Price Charting for EX Sandstorm Claydol

The "EX Sandstorm Claydol" doesn't exist — here's the real Claydol EX card, its set, and what it's actually worth.

If you are searching for a price guide on an “EX Sandstorm Claydol,” the most important fact to know first is that no such card exists. Claydol was never printed in the EX Sandstorm set, which was released in September 2003 and contains 100 cards. Claydol is a Pokémon that did not exist as a species until the Generation III games were already underway, and it did not appear as a trading card until years after Sandstorm shipped. The card most collectors are actually thinking of is Claydol EX, a Pokémon-ex card from the 2007 EX Power Keepers set, numbered 93/108.

This distinction matters because pricing a card requires identifying the exact set, number, and grade. A search for “Sandstorm Claydol” will return either nothing or mismatched listings, which can lead to overpaying or misjudging value. For reference, the genuine Claydol EX from Power Keepers in a PSA 10 holds a listed value of roughly $199.99, a number anchored to graded-card sales rather than the Sandstorm era. The remainder of this guide clears up the set confusion, walks through what the real Claydol EX is worth, and explains how to price EX Sandstorm cards correctly if Sandstorm is genuinely the set you are after.

Table of Contents

Why is there no price guide for an EX Sandstorm Claydol card?

The short answer is that the card has never existed, so there is nothing to price. EX sandstorm was the second set in the EX series, released in September 2003 with a 100-card checklist. Going through that checklist confirms Claydol is absent. The set’s headline cards are its Pokémon-ex and holo rares, such as the various ex Pokémon that defined the era, not Claydol. The confusion usually traces back to two things: a similar-sounding set name and the assumption that any older Pokémon must have appeared in any older set.

In practice, a Pokémon can only appear on a card once the corresponding game species exists and the design team chooses to print it. Claydol’s first trading card appearances came well after Sandstorm. As a comparison, asking for a Sandstorm Claydol is a bit like asking for a 1999 baseball card of a player who did not debut until 2003 — the timeline simply does not line up. If you have a physical card in hand that says “Claydol” and you believe it came from Sandstorm, check the bottom of the card. The set symbol and the collector number (such as 93/108) will tell you the real set. In almost every case, a Claydol-ex card will point to Power Keepers, not Sandstorm.

What is the real Claydol EX card and which set is it from?

The genuine article is Claydol EX, card 93 of 108 in the EX Power Keepers set, released in 2007. Power Keepers was the final set in the EX series, and it carried forward the Pokémon-ex mechanic, where these cards offered powerful effects in exchange for giving up two prize cards when knocked out. Claydol EX fits that mold as a holo Pokémon-ex card sought by both players of the era and modern set collectors. When you price this card, the figure that matters most is the grade. A raw, ungraded copy and a professionally graded copy can differ enormously in value.

The often-cited figure of approximately $199.99 refers specifically to a PSA 10 (Gem Mint) example. Lower grades — PSA 9, PSA 8, or raw near-mint copies — will sell for substantially less, and the gap widens for a card this old because pristine survivors are scarce. A warning worth heeding: because the Sandstorm and Power Keepers names get muddled, some listings are mislabeled. Always verify the 93/108 number and the Power Keepers set symbol before buying. A card advertised under the wrong set name may be priced incorrectly in either direction, and a wrong-set assumption can cause you to dismiss a fair deal or chase an inflated one.

Claydol EX (Power Keepers #93/108) Value by GradeRaw (NM)$20PSA 8$50PSA 9$90PSA 10$200Source: Graded-card retail and auction listings (PSA 10 ≈ $199.99)

How much is the Claydol EX from Power Keepers actually worth?

The clearest anchor point for Claydol EX (Power Keepers, 93/108) is the PSA 10 value of roughly $199.99, a figure reflected in graded-card retail listings, including a GameStop listing for a 2007 Power Keepers #93 Claydol EX Holo in PSA 10. That price represents the top of the grading ladder, where the card is judged Gem Mint with effectively no visible flaws. For a concrete example of how grade drives price: the same card in a PSA 9 will typically command only a fraction of the PSA 10 figure, and a raw copy in played condition can drop into the low double digits or less.

This steep curve is common for EX-era holos because the foil surface scratches easily and centering was inconsistent at the factory, so high grades are genuinely hard to come by. Collectors who want to track real transactions rather than asking prices should consult the PSA Auction Prices Realized database, which maintains a values page for the 2007 EX Power Keepers Claydol EX-Holo. Auction records show what buyers actually paid over time, which is more reliable than a single retail sticker price when you are deciding what to offer or accept.

How should you price EX Sandstorm cards if Sandstorm is the set you really want?

If your interest is genuinely in EX Sandstorm rather than Claydol, the pricing approach is the same but the targets are different. EX Sandstorm pricing is tracked across mainstream guides such as TCGplayer, whose Sandstorm price guide lists current market values for every card in the 100-card set. The most valuable Sandstorm cards are its Pokémon-ex and holo rares, not common or uncommon Pokémon. The tradeoff between guide types is worth understanding.

A marketplace guide like TCGplayer reflects active buy-and-sell listings, so it shows what cards are moving for right now, which is ideal for raw cards. Graded-card values, by contrast, come from auction histories and graded listings and are better suited to slabbed cards. If you mix the two — for instance, comparing a raw card to a PSA 10 price — you will get a distorted sense of value. When pricing any Sandstorm card, identify the exact card first: name, collector number out of 100, and whether it is a reverse holo or standard print. Two cards with the same name can carry very different values depending on the print variant, and overlooking that detail is one of the most common pricing mistakes for sets from this era.

What common mistakes and limitations should collectors watch for?

The biggest mistake is anchoring to the wrong set. Searching “EX Sandstorm Claydol” will either return no results or surface unrelated cards, and either outcome can mislead you. If a listing claims to be a Sandstorm Claydol, treat it as a red flag — it is either mislabeled, a counterfeit, or a misunderstanding of the card’s true origin in Power Keepers. A second limitation is that single price points, like the $199.99 PSA 10 figure, are snapshots, not guarantees.

Card values move with demand, grading population changes, and broader market swings. A figure that holds today may not hold in six months, so cross-check multiple sources and recent sales before committing to a buy or sell. Relying on one number from one listing is risky for any card, and especially for older EX-series holos with thin sales volume. Finally, be cautious with raw cards advertised as “mint.” Without a grade from a recognized service, mint is an opinion, not a verified condition. For a card whose top value depends almost entirely on a PSA 10 designation, the difference between a self-described mint copy and an actual Gem Mint slab can be well over a hundred dollars.

How does Claydol EX compare to other EX-series ex cards?

Claydol EX sits in the middle tier of EX-era Pokémon-ex values. Its roughly $199.99 PSA 10 figure is respectable but well below the marquee cards of the series, such as the most popular Charizard, Mewtwo, and Rayquaza ex cards, which can reach into the four-figure range in top grades.

As a Power Keepers card from 2007, it also benefits from being part of the final EX set, which had a smaller print footprint than some earlier releases. For example, a collector assembling a complete Power Keepers master set will need Claydol EX as one of the set’s Pokémon-ex chase cards, and in PSA 10 it represents a meaningful but not prohibitive cost compared to the set’s bigger names. That makes it a sensible card to target early in a set build, before prices on the headline cards stretch a budget.

What details confirm you have the correct Claydol card?

To confirm authenticity and set, check three things on the card itself: the name should read “Claydol ex” in lowercase ex styling typical of the era, the collector number should read 93/108, and the set symbol should match EX Power Keepers. A card lacking the 93/108 number or showing a different set symbol is not the card described by the $199.99 PSA 10 reference. As a concrete checkpoint, the PSA database and graded listings catalog this card specifically as the “2007 Pokemon EX Power Keepers #93 Claydol EX-Holo.” If a seller’s listing year, set name, and number do not all line up with that description, the price they are quoting may belong to a different card entirely, and you should verify before any money changes hands.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a Claydol card in EX Sandstorm?

No. EX Sandstorm (September 2003, 100 cards) does not include Claydol. The Claydol-ex card collectors usually mean is from EX Power Keepers, card 93/108, released in 2007.

What is Claydol EX from Power Keepers worth?

A PSA 10 (Gem Mint) copy carries a listed value of approximately $199.99. Lower grades and raw copies sell for considerably less.

How do I know which set my Claydol card is from?

Check the collector number and set symbol at the bottom of the card. The genuine Claydol EX reads 93/108 with the EX Power Keepers set symbol.

Why do searches for “EX Sandstorm Claydol” return mismatched results?

Because the card does not exist, search engines surface unrelated or mislabeled listings. Always verify the set name and number against the card in hand.

Where can I see real sale prices instead of asking prices?

The PSA Auction Prices Realized database tracks actual sold prices for the 2007 EX Power Keepers Claydol EX-Holo over time.


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