
Tim Duncan
1998 Upper Deck Ovation · #59 · 1998
Tim Duncan prices by grade
| Grade | Value | eBay |
|---|---|---|
| Ungraded | $26.78 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
| PSA 8 | $40.00 | Buy on eBay ↗ |
Live on eBay
Affiliate — we may earn a commission1998 Upper Deck Ovation Tim Duncan #59 value & prices
The 1998 Upper Deck Ovation Tim Duncan #59 is a Basketball card (Gold parallel) released in 1998. In ungraded condition it carries an estimated value of about $26.78, with professionally graded copies commanding more.
See the full grade ladder and current eBay listings above. Collectors use Ripbin to scan, value and trade cards like the Tim Duncan.
About this card's market
Cards from this era were printed in enormous quantities during the hobby's boom years, so raw copies are plentiful — but strict grading separates the true gems from the masses, and top grades remain hard to pull off.
Basketball cards have been one of the hobby's strongest categories, with rookie cards and flagship sets like Prizm leading demand.
How to buy this card
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.
More from 1998 Upper Deck Ovation
Full 1998 Upper Deck Ovation checklist →Other Tim Duncan cards




Frequently asked questions
- How much is the 1998 Upper Deck Ovation Tim Duncan #59 worth?
- An ungraded Tim Duncan #59 is worth approximately $26.78. Values change with the market — check the live eBay listings for current pricing.
- Where can I buy the Tim Duncan #59 card?
- Tim Duncan 1998 Upper Deck Ovation 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 Tim Duncan #59?
- 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.
