Novak Djokovic Cards: Collect the Most Decorated Grand Slam Champion Ever

Twenty-four Grand Slam titles — the all-time record — and a career that keeps rewriting the history books. Djokovic cards lead the tennis collecting market.

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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

Novak Djokovic - 2006 Ace Authentic Grand Slam Tennis
SLAM 9

Collection

Buy it because you love it

Novak Djokovic - 2006 Ace Authentic Grand Slam Tennis

Avg Sale

$25499

Sales

1

Grade

PSA 10

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The Legacy in Cardboard

Twenty-four Grand Slam singles titles — more than any player in the history of tennis. That number is the foundation of every conversation about Novak Djokovic's cards, and it keeps growing. His relentless consistency, including holding all four Grand Slam trophies simultaneously, spending the most weeks at world number one, and winning every major tournament at least twice, makes his cards the benchmark for tennis collecting value. Unlike Federer and Nadal who have retired, Djokovic is still competing, which means his market still has performance-driven upside on top of an already cemented legacy.

That active-player dynamic is the key differentiator. Every Grand Slam tournament Djokovic enters is a potential new record, a potential new milestone, and a potential new price catalyst. Collectors who buy now are getting legacy-tier cards at prices that have not yet fully absorbed the complete career — a rare opportunity in any sport's card market.

Definitive Cards in the Collection

2007-08 Ace Authentic (True RC) — Djokovic's earliest cards appear in Ace Authentic products from 2007-2008, which serve as his true rookie cards. These are genuinely scarce and highly sought after in graded condition. Ace Authentic era tennis cards are among the hardest pieces to source in the hobby.

Topps Chrome and Topps Now — Topps Chrome entries provide the modern production tier with recognizable branding. Topps Now cards tied to record-breaking moments — Grand Slam wins, world ranking milestones — combine event significance with limited print runs.

Leaf Signature Series Autographs — On-card autographs from Leaf are the high-end tier of Djokovic collecting. Total production is extremely limited, and these cards carry substantial premiums. They represent the definitive high-end pieces for collectors building a legacy collection around the all-time leader.

What Moves the Market

Djokovic's market moves with Grand Slam wins, record-breaking milestones, and the ongoing GOAT debate. Each new title pushes prices higher as the record becomes more untouchable and the historical argument tilts further in his favor. Watch every major draw — if he's in contention by the quarterfinals, that's your signal that a price move is coming. The Big Three narrative keeps all three players' cards interconnected — any milestone from Djokovic generates secondary interest in Federer and Nadal cards, and vice versa.

His eventual retirement will trigger a major market event similar to what Federer and Nadal experienced — a rush of legacy buying from collectors who want to lock in cards before the final chapter closes. For now, collectors benefit from buying during the active career phase while prices have not yet fully reflected the complete legacy. Each additional Grand Slam raises the base price that holds for every card in his collection.

Track the Legacy on Mantel

Djokovic is still competing, which means every Grand Slam tournament is a potential record-breaking milestone — and SLAM scores on Mantel show you whether a title win is actually moving card prices or just generating noise. SLAM scores measure real sales velocity, price trends, and trading activity across Djokovic's Ace Authentic rookies, Topps Chrome entries, and Leaf autographs so you can see within days whether a new Grand Slam record translated into genuine buying activity or stalled at inflated asking prices. Mantel aggregates real-time listings from eBay and Fanatics Collect into one searchable feed so you can find specific cards across the scattered tennis market without checking multiple platforms. Comps show what Djokovic cards are actually selling for, giving you the data to time entries around major tournament windows rather than guessing. Wish List alerts notify you when a target card appears at your price, and the community on Mantel is where collectors tracking the all-time Grand Slam leader debate where each new title places him in the GOAT conversation, share their Djokovic cards, and plan their moves before each major.

Djokovic is still writing history, and his cards carry the weight of the greatest Grand Slam career ever assembled. Track the velocity data after every milestone, verify value with comps, and connect with a community that watches every record fall in real time.

Join the Novak Djokovic 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

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How to Protect Your Cards

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10 Tips for Navigating a Card Show

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