Signed on the Fairway — Golf Autograph Cards
Tiger Woods autos, SP Authentic signatures, and the most collectible ink in golf. Mantel is where auto collectors connect to track comps, share pulls, and find the signed cards worth owning.
From the Community
Related posts from the Golf Cards community on Mantel
Join the Golf Autograph Cards Community
Share your collection, compare comps, browse live marketplace listings, track trends, and connect with collectors who care about the hobby and the market behind every card.
SLAM Scores & Marketplace
SLAM is a liquidity score from 0–100 that measures how easily a card can be bought or sold at a fair price. It combines recent sales data, trading volume, and market depth into a single number. Listings are aggregated from eBay and Fanatics Collect.
90–100 Cash
70–89 Liquid
40–69 Inventory
0–39 Collection

Liquid
High demand, easy to sell
Tiger Woods - 2001 Upper Deck Golf
Avg Sale
$297
Sales
136
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Tiger Woods - 2001 Upper Deck Golf
Avg Sale
$74
Sales
39
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Jack Nicklaus - 1981 Donruss Golf
Avg Sale
$3317
Sales
3
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →
Collection
Buy it because you love it
Tiger Woods - 2001 Upper Deck Golf
Avg Sale
$63
Sales
33
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Tiger Woods - 2001 Upper Deck Golf
Avg Sale
$82
Sales
7
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
John Daly - 2001 Upper Deck Golf
Avg Sale
$43
Sales
15
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →
Where Golf Auto Collectors Gather
Golf autograph cards occupy a unique space in the hobby. The player pool is smaller, the products are more concentrated, and the top-end signatures — Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer — carry values that rival the biggest names in any sport. Collecting golf autos is not about chasing hundreds of rookies. It is about knowing which players, products, and print runs matter and understanding why a Tiger Woods SP Authentic auto commands a different tier of pricing than a mid-range certified signature.
On Mantel, you will connect with collectors who follow the golf card market with the same focus they bring to the sport itself. Conversations cover everything from which PGA Tour rookies are worth targeting to why certain Upper Deck products from the early 2000s remain the gold standard for golf autographs. If you care about the quality of the signature, the prestige of the product, and the real market value behind the card, this is where you will find collectors who think the same way.
See What Collectors Are Pulling and Buying
Post your golf auto hits and see what the community is chasing. Which SP Authentic autos are surfacing in breaks? What are collectors paying for graded Tiger Woods signatures? Which rising PGA Tour stars have autograph cards worth targeting before their market takes off?
Golf auto collectors on Mantel share their best pulls, compare signature quality across products, and discuss which new releases are delivering autograph content that justifies the price. The golf card market rewards patience and knowledge — and this community shares both freely.
Live Marketplace Listings in One Feed
Search real-time listings for golf autograph cards from eBay and Fanatics Collect without switching between platforms. Find SP Authentic on-card autos, Exquisite Collection signatures, Goodwin Champions certified autos, and signed cards from every major golf card product — filtered by player, product, grade, and price.
Connect your eBay seller account to showcase your golf auto inventory to collectors on Mantel who are actively hunting specific signatures.
Comps That Tell the Real Story
Listed prices lie. Comps don't. The golf autograph market is especially prone to aspirational pricing — sellers listing Tiger Woods autos at five figures based on a single outlier sale while the consistent market sits well below. Mantel shows you real completed sales data so you can understand what golf autograph cards are actually trading for. In a market where a single player can dominate the value conversation, comps keep you grounded.
Track Price Movements Over Time
Major tournament wins, Ryder Cup appearances, and Hall of Fame inductions all move golf auto prices. A player who wins the Masters will see his autograph market respond within hours. Mantel gives you market trends and advanced analytics to track how golf auto values shift around the PGA Tour calendar. This long-view data is especially valuable in golf, where the autograph market is smaller and individual results can create outsized price swings.
SLAM Scores: One Number, Real Market Signal
Golf autograph cards often trade in lower volumes than mainstream sports autos, which makes evaluating real demand harder. The SLAM Score combines recent sales, price direction, and liquidity into a single number that tells you whether a golf auto has genuine market support or is just listed high with no buyers. Before you invest in a premium Tiger Woods auto or bet on a rising PGA Tour star's signature, check the SLAM Score to validate that real demand exists.
What Makes Golf Autographs Unique
SP Authentic Autos — Upper Deck's SP Authentic line is the benchmark for golf autograph cards. On-card signatures, clean designs, and numbered print runs make SP Authentic autos the most recognized and sought-after golf cards in the hobby. Sign of the Times inserts from this product are especially collectible.
Tiger Woods Autographs — Tiger dominates the golf auto market the way few athletes dominate any category. His signed cards from SP Authentic, Exquisite Collection, and Upper Deck flagship products set the ceiling for the entire golf card hobby. Graded on-card Tiger autos are blue-chip collectibles with a track record of long-term value.
Exquisite Collection — Ultra-premium golf cards with low print runs, premium materials, and on-card autographs. Exquisite Collection golf autos sit at the top of the market for collectors who want the most exclusive signed cards available.
Goodwin Champions and Allen & Ginter — Multi-sport products that include golf legends alongside athletes from other sports. These provide an accessible entry point for golf auto collectors and occasionally deliver surprisingly valuable signatures from Hall of Famers and retired greats.
Start Collecting Smarter
- Join Mantel — Connect with golf auto collectors who track the market around every major tournament and product release
- Search live listings — Browse golf autograph cards from eBay and Fanatics Collect in one feed
- Check comps — See what golf autos are actually selling for before you buy at an inflated asking price
- Track the market — Follow auto card trends and SLAM scores around PGA Tour wins, major championships, and Ryder Cup events
- Set alerts — Add specific golf autograph cards to your Wish List and get notified when a listing matches
Join the Golf Autograph Cards Community
Share your collection, compare comps, browse live marketplace listings, track trends, and connect with collectors who care about the hobby and the market behind every card.
Guides & Resources
What Is a SLAM Score? →
Learn how SLAM scores rate card market activity from 0-100 and what the four score tiers mean.
How to Start Collecting Sports Cards →
A complete guide to card types, grading, buying, selling, and building your collection.
What Do Card Grades Mean? →
Learn what PSA 10, BGS 9.5, and other grades actually mean for card value and condition.
What's the Difference Between PSA, Beckett, SGC, CGC? →
Compare the major grading services and understand which one is right for your cards.
How to Get a Card Graded →
Step-by-step guide to submitting your cards for professional grading.
How to Get Cards Graded at the Show →
Tips for on-site grading submissions at card shows and conventions.
How to Protect Your Cards →
Best practices for sleeves, toploaders, and long-term card storage.
10 Tips for Navigating a Card Show →
Make the most of your next card show with these practical tips.
Sports Card Collectors Glossary of Terms →
From "hit" to "RPA" — a complete glossary of the hobby's most common terms.
