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2015-16 Prizm Gold Stephen Curry PSA 10 Sells
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2015-16 Prizm Gold Stephen Curry PSA 10 Sells

A 2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364 Stephen Curry PSA 10 (Pop 2) sold for $13,422 at Goldin on March 15, 2026. Here’s the context for collectors.

Mar 15, 20267 min read
2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364 Stephen Curry (#05/10) - PSA GEM MT 10 - Pop 2

Sold Card

2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364 Stephen Curry (#05/10) - PSA GEM MT 10 - Pop 2

Sale Price

$13,422.00

Platform

Goldin

2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364 Stephen Curry (#05/10) - PSA GEM MT 10 - Pop 2 Sells for $13,422

On March 15, 2026, Goldin closed the auction on a key modern Stephen Curry parallel: a 2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364, serial numbered 05/10 and graded PSA GEM MT 10 (often written PSA 10). The final price was $13,422.

For Prizm and Curry collectors, this is a meaningful data point. Below, we break down what this card is, why it matters, and how this sale fits into the broader market context.

Card overview

Let’s start with the basics:

  • Player: Stephen Curry
  • Team: Golden State Warriors
  • Year: 2015-16
  • Set: Panini Prizm Basketball
  • Card number: #364
  • Parallel: Gold Prizm (serial numbered to 10 copies)
  • Serial number: 05/10
  • Rookie card? No – Curry’s true rookies are from 2009-10 products
  • Grading company: PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator)
  • Grade: GEM MT 10 (Gem Mint)
  • Population report (PSA): Pop 2 in PSA 10 at the time of sale

Gold Prizms are among the most chased parallels in the Panini Prizm line. Numbered to just 10 copies, they sit near the top of the non–1-of-1 color hierarchy for most collectors.

2015-16 is well into Curry’s career, so this is not a rookie card. Instead, it’s a low-serial, flagship chromium parallel of an established superstar, from a period when he was redefining how the game is played.

Why this card matters to collectors

1. Panini Prizm Gold is a core modern parallel

Prizm is often referred to as a “flagship” chromium set in basketball – meaning it’s a central, recurring release that many collectors use as a benchmark across years. Within Prizm, the Gold Prizm (out of 10) is one of the most recognizable and consistent chase parallels.

For ultra-modern and modern eras, Gold Prizms are often a reference point when people talk about “top-tier non-1/1” cards of star players.

2. Low serial number and high grade

This specific card is:

  • Serial numbered to 10 – a built-in cap on supply
  • PSA 10 – the highest standard baseline grade most collectors target
  • Pop 2 – only two copies have achieved PSA 10 status according to the population report (the count of how many copies PSA has graded at each grade level)

When you combine a print run of 10 with just 2 PSA 10s, you get a card that is thinly traded. That means any auction result can have an outsized effect on how collectors think about value, simply because sales are infrequent.

3. Capturing peak-era Curry

The 2015-16 season is historically significant for Stephen Curry and the Warriors:

  • Curry was coming off his first MVP in 2014-15.
  • The 2015-16 season itself was his unanimous MVP year.
  • The Warriors set the regular-season wins record (73–9).

This card is not an in-action photo of a single iconic shot, but it represents the period when Curry’s impact and popularity were at their peak. Many collectors look for cards that line up with meaningful seasons, not just rookie years.

Market context: where $13,422 fits

The final price for this card at Goldin was $13,422.

Because this is a Gold Prizm /10 with a population of 2 in PSA 10, exact comparable sales (also called “comps”) are naturally limited. For cards like this, collectors usually look at:

  • Past sales of the same card in other grades (PSA 9, BGS 9.5)
  • Other key Curry Gold Prizms from nearby years
  • Top-tier parallels of Curry from similar-era premium chromium sets

As of the time of writing, publicly available data for this exact card in PSA 10 is sparse; it does not appear often at major auction houses in this grade. That means this sale effectively becomes one of the reference points for future pricing discussions.

In general hobby terms:

  • Gold Prizms of all-time greats (LeBron, Curry, Durant, etc.) from core years often command strong premiums versus more common color (Silver, Red, Blue, etc.).
  • Non-rookie but key-era stars usually price below true rookies and earlier flagship parallels, but can still be heavily collected because they capture championship or MVP windows.

Rather than saying this sale is definitively “high” or “low,” it’s more accurate to view it as:

  • A fresh, high-grade benchmark for a scarce, low-pop Curry parallel
  • A data point that future buyers and sellers can reference when assessing Curry Gold Prizms from mid-2010s seasons

Set and era: modern, not mass-printed junk wax

The 2015-16 Prizm release lands in what collectors typically call the modern era (as opposed to vintage or the 1980s–90s “junk wax” period of very large print runs). While modern sets do have wider availability, the key low-numbered parallels like Gold /10 remain legitimately scarce.

That scarcity is reinforced by grading behavior:

  • Not all 10 raw copies will ever be submitted for grading.
  • Not all graded copies will hit PSA 10.
  • Some graded copies get locked away in long-term collections and may not re-emerge for years.

In practice, the number of 2015-16 Curry Gold Prizms that surface in high grade at major auction houses is quite small.

Player and hobby context

Stephen Curry’s long-term hobby profile is anchored by several factors:

  • Multiple NBA championships
  • Multiple MVP awards, including the first unanimous MVP
  • A clear stylistic impact on how basketball is played (three-point volume and spacing)

Recent seasons have seen the Warriors transition from dominant dynasty to a more competitive, but aging, core. For the hobby, that often means less short-term speculation but continued interest in established “pillar” cards.

In that environment, low-serial, flagship parallels like this Gold Prizm tend to appeal to collectors who:

  • Already believe in Curry’s long-term legacy
  • Prefer rare, high-grade, key parallels over chasing the latest rookie class

How collectors might use this sale

For active hobbyists, returning collectors, and small sellers, this Goldin sale can be useful in a few ways:

  1. As a reference point for Curry Gold Prizms
    Even if you’re buying or selling different years or slightly different parallels, this result helps frame expectations for what a high-end, low-serial Curry Prizm can do in a major auction.

  2. To gauge appetite for non-rookie stars
    This sale underscores that serious demand exists not only for rookie cards, but also for important parallels that line up with MVP and title windows.

  3. To understand the impact of grade and population
    Pop 2 in PSA 10 matters. If a PSA 9 or BGS 9.5 copy appears, this sale becomes a natural comparison point, with adjustments up or down for grade and eye appeal.

Takeaways

  • The 2015-16 Panini Prizm Gold Prizm #364 Stephen Curry (#05/10) is a low-serial, flagship parallel from a historically important season.
  • Graded PSA GEM MT 10 with a population of 2, it represents one of the best-known graded examples of this card.
  • The $13,422 sale at Goldin on March 15, 2026 provides a fresh benchmark for high-end Curry Prizm parallels in the modern era.

For collectors tracking Curry, Prizm color, or modern basketball parallels, this is a sale worth bookmarking—not as a promise of where prices will go, but as a clear snapshot of where one of the scarcest copies changed hands.