Ronda Rousey Cards: Collect the Pioneer of Women's Combat Sports
The first female UFC champion and WWE crossover star — Rousey cards span two iconic franchises in combat sports collecting.
From the Community
Related posts from the MMA Cards community on Mantel
Join the Ronda Rousey 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
Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2013 Topps UFC Knockout
Avg Sale
$1768
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2012 Topps Finest UFC
Avg Sale
$1200
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →
Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2013 Topps Finest UFC
Avg Sale
$383
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2017 Topps Chrome UFC
Avg Sale
$53
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2017 Topps Chrome UFC
Avg Sale
$53
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Ronda Rousey - 2013 Topps Finest UFC
Avg Sale
$100
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →
The Legacy in Cardboard
The first Women's Bantamweight Champion in UFC history. The dominant force who finished opponents so fast it captivated the entire sports world. A WrestleMania headliner who earned championship reigns in a second franchise. Ronda Rousey's dual-sport career produced a resume of firsts that no other female combat sports athlete can match, and her cards carry the historical weight of someone who did not just compete at the highest level but fundamentally changed what was possible for women in fighting.
That dual-sport legacy gives Rousey a unique position in the card hobby. Her cards appear in both Topps UFC products and Topps WWE products, providing two distinct collecting lanes with two distinct buyer pools. MMA collectors and wrestling collectors both have reasons to pursue her key cards, which broadens the demand base beyond what most combat sports athletes can generate. Her UFC Hall of Fame induction cemented the legacy, and the WWE chapter added a second act that keeps her name relevant across collecting communities.
Definitive Cards in the Collection
2012 Topps UFC Bloodlines (RC) — Widely considered her rookie card and the most sought-after Rousey card in the hobby. This is a foundational piece of women's MMA collecting, and graded copies in PSA 10 carry premiums given the age of the card and relatively low population counts at the top grade.
Panini Prizm UFC and Select UFC — Prizm and Select offer clean designs with silver and color parallels that collectors prize. These provide the modern production tier of Rousey's MMA card market, with numbered variations offering tiered scarcity for different collector budgets.
Topps WWE Chrome and Undisputed — Rousey's WWE cards from Chrome and Undisputed lines cover her professional wrestling chapter. On-card autographs from either franchise — UFC or WWE — are the premier targets for high-end collectors.
What Moves the Market
Watch for legacy moments — Hall of Fame milestones, documentary features, anniversary events, and any return to competition in either MMA or wrestling. Those are the catalysts that move this market, and the best time to buy is before they are announced. The crossover collector base provides a base price that holds better than most fighters because demand comes from two separate hobby communities rather than one.
The supply picture favors collectors who move early. Early women's UFC cards from 2012-2013 were produced in modest quantities, and surviving high-grade copies are genuinely scarce. The dual-franchise presence means more total Rousey cards exist than for most combat sports athletes, but the key rookie and autograph cards from her UFC era still carry meaningful scarcity that supports premium pricing.
Track the Legacy on Mantel
Rousey's dual-franchise career created a collector base that straddles two separate hobbies — UFC card collectors and WWE card collectors — and those groups rarely cross paths on their own. The community on Mantel is where they meet, with MMA collectors sharing knowledge about which 2012 Topps Bloodlines grades are genuinely scarce while wrestling hobbyists break down how her WWE Chrome and Undisputed cards fit into the broader women's division market. That cross-franchise perspective is uniquely valuable for a name that appears in both Topps UFC and Topps WWE products. Real-time listings from eBay and Fanatics Collect cover her entire card universe in one searchable feed so you do not have to hunt across separate UFC and WWE searches. SLAM scores measure actual sales velocity, price trends, and trading activity to show whether demand on a specific card is genuine. Comps reveal what Rousey cards are actually selling for rather than inflated asking prices, and Wish List alerts notify you when a target card appears at a price you are willing to pay.
Rousey pioneered an entire division and built a legacy across two franchises. Honor that history by browsing live listings, checking SLAM scores and comps before you buy, and joining a community where UFC and WWE collectors share the knowledge it takes to navigate the most important career in women's combat sports.
Join the Ronda Rousey 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.
Explore More Categories
Related
MMA Autograph CardsSports
Baseball CardsFootball CardsBasketball CardsHockey CardsSoccer CardsWrestling CardsGolf CardsMMA CardsRacing CardsTennis CardsOlympics Cards