
10 Most Valuable Funko Pop Figures Every Collector Should Know About
Freddy Funko as Count Chocula (Glow in the Dark)
Willy Wonka & Golden Ticket 2-Pack (2016 SDCC)
Stan Lee Signed Superhero Pops (Metallic Gold)
Dumbo (Clown Face) - 2013 SDCC Exclusive
Boo Berry Funko Shop Exclusive (Flocked)
Some Funko Pop figures sit on shelves for years at retail price. Others? They appreciate faster than vintage comic books. This guide breaks down ten of the most valuable Funko Pops on the market — the grails that serious collectors chase, why they're worth what they are, and what separates a $15 common from a $2,000+ centerpiece. Whether you're hunting your first grail or just curious what that dusty box in your closet might be worth, here's what matters.
What Makes a Funko Pop Valuable?
Rarity drives value — but it's not the whole story. Scarcity (low production numbers), exclusivity (convention or retailer-specific releases), condition, and pop culture significance all factor in. A Pop with 480 pieces worldwide will command more than a mass-produced figure, sure. But demand matters too. The Metallic Alex DeLarge from A Clockwork Orange (SDCC 2012, 480 pieces) trades hands for $13,000+ not just because it's rare, but because the character has lasting cultural cachet.
Condition is non-negotiable. Mint boxes — no creases, window scuffs, or shelf wear — fetch premiums. Graded Pops (from companies like PSA or Vaulted) in 9.8 or 10 condition can double or triple ungraded values. That said, even a damaged box on a truly rare Pop still holds value. The market's forgiving — to a point.
What Is the Most Expensive Funko Pop Ever Sold?
The Metallic Alex DeLarge (SDCC 2012, 480 pieces) holds the record, with sales exceeding $13,000 for mint-condition specimens. This Clockwork Orange variant wasn't always a grail. When it debuted at San Diego Comic-Con in 2012, Funko was still a niche collectibles company. Only 480 exist. The figure features Alex in his signature bowler hat and white outfit — but finished in metallic paint. Today, it's the holy grail.
Here's the thing: most collectors will never touch one. And that's okay. The hunt for accessible grails — figures in the $200–$800 range — keeps the hobby vibrant. The Alex DeLarge sits at the apex, a reminder that timing (buying early) and luck (attending the right convention) shape collections more than deep pockets alone.
Which Star Wars Funko Pops Are Worth the Most?
The Holographic Darth Maul (SDCC 2012, 480 pieces) and Blue Chrome Mandalorian (Celebration 2019, 2,500 pieces) dominate high-value Star Wars listings, with the former regularly selling for $3,000–$5,000.
Star Wars Pops occupy a unique space. The franchise's massive fan base means even common figures sell well. But the true grails? Convention exclusives with tiny production runs. The Holographic Darth Maul — released the same year as Alex DeLarge — features the Sith Lord in translucent blue plastic. It was a San Diego Comic-Con giveaway, limited to 480 pieces. Today, it's a six-figure grail in the right condition.
The Shadow Trooper (Star Wars Celebration 2011, 480 pieces) and Blue Chrome Yoda (Celebration 2019, 2,500 pieces) follow closely. These aren't mass-market Walmart finds. They're event-specific, timed releases that reward attendees — and punish latecomers. The Mandalorian blue chrome variant, released at Star Wars Celebration Chicago in 2019, seemed plentiful at 2,500 pieces. Then the Disney+ show exploded. Prices tripled within months.
| Figure | Release Event | Production Run | Current Market Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Holographic Darth Maul | SDCC 2012 | 480 pieces | $3,000 – $5,000 |
| Shadow Trooper | Star Wars Celebration 2011 | 480 pieces | $2,500 – $4,000 |
| Blue Chrome Mandalorian | Celebration 2019 | 2,500 pieces | $800 – $1,200 |
| Blue Chrome Yoda | Celebration 2019 | 2,500 pieces | $400 – $600 |
Are There Any Disney Funko Pops Worth Serious Money?
Yes — the Gold Stan Lee (SDCC 2013, 12 pieces) and Dumbo (Clown Paint) (SDCC 2013, 480 pieces) represent Disney's high-value outliers, with the Stan Lee variant virtually unobtainable and Dumbo regularly selling for $4,000+.
Disney's vault mentality extends to Funko. When characters go "into the vault" (discontinued), secondary market prices climb. The Clown Paint Dumbo — released at SDCC 2013 — captures the elephant in his circus makeup. It's creepy. It's distinctive. And at 480 pieces, it's scarce. Prices hover between $3,500 and $5,000 depending on box condition.
The Gold Stan Lee is a different beast entirely. Only 12 exist. They were handed out personally by Stan Lee at SDCC 2013. These don't hit the open market often — and when they do, wallets weep. It's less a collectible than a trophy.
More accessible (relatively speaking): the Metallic Toy Story Alien (SDCC 2011, 480 pieces). The little green three-eyed alien — already a fan favorite — in chrome finish. Prices start around $1,500. Worth noting: Disney Store exclusives from the early 2010s, particularly villain variants, have appreciated steadily. Funko's official site occasionally restocks retired designs, but the original releases retain collector premiums.
What About Marvel and DC Grails?
The Metallic Harley Quinn (With Bat) (SDCC 2012, 480 pieces) and Ghost Rider (Metallic) (SDCC 2013, 480 pieces) top the DC/Marvel hierarchy, with Harley reaching $3,000+ and Ghost Rider commanding $2,000+.
Comic book Pops follow predictable patterns — movie releases spike interest, but the oldest convention exclusives hold value. The Metallic Harley Quinn features the Arkham Asylum video game design in chrome finish. Released at SDCC 2012 (noticing a pattern?), it's become the definitive Harley collectible. Margot Robbie's live-action portrayal drove renewed interest, but the 2012 Pop remains the grail.
The Metallic Ghost Rider — SDCC 2013, 480 pieces — suffers from box condition issues. The flame details on the figure make window scuffs particularly visible. Mint specimens command premiums; even slight damage knocks hundreds off the price. It's a reminder: how you store Pops matters. Sunlight fades boxes. Stacking crushes corners. That "I'll just leave it on the shelf" approach costs money later.
DC's Batman (Blue Chrome) from 2019 and Superman (Black Chrome) from the same year trade for $300–$600. Not grail territory, but solid appreciation. The catch? Chrome variants are divisive. Some collectors love them; others find them gimmicky. Market demand fluctuates accordingly.
What Are the Rarest Freddy Funko Figures?
The Freddy Funko as Venom (SDCC 2012, 12 pieces) and Freddy Funko as Darth Maul (SDCC 2012, 12 pieces) are impossibly rare, with single-digit sales recorded and values estimated at $10,000+.
Freddy Funko — the company's mascot — appears in countless variants. Most are limited to 300–500 pieces. But the "12 piece" releases? Mythical. These weren't sold. They were given to employees, contest winners, or VIPs. The Venom and Darth Maul crossovers represent the intersection of two collector obsessions: Marvel/Star Wars and mascot variants.
More attainable Freddy grails include the Freddy Funko as Big Boy (SDCC 2012, 480 pieces) — yes, the restaurant mascot — which trades for $2,000–$3,000. The Freddy Funko as Boba Fett (Celebration 2015, 144 pieces) commands similar prices. These figures prove a point: weirdness sells. A Freddy in a Big Boy outfit shouldn't work. But it does. Collectors love the absurdity.
How Do You Spot a Future Grail?
Look for low production numbers, convention exclusivity, and characters with lasting cultural relevance — not just flash-in-the-pan trends. The 2012–2013 SDCC Pops dominate this list because Funko was smaller then. Production runs were tighter. Today, "limited" often means 10,000+ pieces. That's not scarce — that's marketing.
That said, opportunities exist. Store-exclusive "chase" variants (1-in-6 ratios) occasionally appreciate. The John Wick Chase from 2017, for example, started as a $30 figure. Today? $200+. Not grail money, but solid returns. The key: buy what you like. If the market shifts, you'll still own something that sparks joy.
Storage matters. Keep boxes — the cardboard is half the value. Use Pop protectors for anything over $50. Avoid attics (heat warps vinyl) and basements (humidity breeds mold). Direct sunlight fades paint. It's basic, but ignored constantly. That $500 Grail becomes a $100 figure with water damage.
Where Should You Buy High-Value Funko Pops?
Established marketplaces with buyer protection — eBay (with authentication), Whatnot (live auctions), and specialized Facebook groups with verified sellers — offer the safest entry points for grail hunting.
Avoid Craigslist for high-dollar transactions. No recourse if the Pop's fake. Counterfeits plague the market — especially for figures over $500. Telltale signs: blurry printing, off-center eyes, matte paint where gloss should exist. When possible, buy graded from PSA, Vaulted, or Beckett. Yes, you'll pay more upfront. But authentication removes the stomach-dropping "is this real?" doubt.
Local comic shops occasionally surface grails. Estate sales too — though that's a crapshoot. The Ottawa collector scene (Jin Côté's home base) has active trading communities. Facebook groups, Discord servers, and the occasional convention booth yield finds. Building relationships with shop owners helps. They remember who collects what. When that long-sought Grail walks in, you get the call.
Here's the thing about value: it changes. Today's $50 common becomes tomorrow's $500 exclusive when Netflix announces a reboot. Today's $2,000 grail might settle at $800 if interest wanes. Collect for the hunt, the community, the stories. The appreciation? That's just a bonus.
