
2018-19 Prizm Nebula Dirk 1/1 PSA 10 Sells for $31K
Breaking down the $31,720 Goldin sale of the 2018-19 Panini Prizm Nebula Choice 1/1 Dirk Nowitzki PSA 10 and what it means for collectors.

Sold Card
2018-19 Panini Prizm Nebula Choice Prizm #2 Dirk Nowitzki (#1/1) - PSA GEM MT 10
Sale Price
Platform
Goldin2018-19 Prizm Nebula Dirk Nowitzki 1/1 PSA 10 Sells for $31,720 at Goldin
On June 7, 2026, Goldin closed a notable modern basketball sale: a 2018-19 Panini Prizm Nebula Choice Prizm #2 Dirk Nowitzki, serial-numbered 1/1 and graded PSA GEM MT 10, sold for $31,720.
For a retired legend whose market is usually quieter than today’s headliners, this is an important data point. Below, we break down what this card is, why it matters to collectors, and how this sale fits into the broader Dirk and Prizm markets.
The card at a glance
Full card ID
- Player: Dirk Nowitzki
- Team: Dallas Mavericks
- Year: 2018-19
- Set: Panini Prizm (Choice)
- Card number: #2
- Parallel: Nebula Choice Prizm (1/1)
- Serial numbering: 1/1 (one-of-one)
- Rookie card?: No – this is a late-career card, not a rookie
- Era: Modern / ultra-modern (2010s)
Grading details
- Grading company: PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator)
- Grade: GEM MT 10 (their highest standard grade)
- Special attributes: 1-of-1 parallel, high-end color / pattern, from the Choice configuration of Prizm
The Nebula parallel is one of the most visually distinctive patterns in the Prizm family. In the Choice format, Nebula is the true one-of-one level for many players — effectively the top of the non-autograph rainbow for this product.
Why this specific Dirk matters
Dirk Nowitzki’s key rookie card for most collectors is his 1998-99 Topps Chrome #154 (and its refractor parallel). By contrast, this 2018-19 Panini Prizm Nebula is a late-career, ultra-short-print parallel from a popular modern brand.
So why do collectors care about this card?
1. One-of-one, with a PSA 10
One-of-one (1/1) means exactly one copy of this specific parallel exists. When that lone copy is also graded PSA 10, it becomes the definitive example for collectors who care about condition.
Even though there is no population report competition in the usual sense (because there can’t be more than one), the PSA 10 encapsulation still matters for:
- Presentation: Slabbed and labeled as the top condition tier.
- Liquidity: Many modern buyers prefer graded, especially in PSA holders.
- Confidence: A third party confirming centering, edges, and surface helps buyers feel comfortable at higher price points.
2. From a flagship chromium brand
Panini Prizm is widely treated as the flagship chromium set of the modern basketball era. When people talk about “rainbows” (chasing every color parallel of a single card), they often mean Prizm.
Within that structure, Choice-exclusive parallels like Nebula sit near the very top of the prestige ladder. While this is not a rookie, it is still the premier 2018-19 Prizm parallel for Dirk.
3. Dirk’s legacy window
Dirk is a Hall of Famer, NBA champion, Finals MVP, and one of the defining international players in league history. His peak playing days are behind us, which means most of his cardboard movement is now:
- Long-term collectors consolidating into top-end pieces.
- Player collectors and team collectors upgrading into the best examples they can find.
A one-of-one Prizm parallel in a PSA 10 holder fits squarely into that “tier-one” bucket for modern Dirk cards, even though it’s not his true rookie.
Market context: where does $31,720 fit in?
The card realized $31,720 at Goldin on June 7, 2026.
Because this is a true 1/1, there is no direct, repeatable sales history for this exact card in this exact grade. Instead, we look at:
- Comparable parallels of Dirk from other years and sets (e.g., Gold / Black / 1/1 parallels from Prizm, Select, NT, Flawless).
- Comparable players’ Nebula Prizms in PSA 10 from similar years.
- Broader Dirk high-end sales to understand his market band.
Across public marketplaces and auction archives, a pattern emerges:
- Premium Dirk 1/1 parallels (especially from major brands like Prizm, National Treasures, or Flawless) have typically sold in the low five-figure range, with occasional spikes higher for particularly iconic designs, patches, or autos.
- Non-rookie, non-auto, modern parallels for legendary players often land below their patch or autograph counterparts, but still command meaningful premiums when they are the top parallel from a key set.
Viewed against that backdrop, $31,720 is on the strong side for a late-career, non-autograph, non-rookie parallel. It aligns with how the market currently values:
- Top-tier 1/1 chromium cards of established legends.
- High-end color parallels from the Prizm line, especially in PSA 10.
Without repeated sales of the same card, you can’t call this result “typical,” but it does fit within the broader curve for high-end Dirk cardboard in 2025–2026: strong but not disconnected from other premium sales.
Understanding Nebula and the Choice configuration
For newer collectors, some quick definitions:
- Parallel: A version of the base card with a different color/finish and usually a different print run.
- Choice: A specific configuration of Prizm (often sold in smaller, regionally focused boxes) with its own exclusive parallel lineup.
- Nebula: In the Choice format, a swirling, galaxy-style pattern used on 1/1 parallels for many players.
In other words, this card is not just a random shiny Dirk from 2018-19. It is the top of the Choice-exclusive ladder for that year’s Prizm Dirk card.
How this sale fits into modern and Dirk collecting
For modern Prizm collectors
This sale reinforces several ongoing themes in the modern market:
- Flagship status matters: Top parallels from Prizm still command strong attention, even when they’re not rookies.
- Clear hierarchy of rarity: Collectors continue to respect the structure of the rainbow (Silver, numbered colors, ultra-rare 1/1s).
- Condition plus scarcity: When ultra-scarce cards also grade GEM MT 10, the market often pays a noticeable premium.
For Dirk-focused collectors
If you collect Dirk, this sale helps set expectations for high-end, non-rookie, non-auto pieces from the modern era:
- Rookies vs. modern parallels: His foundational rookies (especially 1998 Topps Chrome and rare parallels) still define the top of the hierarchy. But elite modern 1/1s like this establish a second pillar of his market.
- A benchmark for 1/1 Prizm Dirks: While each year and design is different, this Nebula PSA 10 result gives a reference point for valuing similar 1-of-1 chromium cards of Nowitzki.
Takeaways for collectors and small sellers
A few lessons you can carry into your own collecting:
Know the set’s place in the hobby
Understanding that 2018-19 Prizm is part of the main modern chromium line helps frame expectations for demand and liquidity.Look at the full stack: player, brand, rarity, grade
This card combines a Hall of Famer, a flagship brand, the highest rarity level (1/1), and the top grade (PSA 10). When all four align, the market usually takes notice.Use comps as guides, not guarantees
“Comps” are comparable past sales that collectors use as reference points. With 1/1s, comps are often imperfect, so it’s better to look at ranges from similar players, sets, and parallels rather than expecting repeatable prices.Non-rookie does not mean non-important
For established stars, especially Hall of Famers, special late-career cards from key sets can become centerpieces for player collectors, not just their rookies.
Final thoughts
The June 7, 2026 Goldin sale of the 2018-19 Panini Prizm Nebula Choice Prizm #2 Dirk Nowitzki 1/1 in PSA GEM MT 10 at $31,720 underscores how the hobby currently values a rare intersection: a modern flagship brand, a one-of-one parallel, a Hall of Fame legend, and a top grade.
For Dirk collectors, it sets another marker for what premium, non-rookie Prizm cards can do. For broader basketball collectors, it’s a clear example of how scarcity, brand, and player legacy combine to shape today’s high-end modern market.