
David West
2009 Topps Chrome · #64 · 2009
David West prices by grade
| Grade | Value | eBay |
|---|---|---|
| Ungraded | $105.50 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
| PSA 8 | $202.59 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
| Grade 9.5 | $78.55 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
Live on eBay
Affiliate — we may earn a commission2009 Topps Chrome David West #64 value & prices
How much is the 2009 Topps Chrome David West #64 worth? Raw, ungraded copies sell for around $105.50, while graded examples can be worth significantly more. This Basketball card is part of the 2009 Topps Chrome set.
Use the grade table above to compare values across PSA, BGS, CGC and SGC, and the eBay links to find live listings. Scan your copy with Ripbin to track it in your locker.
Market context
This card comes from the modern era, where print runs tightened and parallels became the chase. Base versions are accessible, while graded gems and rare parallels carry the premium.
The basketball card market rewards star power — top players' cards consistently outperform the broader market.
Buying & selling tips
The fastest way to gauge the real market for this card is to scan the live eBay listings above: look at the spread between auction and Buy-It-Now prices, and check sold history before paying top dollar.
Selling? List smart: photograph corners and surface clearly, state the condition honestly, and price against the grade table above. Or scan it into your Ripbin locker and let bids come to you.
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All David West cards & values →Frequently asked questions
- How much is the 2009 Topps Chrome David West #64 worth?
- An ungraded David West #64 is worth approximately $105.50. Values change with the market — check the live eBay listings for current pricing.
- Where can I buy the David West #64 card?
- David West 2009 Topps Chrome cards are available on eBay — use the grade-specific links above to find current listings, or browse the live listings carousel on this page.
- What affects the value of the David West #64?
- Condition and grade matter most, followed by the player's performance and career trajectory. Parallel versions, print runs, and overall hobby demand also move the price.