When it comes to the Pokémon Trading Card Game, there are thousands of cards you could consider ‘iconic’. These collectibles blend childhood nostalgia, high-stakes chasing, and jaw-dropping artistic brilliance into a beloved hobby that’s recently exploded in mass market appeal.
With Pokémon’s 30th Anniversary celebrations already fully underway, and with that huge Pokémon Presents event to boot, we’ve put together the definitive list of the 10 most iconic Pokémon cards ever printed.
You may ask - what’s this based on? It’s a healthy mix of current resale value, the cultural impact each card has had, and a card’s visual aesthetics, and also a bit of personal preference from myself as well (so just keep that in mind).
From playground legends of 1999 to modern-day chase cards of the 2020s, these are the top 10 most iconic Pokémon cards of all time.
First up, but by no means least - the Van Gogh Pikachu. Rarely does a card cause a literal international scandal, but this 2023 collaboration with Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum did exactly that.
Resellers swarmed the IRL gift shop to snatch up this exclusive card to sell at a ridiculous price. I was actually in Amsterdam at the same time, unrelated, and I saw queues stretching back for miles. Even with the card dropping on the Pokémon Center website in the weeks following the incident, it sold out in minutes, leading to an official apology from TCG officials.
The first appearance of Lugia in the Pokémon TCG - the Neo Genesis Lugia holo card is a high-value first edition; its record for a PSA 10 1st Edition Lugia peaked around $50,000 - $55,000 in the past.
Illustrated by Hironobu Yoshida, this iconic, colorless-type card features notoriously poor print quality, making gem-mint, print-line-free copies incredibly rare.
The stuff of playground legends, the 1999 Pokémon Base Set 1st Edition Mewtwo Holo is one of those cards that feels like a pure encapsulation of 90’s Pokemania, with Ken Sugimori’s gorgeous purple-hued illustration.
Plus - Mewtwo is just awesome, and it’s as simple as that.
While not competitively legal, this card just feels like pure, unadulterated joy. Originally a "Create-a-Card" campaign reward, Birthday Pikachu famously includes a blank line for you to write your own name.
While PSA won't be happy if you actually take a Sharpie to it, the card is the perfect representation of the personal connection we all have with this franchise. It got a reprint in 2021 Celebrations, but the original promo remains a high-value holy grail that reminds us Pikachu has always been our #1 bestie.
The "Shiny Vault" Charizard VMAX from Shining Fates was huge for the hobby when it dropped in 2021.
Boasting a massive 330 HP, a powerful G-Max Wildfire attack, and an awesome shiny Charizard, which is black instead of orange, this highly collectible Shiny Ultra Rare card is one of my personal favourite Charizard cards ever.
If you’ve been around the competitive scene for a while like me, you’ll remember the envy you felt when the TCG Pokémon World Champions in the Junior, Senior, and Master Divisions received the No. 1 Trainer Trophy card.
You might not know these half-art trophy cards are a tribute to the original 1997 Pikachu trophy cards, first awarded to winners of the first official tournament in Chiba, Japan. I’d love to bring this back!
This infamous card is the reason Abra was forced to evolve straight into Alakazam for two decades. Following the 2003 Skyridge set, Kadabra vanished from the TCG entirely due to a lawsuit from illusionist Uri Geller.
Geller alleged the spoon-bending Pokémon was an unauthorized parody of his likeness, reportedly seeking £60 million in damages.
While the initial lawsuit was dismissed in 2003 by the US courts, Geller continued to file lawsuits in other regions until he issued an apology in late 2020. This paved the way for the psychic Pokémon’s return in June 2021’s Pokémon Card 151 expansion.
Affectionately known as "Moonbreon," this gorgeous card is the gold standard when it comes to modern-day card chasing. The artist of the Secret Rare Alternative Art is KEIICHIRO ITO, an artist since the Unified Minds set, who has illustrated 62 cards.
His other work includes some of my personal favourites, such as Medicham from Ascending Heroes, and Toedscruel in Paradox Rift.
Fetching a hefty $1,671.18 over on TCGPlayer to this day, it’s widely considered the most iconic card in the entire Sword & Shield series.
Released to promote Pokémon The Movie 2000, Ancient Mew’s hieroglyphic text and unique sparkly foil made it look like a genuine artifact found in the ruins Mew hid away in during the movie.
It has a unique card back that has never been used for any other Pokémon card. I remember watching the movie in the cinema, but my Mew card was lost to time. I probably traded it on the playground for a Pidgey.
There could be no other - it had to be Charizard, didn’t it? It’s the card that started the fire, all the way back in 1999.
The original artwork by Mitsuhiro Arita has become the face of the TCG for old and new players alike, which is reflected in the fact that it’s one of the most coveted Pokémon cards you can pull from a regular booster pack. That’s the Charizard effect!
Sara Heritage is a freelance contributor for IGN.