Top Selling Magic: The Gathering Cards on TCGplayer: June 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 June 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 June 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 The Mind Stone
Set: Marvel Super Heroes
Average Sale Price: $65.82

The Mind Stone, which is awfully-named given that we have Mind Stone in MTG already, is an excellent mana rock which eventually lets you blink creatures once per turn. While we’d argue that The Soul Stone is actually stronger, this one is newer, and people are clamoring to pick up a copy for themselves.

#2 The Soul Stone
Set: Marvel’s Spider-Man
Average Sale Price: $76.59

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.

As we now have The Mind Stone as well, which more or less confirmed their plan to turn all of the Infinity Stones into mana rocks—and likely, to print some payoff for assembling them all. Players hardly needed another incentive to seek out The Soul Stone, but they got one anyway.

#3 Badgermole Cub
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $52.12

Badgermole’s mountain-sized popularity made it the best-selling Magic card over $50 for the sixth 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.

#4 Rhystic Study
Set: Prophecy
Average Sale Price: $52.01

Rhystic Study is a staple of Commander, and the single most-played Game Changer according to EDHREC. While some players have worried (or wished) that WotC would ban the card given its ubiquity, the Commander Format Panel’s announcement on February 9 reiterated that they have no plans to ban the card in the near future. As a result, fans have felt confident continuing to spend over $50 per copy.

#5 Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx
Set: Theros
Average Sale Price: $52.31

Nykthos, Shrine to Nyx is a mighty card in mono-colored Commander decks, as it nets you mana equal to your devotion to a single color. It’s also a card that a lot of players would love to see reprinted, and one that just isn’t getting that reprint at the moment. It’s one of the best lands in Commander.

Top Selling Magic Cards: $1.00 to $49.99

#1 Slime Against Humanity
Set: Murders at Karlov Manor
Average Sale Price: $1.69

Slime Against Humanity is one of a few cards which allow you to put as many of them in a deck as you’d like, making them incredibly popular in Commander. This one also has synergies with both tokens and +1/+1 counters, which just keep getting new options in nearly every single set.

#2 Hare Apparent
Set: Foundations
Average Sale Price: $3.26

As with Slime Against Humanity, Hare Apparent earns its place here for the same reason it appears in our list of the most expensive “bulk” Magic cards. Its ability dares players to jam as many copies of this card into their deck as they can, which inflates the demand for this card over similarly popular cards that are limited to four copies per deck (or one in Commander).

#3 Sol Ring
Set: Commander: Secrets of Strixhaven
Average Sale Price: $1.12

Sol Ring always ranks among the best-selling 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. This version of Sol Ring had one of the lowest Market Prices in June, which helped it show up in more players’ carts when they used Cart Optimizer.

#4 Fabled Passage
Set: Commander: Secrets of Strixhaven
Average Sale Price: $1.07

Fabled Passage is an incredibly strong fetch land in Commander, as it lets you regularly bring the land in untapped, and not only that, but it’s about a tenth of the price of other fetch lands. The Secrets of Strixhaven version is the cheapest one available right now, so it’s selling well.

#5 Flow State
Set: Secrets of Strixhaven
Average Sale Price: $2.85

Much like Stock Up from Aetherdrift, Flow State sets a new standard for card draw. Every spell-based blue deck in all but the fastest formats are going to want this card for the foreseeable future.

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.