Top Selling Magic: The Gathering Cards on TCGplayer: February 2026

The first step to serving customer demand is to understand it. So to help you follow what’s currently popular with players and collectors, we’ve put together a pair of downloadable CSV reports of the top-selling Magic: The Gathering cards of the past month.

These reports show the name and set of the Magic cards with the highest total number of copies sold on the TCGplayer Marketplace between February 1 and 28, 2026. The reports consider cards from different sets to be distinct (even if they have the same name), but do not distinguish copies sold by condition (Near Mint, Lightly Played, etc.) or by printing (Foil, etc.).

The two reports cover cards that had an average sale price in February within two ranges: $50.00 or more, and $1.00 to $49.99.

Here are five highlights from each report.

Top Selling Magic Cards: $50 or More

#1 Badgermole Cub
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $54.70

Badgermole’s mountain-sized popularity made it the bestselling Magic card over $50 for the fourth month in a row.

It all comes down to the card’s power. With no additional support, Badgermole Cub puts 3/3 worth of stats into play and accelerates you one mana—not bad at all. But with any kind of mana dorks (like Llanowar Elves) or lands that sacrifice themselves (like fetch lands), the cub quickly builds an overwhelming mana advantage. It even stacks with itself!

We’ve seen Badgermole Cub burrow its way into Standard, Modern, Commander, and even Legacy. You should expect it to keep popping up in any format where it’s legal for the foreseeable future.

#2 The Soul Stone
Set: Marvel's Spider-Man
Average Sale Price: $60.07

In Commander, The Soul Stone is an efficient, indestructible mana rock that offers recurring value once you harness it—a no-brainer for almost any black deck.

The other Infinity Stones are expected to make their cardboard debuts in later Marvel sets like Marvel Super Heroes, likely along with some payoff for assembling them all, so any players with the means to do so are picking up their copies of The Soul Stone now while it’s relatively inexpensive.

#3 Roaming Throne
Set: The Lost Caverns of Ixalan
Average Sale Price: $58.18

Roaming Throne was always destined to be a Commander staple—but if that wasn’t enough, it’s now a staple of Standard too thanks to all the typal support in Lorwyn Eclipsed. Elemental decks are already notching Top 8s at Regional Championships, and they may do more than that before Throne finally rotates.

#4 Roaming Throne (Borderless)
Set: The Lost Caverns of Ixalan
Average Sale Price: $54.44

Surprisingly, the Borderless version of Roaming Throne is cheaper than the normal printing right now. All versions of the card have climbed significantly since December, so the market is still correcting itself.

#5 Wan Shi Tong, Librarian (Borderless)
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $74.82

Wan Shi Tong, Librarian almost gives Badgermole Cub a run for its money as the top mythic in Avatar: The Last Airbender. The jealous owl spirit naturally scales in power according to the format—the more searching there is, the better it gets—so players have been eager to test it out in Standard, Modern, and even Vintage.

Top Selling Magic Cards: $1.00 to $49.99

#1 Lutri, the Spellchaser
Set: Ikoria: Lair of Behemoths
Average Sale Price: $2.29

On February 9, the Commander Format Panel unbanned Lutri, the Spellcaster in Commander, with the caveat that it can’t be used as a companion. Sales of the electric otter surged immediately, as every player who’d wanted to use the card in Commander before but couldn’t suddenly bought their copies at once.

#2 Hexing Squelcher
Set: Lorwyn Eclipsed
Average Sale Price: $17.25

Tired of having your spells countered? Hexing Squelcher fixes that. According to EDHREC, this is the single most popular card in Lorwyn Eclipsed among Commander players. With plenty of applications in 60-card formats too, you should expect this card to be in high demand with every player who ever used “mono-blue” as a swear word.

#3 Lutri, the Spellchaser
Set: March of the Machine: Multiverse Legends
Average Sale Price: $3.27

Every version of Lutri sold fast on February 9, including this charming borderless version.

#4 Sol Ring
Set: Commander: Edge of Eternities
Average Sale Price: $1.43

Sol Ring always ranks among the bestselling cards in Magic, thanks to being a symbol of the game’s most popular format, but those sales are usually spread out among its many (many) reprints.

A pair of buyouts helped push this reprint above the rest. On February 14, the average number of copies per buyer spiked to 10.8, followed by a spike to 34.8 on February 17.

#5 Hare Apparent
Set: Foundations
Average Sale Price: $3.91

Cards like Hare Apparent allow (and encourage) players to play way more than the standard four copies in their decks, so anyone who wants to build around it needs tons of copies.

Selling cards that have high “velocity” keeps your cash flow healthy so you can take advantage of new opportunities. Check out our reports on the top-selling cards in Yu-Gi-Oh! and Pokémon, and be sure to list these cards on TCGplayer to unlock value you can reinvest in your business.