Quick Facts
In 2026, Labubu resale spans $65 to $600+ across eBay, Mercari, and StockX, with weekly swings up to 40%.
- Duck Edition trades $65–$110 across eBay, Mercari, and StockX in April 2026 secondary markets. - Snow Wing Edition resells $75–$130 in 2026, roughly 2x its original Pop Mart retail price. - Pink Fang Edition commands $90–$180 in 2026, with weekly swings exceeding 30% post-drop. - Rare Labubu editions clear $200–$600+ in 2026, with authenticity risk rising sharply above $150. - voxelyo operates independently from Pop Mart in 2026, offering fixed-price collector tools with zero resale volatility.
How to Read Resale Prices (Method Note)
The prices below are based on eBay 'Sold listings' data from April 2026. To verify: go to eBay, search 'labubu [edition name]', apply the 'Sold listings' filter (left sidebar, scroll to 'Show only'). This shows actual transaction prices — not asking prices, which are often 30–50% higher and skew the perceived market. Cross-check with Mercari 'Sold' history (US/JP versions both useful) and StockX 'Last Sale' for the same edition.
Condition matters enormously: sealed in original box commands a premium over opened-but-complete, which is worth more than opened-with-damage. Prices below assume opened-complete condition (most common resale state) unless noted. A rough condition multiplier: sealed-original-box = 1.4×, opened-complete-with-box = 1.0×, opened-no-box = 0.6×, visible damage or yellowing = 0.4–0.5×.
Time-window also matters. Snapshot the same edition every Sunday for 4 weeks before deciding 'fair price' — Pop Mart blind-box drops, K-pop comebacks, and viral TikTok moments can spike a single edition 30–50% inside 72 hours then settle back. Quoting a single peak as 'market price' is the most common amateur mistake.
Duck Edition: $65–$110
Duck Labubu is the entry-level edition — most available, lowest resale premium. Common editions trade at $65–80. Limited colorways or artist-collaboration Duck editions reach $90–110. Retail was $22; average resale premium is approximately 3–4×.
Buy or pass: at $65, Duck is the safest resale pick if you're buying for display — most available, easiest to find authentic. If you're buying for investment, the margin vs. retail is there but not dramatic, and Duck supply remains the highest of the four major editions (more available = less price floor support).
Watch out for: Duck listings labeled 'rare colorway' that are actually standard-release Duck with a different lighting setup in photos. Always cross-check the box label and Pop Mart series number before paying premium. Duck has the highest counterfeit ratio of the four core editions because it's the most-imitated entry point — assume any Duck listed under $50 with no box is high-risk.
Snow Wing Edition: $75–$130
Snow Wing commands a moderate premium — the wing detail creates more visual complexity and it's slightly rarer than Duck in secondary supply. Common colorways: $75–95. Limited releases: $100–130.
The white/silver color palette of Snow Wing is also more prone to scuffing and yellowing, which compresses resale value for figures with any handling marks. UV exposure over months in indirect sunlight can also drop the white tone toward cream, taking 10–20% off resale value.
Snow Wing has the strongest seasonal demand cycle of the four — listings move fastest in Q4 (gift season) and February (Lunar New Year gifts in Asian markets). Selling at those windows can capture 10–15% above off-season prices on the same condition.
Angel Edition: $80–$150
Angel has stronger collector appeal — the halo and wing combination gives it a distinctly different silhouette. Regular releases: $80–110. Pastel or limited Angel editions: $120–150+.
Angel editions from collaboration series (branded collab with fashion labels) regularly breach $200 if in sealed-original-box condition. The collab tier is where resale value separates dramatically from baseline — the cap on standard Angel is around $150, but a collab-tagged Angel can hit $250–300 in the right window.
Selling tip for Angel: photograph the halo from a 30° angle under daylight-balanced lighting. Bad lighting on Angel listings drops sale price 15–25% vs. well-lit photos because the halo's iridescent finish only reads correctly when lit properly.
Pink Fang Edition: $90–$180
Pink Fang is among the higher-demand Labubu variants. The tooth-heavy face design is distinctive and the colorway works well as a display piece. Standard resale: $90–130. Limited colorway Pink Fang: $150–180.
Pink Fang from special drop series (limited quantities, specific event tie-ins) can reach $200–300+ sealed. Pop Mart's Q1 2026 limited Pink Fang drop sold out in under 90 minutes and is currently trading at $250–320 sealed on eBay.
Pink Fang has the strongest 'collector intent' purchase signal of the four — buyers in this band rarely flip, they hold. That makes secondary supply tight and price floors sticky. If you're buying Pink Fang above $150, expect to wait 2–4 weeks for the right listing rather than buying the first one available.
Rare Editions: $200–$600+
Lisa Blackpink collaboration editions, certain TST (Time-Space Tourist) series, and artist-collaboration Labubu regularly breach $200–300 on secondary market. The most sought-after sealed in original box have sold for $500–600.
These are speculative territory. The resale market for ultra-rare editions is thin — fewer transactions, higher price variance, higher counterfeit risk. Unless you have deep category knowledge, avoid buying these for investment. The 'lottery winner' edition prices you see on social media are real but unrepresentative — most ultra-rare listings sit unsold for weeks before transacting at the bottom of the quoted range.
If you do buy in this tier, only buy from sellers with ≥99% feedback over 100+ Labubu-specific transactions, with high-resolution photos including box label, serial number, and seam detail. Insist on signature-required shipping and itemized insurance. The cost adds 5–8% to the deal but protects against the most common scam patterns.
Why Resale Prices Move (Pop Mart Drop Cycles)
Three forces drive Labubu secondary-market price more than anything else. First: Pop Mart's blind-box drop schedule. New release weeks pull collector attention away from secondary listings, so older edition prices soften 5–15% for ~10 days post-drop, then recover. Watching the official Pop Mart release calendar gives you a buy-window pattern.
Second: K-pop and celebrity feature cycles. When a Lisa, Rosé, or other high-reach influencer is photographed with a specific Labubu edition, that edition can spike 25–40% inside 48 hours. Most spikes retrace within 2 weeks, so impulse-buying off a viral moment usually means paying the local maximum.
Third: counterfeit supply visibility. When a new wave of high-quality counterfeits floods AliExpress / Taobao, authentic-edition resale temporarily softens (buyers worried about authenticity hold off). This is rare but worth knowing — if you see a sudden 20%+ drop in a normally-stable edition, check r/PopMartCollectors for new counterfeit alerts before assuming it's a buying opportunity.
Authenticity Risk Rises With Price
Counterfeit ratio scales roughly linearly with edition resale value. At $50–80 (Duck baseline) counterfeits are present but limited — most are easily spotted by box quality and paint depth. At $150–200 (Pink Fang limited tier) counterfeits become sophisticated, requiring serial number and box-stitching inspection. Above $300 (rare collab tier), high-quality counterfeits are nearly indistinguishable from authentic without UV-light testing of the box label.
Practical rule: budget 5–10% of any purchase above $200 toward authenticity verification — either pay a third-party authenticator (StockX bundles this into their fee, ~$15 per item), or buy only from sellers with verified-authentic transaction history specifically in the Labubu category. Sellers with broad action-figure inventory but no Labubu specialization are not a reliable signal.
Quick red-flag checklist before buying any resale Labubu above $100: (1) box label has clean stitching not glued seams, (2) serial number registered on Pop Mart's official authentication site, (3) figure paint shows brush detail not airbrush flatness, (4) seller has at least 50 prior Labubu sales with positive feedback specifically mentioning authenticity.
Where to Sell: Marketplace Comparison
eBay: largest US Labubu collector audience, sold-listing transparency lets you price accurately, but final-value fees + payment processing total ~13.25% of sale price. Best for editions $80+ where transparency premium offsets the fee. Listings under $50 lose disproportionate margin to fees.
Mercari: lower fees (~10% total), faster sale cycle for entry-level Duck/Snow Wing in the $50–100 range, but smaller buyer pool means thinner liquidity for rare editions. Best for fast-moving common editions.
StockX: built-in authentication adds buyer trust premium, fees are higher (9.5% commission + 3% payment processing = ~12.5%) but selling price often clears 8–15% above eBay net for editions $200+. Worst fit for sub-$100 editions where fees eat the entire premium.
Reddit r/PopMartCollectors trade thread: 0% fees but liquidity depends on whether your specific edition has active demand the week you list. Best for rare editions where StockX would take weeks; risky for buyer-disputes since no platform protection. Use only with established trade-history users.
The Alternative: Fixed Price, Zero Resale Risk
If you want Duck, Snow Wing, Angel, or Pink Fang on your shelf without paying $65–180+ or gambling on authenticity: Labubu Studio sells 3D printed hand-finished versions at $39.90. Not a secondary market purchase — a direct order at a fixed price with shipping in 3–5 business days.
Different value proposition from resale: you get the specific edition at a predictable price, no authentication uncertainty, no condition risk. For display purposes, the comparison is favorable — same silhouette and color palette on your shelf, without the resale-market premium or counterfeit risk that scales with edition tier.
Best use cases for the fixed-price route: building a 4-piece display set without spending $400+ on secondary market, gifting where authentication concern would burden the recipient, or replacing a damaged edition without overpaying for emergency same-edition supply.
Frequently Asked Questions
**Are Labubu resale prices going up or down in 2026?** Mixed by edition tier. Common Duck/Snow Wing has flattened year-over-year (+3–5%). Pink Fang and Angel limited tiers continue to appreciate (+12–18% YoY). Rare collab tier is volatile — single editions can move ±30% inside a quarter based on celebrity feature cycles.
**Should I buy Labubu as an investment?** Realistically, no — for most retail buyers. Transaction fees, counterfeit risk, and condition degradation absorb most of the appreciation. Buy because you want the figure on display; treat any resale upside as bonus, not core thesis. Investment-grade buying requires deep category knowledge and 5+ year holding horizons.
**What's the safest first Labubu to buy on resale?** Duck in opened-complete-with-box condition from a US-based seller with 50+ Labubu transactions, priced at $65–75. Lowest authenticity risk, easiest to verify, lowest absolute downside if you decide to resell.
**How do I authenticate a Labubu before buying?** Check Pop Mart's official authentication serial number registry (label inside box), inspect box stitching for clean factory thread vs. glued seams, verify paint detail under good lighting (authentic shows brush variance, counterfeits show airbrush flatness), and require seller to provide additional photos on request.