Section 1
What Pokemon Card Restoration Costs in Australia
At CardRevive, restoration is priced as a percentage of the card value, with a flat per-card minimum sitting underneath it. In practice that creates two bands. Above the point where the percentage clears the minimum, the fee scales with the card, so a grail chase card pays more than a mid-value card for the same work. Below that point, the per-card minimum applies instead, so two lower-value cards on the same tier can pay the same minimum even when their values differ, which keeps every job covering the bench time it takes. The core rate starts at 5 percent of the assessed card value on the Standard tier, and every card in a submission also carries a 10 dollar inspection fee, which pays for the physical assessment that happens before any treatment is approved.
This value-based model is deliberate. It keeps entry pricing sensible for mid-value cards while scaling fairly for the high-value cards where the stakes, and the care required, are greatest. The pricing described here is effective 25 February 2026. Because the amount is tied to assessed value, the fastest way to get an exact figure for your own card is the live estimator on the restoration page, which returns a quote in seconds rather than after a long back-and-forth.
Section 2
The Three Restoration Tiers
CardRevive offers three tiers, and the important thing to understand is that they differ in turnaround and queue position, not in the quality of the work. The same conservation process is applied to your card whether you choose the entry tier or the fastest one, so paying more never buys a better repair, only a shorter wait.
Standard Restoration is 5 percent of card value with a 25 dollar per-card minimum and a turnaround of roughly 60 to 75 business days or more. It suits collectors who are not in a hurry. On this tier, pre-grading analysis and corner correction are billed as separate add-ons rather than bundled in.
Express Restoration is the most popular tier, at 7.5 percent of card value with a 50 dollar per-card minimum and a turnaround of roughly 40 to 50 business days or more. Pre-grading analysis is bundled into this tier, while corner correction remains a separate add-on.
Priority Restoration is 10 percent of card value with a 100 dollar per-card minimum and the fastest turnaround, roughly 5 to 25 business days or more. Both pre-grading analysis and corner correction are bundled in, which makes it the most complete tier as well as the quickest.
Section 3
Add-Ons and Specialty Repairs
Beyond the tier rate, several services are priced as flat fees so the cost stays predictable regardless of card value. Corner correction is 20 dollars and covers the card no matter how many corners need attention. Pre-grading analysis is 10 dollars per card and gives you a condition assessment across surface, edges, corners and centring, along with an approximate grade estimate, before you commit to grading.
Specialty repairs are also flat fees. Indent reduction is 100 dollars, mould removal is 150 dollars, and crease reduction is 200 dollars with a quote required, because creases vary so much from card to card. These flat fees sit on top of the tier rate only when the card genuinely needs that specific work, and the assessment always tells you which repairs are worth doing before anything is approved.
Section 4
What Affects the Price of Your Restoration
Four things move the final number. The first is the card value itself, since the tier rate is a percentage of that value. The second is the tier you choose, because faster turnaround costs more. The third is the type and severity of damage, which decides whether flat-fee specialty repairs such as indent, crease or mould work are needed. The fourth is whether you add professional grading afterwards, which is a separate charge covered further down.
It is worth being realistic about outcomes as well as cost. Restoration work at CardRevive typically achieves a one to three point grading upgrade, and some cases have gone further, but no restorer controls a grading company decision. Surface cleaning, edge and corner work and pressure-mark reduction can improve presentation, yet missing material, deep creases and heavy foil damage may remain permanent. The assessment is where the honest conversation about what is achievable happens, before you spend anything.
Section 5
Worked Examples for Common Scenarios
These illustrative examples use the published rates to show how a quote comes together. They are worked calculations, not specific customer records. Picture a 300 dollar raw Pokemon card sent on Standard Restoration. Five percent of 300 is 15 dollars, but the 25 dollar per-card minimum applies, so the restoration is 25 dollars, plus the 10 dollar inspection fee, for 35 dollars before any optional extras.
Now picture a 1,000 dollar card on Express Restoration. Seven and a half percent of 1,000 is 75 dollars, comfortably above the 50 dollar minimum, and pre-grading analysis is already bundled into this tier, so you would pay 75 dollars plus the 10 dollar inspection fee. A 2,000 dollar card on Priority Restoration would be 10 percent, or 200 dollars, plus the 10 dollar inspection fee, with pre-grading and corner correction both included.
If any of those cards also needed crease reduction, you would add the 200 dollar flat specialty fee once a quote is confirmed. The pattern stays consistent across every card: a percentage of value, the higher of that or the tier minimum, plus the inspection fee, plus any flat-fee specialty work the card actually needs.
Section 6
Inspection, Shipping and Cancellation Fees
A few smaller costs round out the picture. The 10 dollar inspection fee applies to every card in a submission and is what funds the physical assessment and intake photography before treatment. Return shipping is 19.99 dollars for tracked Express Post, or free if you collect from the Sydney intake address in person.
If you change your mind after an order is placed, a 25 dollar cancellation fee applies. For collectors in Sydney, walking your cards in and picking them up removes the return postage entirely, which is one reason local drop-off is popular with people who would rather not post a valuable card at all.
Section 7
How the Grading Up-Charge Works
Professional grading is separate from restoration, and CardRevive can handle the submission for you as a middleman across five grading companies. When you add grading, an up-charge is calculated as a percentage of card value. It is assessed on the raw value at intake, then reconciled against the final graded value at completion, so the charge reflects the value the finished card actually carries.
Keeping grading as a distinct line item matters because not every card needs restoration before it is graded. If your card is already clean and straight, it can be forwarded to grading without paying a restoration tier fee at all. The grading companies set their own prices and timeframes, and CardRevive is an independent business that is not affiliated with any of them.
Section 8
Is Restoration Worth the Cost?
Whether restoration pays off depends on the gap between what a card is worth now and what it could be worth once it presents and grades better. Because the tier rate is a percentage of value, the fee scales with the card, and the typical one to three point grading upgrade tends to matter most on cards where each grade point carries a meaningful jump in market value. On a low-value card, the per-card minimum and inspection fee can outweigh any realistic uplift, which the assessment will tell you honestly before you commit.
The better question is rarely just how much restoration costs, but what it protects or unlocks. A card headed for grading benefits from being clean and straight first, since the grade is set on the day it is assessed and cannot be improved once the card is slabbed. A binder copy you simply want to look its best has a different calculation again. The assessment exists precisely so you can weigh cost against likely outcome before committing, rather than discovering the answer afterwards.
Section 9
How CardRevive Pricing Compares
The Australian restoration market has plenty of options, and pricing models vary widely. Across the broader market, and without pointing at any single provider, a few patterns are common: quote-only pricing that is hard to compare like for like, flat fixed prices that do not scale with card value, or a tier fee charged even when a card needs no restoration at all.
CardRevive takes a different line. Pricing is a percentage of value with specialty repairs as transparent flat fees, and the estimator returns a quote in seconds. The 10 dollar inspection fee is not locked to a tier, so a card that does not need restoration can be forwarded to grading without a tier charge. On international competitor pricing specifically, CardRevive does not publish rival figures, so this comparison stays on method and structure rather than on invented numbers.
Section 10
Why CardRevive Is Priced Where It Is
The pricing reflects how the work is actually done. Every card is physically assessed, logged and photographed at intake, so the baseline is unambiguous before any treatment begins, and the proposed service, material risks and price are presented for your approval. The same standard of work is applied on every tier, which is exactly why the tiers differ only in speed.
It also reflects what CardRevive will not do. Counterfeits, repainted cards and water damage past structural recovery are turned down rather than taken on, and no work is ever promised as undetectable or guaranteed to pass, because that call always belongs to the grading company. Value-based pricing, flat-fee specialty work and a transparent estimator are what let collectors see exactly what they are paying for before they commit a single dollar.
