Ripbin

Unown [E] card values & price guide

2 cards · 2 sets · 2001–2007

2
cards tracked
$2.09
top card value
2
sets

Looking up Unown [E] card values? Ripbin tracks 2 of them across 2 sets — worth from $1.14 for common issues up to $2.09 for the top card — each with current prices and live listings.

Topping the list: the 2001 Neo Discovery Unown [E] #67, worth about $2.09 raw. High-grade copies command a premium on top of that.

Unown [E] card prices

CardYearValue
Unown [E]Neo Discovery#672001$2.09
Unown [E]Mysterious Treasures#652007$1.14

Unown [E] card market

Unown [E] cards in our catalog span 2001 to 2007 — earlier issues generally carry the collector premium, while recent releases trade closer to pack-fresh prices.

Prices below are ungraded market values; click through to any card to compare PSA, BGS, CGC and SGC graded prices and find live eBay listings.

Where to start collecting Unown [E]

There's a Unown [E] card for every budget: 2 cards under $10.00 — ideal entry points. Newer collectors typically begin with affordable base versions; the premium tier is dominated by graded early-year cards and short-printed parallels.

Unown [E] cards by year

YearCardsTop cardValue
20071Mysterious Treasures #65$1.14
20011Neo Discovery #67$2.09

Sets featuring Unown [E]

Frequently asked questions

What is the most valuable Unown [E] card?
The 2001 Neo Discovery Unown [E] #67 is the most valuable Unown [E] card we track, at around $2.09 ungraded.
How many Unown [E] cards are there?
Ripbin tracks 2 Unown [E] cards across 2 sets. New cards are added as sets release.
What is the cheapest Unown [E] card?
Unown [E] cards start around $1.14 for common base issues — an affordable way to start a collection before moving up to graded or early-year cards.
How do I sell my Unown [E] cards?
Compare your card against the price table above, check its live eBay listings for the current market, and scan it with Ripbin to track it in your locker and receive bids from other collectors.
Are Unown [E] cards a good investment?
Card values move with hobby demand, condition and grading population. Use the price table to compare values, and check each card's live listings before buying or selling.