the most recognizable and coveted designations in the entire hobby.
The pull rates for Gold Star cards were punishing even by the standards of modern ultra-rare chase cards: roughly one Gold Star per every two booster boxes, a rate that means the vast majority of collectors who opened product from these sets never pulled a single Gold Star card across their entire collecting career. That extreme pull rate, combined with the relatively modest print runs of ex-era sets compared to the massive production volumes of modern expansions, has created a situation where the total surviving population of Gold Star cards is vanishingly small. Many copies that were pulled during the original release window were damaged through normal play and handling, lost, or discarded before the collecting community fully appreciated how rare they were, further reducing the number of specimens available in collectible condition.
The Mewtwo Gold Star features a stunning alternate-color illustration that replaces the character's signature purple palette with a green and yellow color scheme, creating a visual that is immediately striking, unmistakably premium, and utterly distinct from every other Mewtwo printing. The holographic foil treatment characteristic of the era adds depth and shimmer to the alternate coloring, producing a card that looks spectacular both in person and in photographs. PSA 10 copies are exceptionally rare, representing a tiny fraction of an already tiny total population, and they command five-figure prices that have shown no signs of declining even as the broader market has experienced periods of cooling. For many vintage Pokemon collectors, acquiring a Mewtwo Gold Star in high grade is a bucket-list achievement, the kind of card that represents years of searching, multiple failed acquisition attempts, and a significant financial commitment when the right copy finally becomes available. Its combination of extreme scarcity, beautiful alternate-color artwork, historical significance as a representative of the beloved Gold Star era, and association with one of the most popular Pokemon in the franchise makes it a cornerstone card for any collection that aspires to comprehensiveness.
#2. Mewtwo (Holo, Base Set Shadowless)
The Shadowless Base Set Mewtwo holo is one of the most important and historically significant cards in the history of the Pokemon TCG. Shadowless cards come from the earliest English-language print run of Base Set, produced before a design change added a drop shadow to the right side of the card's artwork window. That seemingly minor visual distinction, barely noticeable to casual observers, represents the difference between an early-production card and the mass-market unlimited version, and the collecting market treats that distinction with deadly seriousness. The Mewtwo holo from the Shadowless print run features the iconic Mitsuhiro Arita artwork of Mewtwo gathering psychic energy in its hands, an image that has become one of the most recognized and reproduced illustrations in the entire trading card hobby. The composition is simple and devastatingly effective: Mewtwo stands in a three-quarter pose, energy crackling between its outstretched hands, eyes glowing with barely contained power. It is an image that communicates everything you need to know about the character in a single frame, and it has lost none of its impact in the nearly three decades since it was first printed. In PSA 10 condition, the Shadowless Mewtwo commands prices that reflect both its historical significance as an early-production card and its genuine scarcity in top grades. The Shadowless print run was relatively small compared to the subsequent unlimited run, and the number of copies that have survived in gem mint condition after twenty-seven years of handling, storage, and the general entropy of time is extremely limited. The card is a cornerstone of any serious vintage Pokemon collection, a benchmark for the broader market, and one of the most liquid and consistently traded high-end cards in the hobby. Whether you view it as an investment, a piece of nostalgia, or a historical artifact, the Shadowless Mewtwo delivers on every level.
#1. Mewtwo (Holo, Base Set 1st Edition)
At the top of our list sits the card that represents the intersection of Pokemon's most powerful character and the most coveted print run in the hobby's history. The 1st Edition Base Set Mewtwo holo is, simply put, the definitive Mewtwo card, the most valuable printing of one of the most important Pokemon ever created, and its place at the top of this list was never seriously in question. The 1st Edition stamp, that small black emblem visible in the lower left corner of the card, marks it as part of the very first English-language print run of the Pokemon TCG, a print run that is now the stuff of collecting legend. First Edition Base Set was produced in relatively limited quantities before the Pokemon Company and Wizards of the Coast fully understood the magnitude of the demand they were about to face. By the time they ramped up production with the Shadowless and Unlimited runs, the First Edition print was already in collectors' hands, and the total number of copies in existence was permanently fixed at a level far below what the market would eventually demand.
While the 1st Edition Charizard and Blastoise from the same set receive more mainstream attention and higher absolute prices, the 1st Edition Mewtwo is no less significant from a pure collecting standpoint. Mewtwo's role as the ultimate antagonist of the original Pokemon games and the central character of the franchise's first and most emotionally resonant film gives it a narrative gravity that enhances the card's collectible appeal far beyond simple rarity metrics. The card is not just rare. It is meaningful. It represents a character that an entire generation of fans grew up fearing, admiring, and ultimately empathizing with, and owning the most premium version of that character's most iconic card is a collecting goal that many people pursue with genuine passion.
PSA 10 copies of the 1st Edition Base Set Mewtwo have crossed the six-figure threshold at auction on multiple occasions, and the long-term trajectory suggests that number will only continue to climb. The pool of high-grade surviving copies is finite, shrinking incrementally each year as specimens are damaged, lost, or locked away in permanent collections. Meanwhile, the number of collectors with the means and motivation to acquire one continues to grow as the Pokemon collecting market expands globally. That fundamental supply-demand dynamic, fixed supply meeting growing demand, is the engine that has driven vintage Pokemon card values upward for years, and it shows no signs of stalling. The 1st Edition Base Set Mewtwo is the definitive Mewtwo card, the most valuable printing of one of the most beloved characters in the Pokemon franchise, and a card whose cultural and financial significance will only deepen with time.
Mewtwo has been a force in the Pokemon TCG market since the very first set was printed in 1996, and nearly thirty years later, that dominance shows no signs of fading. What makes Mewtwo collecting so compelling is the character's unique and multifaceted position in the franchise: powerful enough to be feared, complex enough to be sympathized with, tragic enough to be remembered, and iconic enough to drive demand across every era and every format of the hobby.
From the original Base Set holo that defined a generation of collectors to the Destined Rivals Special Illustration Rare that is captivating a new one, every generation of the Pokemon TCG has produced at least one Mewtwo card that collectors consider essential to their collections. That consistency across three decades of card design is exceptionally rare in a market where most Pokemon cycle in and out of relevance based on competitive viability, set themes, and the shifting tastes of the collector base. Mewtwo transcends those cycles because its appeal is rooted in something deeper than set affiliation or competitive performance: the character's narrative of creation, captivity, rebellion, and self-discovery resonates on a human level that gives its cards an emotional weight most Pokemon simply cannot replicate.
For collectors considering entering the Mewtwo market, the good news is that the breadth of options is extraordinary. Whether you are drawn to the raw nostalgia of the Base Set era, the extreme scarcity of the Gold Star period, the competitive legacy of the Tag Team GX generation, or the artistic ambition of modern Special Illustration Rares, there is a Mewtwo card at every price point and for every collecting philosophy. The market rewards both long-term holders who are patient enough to let their cards appreciate and active traders who capitalize on new releases and short-term price movements, and the consistent introduction of new premium Mewtwo cards in each generation of the TCG ensures that the character will remain squarely at the center of the collecting conversation for many years to come. For collectors, Mewtwo's power extends from the games and the anime directly into the marketplace, where its cards continue to command prices worthy of the world's strongest Pokemon.
Prices referenced are approximate market values as of March 2026 and will fluctuate. Check current listings on Misprint for the latest prices.

