Jon Jones Cards: Collect the Greatest MMA Fighter of All Time

The youngest UFC champion in history, a dominant light heavyweight reign, and a heavyweight title that cemented GOAT status.

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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.

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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

Jon Jones - 2009 Topps UFC Round 2
SLAM 16

Collection

Buy it because you love it

Jon Jones - 2009 Topps UFC Round 2

Avg Sale

$3028

Sales

2

Grade

PSA 10

View in app

Jon Jones - 2025 Panini Combat Anthology Multi-Sport
SLAM 6

Collection

Buy it because you love it

Jon Jones - 2025 Panini Combat Anthology Multi-Sport

Avg Sale

$2600

Sales

1

Grade

PSA 10

View in app

Jon Jones - 2013 Topps Finest UFC
SLAM 2

Collection

Buy it because you love it

Jon Jones - 2013 Topps Finest UFC

Avg Sale

$475

Sales

1

Grade

PSA 10

View in app

Why Collectors Are Watching

Youngest UFC champion in history at age 23. A light heavyweight reign that dismantled every elite challenger put in front of him. A heavyweight championship that answered the one remaining question about his legacy. Jon Jones holds a legitimate claim to the title of greatest mixed martial artist of all time, and the numbers behind his card market reflect that status. His combination of creativity, reach utilization, and fight IQ produced a highlight reel of dominant performances that may never be matched. For collectors, Jones represents the kind of sustained greatness that translates into steady long-term demand rather than hype-driven spikes.

Jones cards carry GOAT premium pricing — a designation that provides built-in value support regardless of what happens in any individual market cycle. His collector base includes MMA historians who view his career as the benchmark for the sport, combat sports collectors who treat his key cards as cornerstone pieces, and newer collectors drawn in by the heavyweight chapter of his legacy. That depth of demand creates a market with genuine price stability.

The Cards That Matter

2009 Topps UFC (RC) — The key Jon Jones rookie card and a foundational piece of any MMA card collection. Early UFC card production was modest, making this card genuinely scarce in high grades. PSA 10 copies carry meaningful premiums and trade infrequently because holders recognize the long-term significance.

Panini Prizm UFC and Select UFC — Prizm and Select bring modern production quality and the hobby's most recognizable parallel structures to the Jones market. Silver prizms are the most liquid mid-tier option, while color parallels and numbered variations provide the scarcity tiers that serious collectors target.

Topps UFC Knockout Autographs — On-card autograph inserts from the Knockout line represent the top tier of the Jones market. Numbered versions under /50 combine a verified signature with genuine scarcity, making them the strongest long-term cards in his market.

Price Catalysts This Season

Watch for fight announcements and title defenses — those are the primary catalysts, but Jones also benefits from more stable collector interest than most fighters. GOAT debates on social media and in MMA media consistently bring attention back to his cards regardless of his activity level. Retirement speculation creates urgency — if you want to collect his key pieces, acting before his career concludes is the smartest move. Any surprise return announcement would trigger a significant price event.

The overall MMA card market has matured significantly, and Jones cards are treated as cornerstone pieces within that space. Early UFC products from 2009 have thin surviving populations in high grades, and that natural scarcity means even modest demand shifts translate into noticeable price movement on his foundational cards.

How Mantel Gives You the Edge

Fight announcements create instant demand shifts in the Jones market — a heavyweight title defense confirmation or a superfight booking can reprice his key cards before most collectors even process the news. SLAM scores catch those velocity spikes as they happen, measuring actual sales data, price trends, and trading activity so you can see whether a fight-week surge reflects genuine buying or just reactive listing inflation. That real-time demand signal is critical for a GOAT-tier market where prices adjust faster than traditional comp data can keep up. Real-time listings from eBay and Fanatics Collect feed into one searchable place so you can scan the entire Jones market the moment an announcement drops. Comps show what his cards are actually selling for rather than just asking prices, and Wish List alerts notify you the moment a target card appears at your price. The community on Mantel is where the GOAT conversation lives for collectors — sharing graded slabs, breaking down how each heavyweight championship defense reshapes card values, and tracking what others are adding to their collections.

Stay ahead of the Jones market by searching live listings, checking SLAM scores and comps before fight-week pricing takes hold, and connecting with a collector community that never stops debating the greatest fighter of all time.

Join the Jon Jones 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.

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