Nikola Jokic Joins the Million-Dollar Card Club: 1/1 Logoman Rookie Hits 1,012,600 Dollars at Goldin
A 1-of-1 Nikola Jokic rookie Logoman patch autograph, a 2015-16 Panini Immaculate RPA graded PSA 8, sold for 1,012,600 dollars in Goldin's April Elite Auction, which closed May 9. It is a record for any Jokic card by a wide margin and his fourth solo card to top 100,000 dollars in 2026.
The million-dollar card club has a new member, and he is the reigning face of the NBA's small-market dynasty. A 1-of-1 Nikola Jokic rookie Logoman patch autograph sold for $1,012,600 in Goldin's 2026 April Elite Auction, which closed May 9. It is a new record for a Jokic card by a wide margin, and it caps a remarkable year-long climb for a player whose cards spent most of his career underpriced relative to his on-court resume.
The Card
The piece in question is a 2015-16 Panini Immaculate Collection Nikola Jokic Logoman RPA (rookie patch autograph), graded PSA 8. As a Logoman, it carries the embroidered NBA logo patch — the single rarest swatch a manufacturer can put on a card, produced as a true 1-of-1. Pair that with an on-card rookie autograph from a back-to-back-era MVP, and you have exactly the kind of trophy card that defines a high-end auction.
- Card: 2015-16 Panini Immaculate Collection Logoman RPA.
- Serial: 1-of-1.
- Grade: PSA 8.
- Result: $1,012,600, a record for any Jokic card.
A Breakout Year for Jokic Cards
The sale is the headline, but the trend underneath it is the real story. Before 2026, Jokic had exactly one card crack six figures. So far this year he has four solo cards sell north of $100,000, with the Logoman more than tripling his previous solo-card record. For a player long considered a value relative to LeBron, Luka, and Wembanyama on the card market, that is a dramatic repricing in a short window.
"A PSA 8 clearing seven figures tells you the grade was almost beside the point. When there is only one copy on earth and it carries the logo patch and the rookie auto, condition becomes a footnote to scarcity."
Why Logoman Cards Command This
Logoman cards sit at the very top of the modern hobby's hierarchy for a simple reason: the NBA logo patch is cut from a tiny, finite piece of material, so each one is a guaranteed 1-of-1. That scarcity has fueled a string of recent records — multi-player Logoman cards featuring combinations like Wembanyama, Jokic, and LeBron have sold in the mid-six figures, and Logoman cards have repeatedly led major auctions. A solo rookie Logoman of an MVP is the cleanest version of that bet.
The PSA 8 Detail Matters
It is worth lingering on the grade. A PSA 8 is not a gem-mint slab, and on a high-volume modern card that ceiling would cap the price hard. On a 1-of-1, the opposite is true — there is no PSA 10 alternative to chase, because there is no second copy. Buyers who want this card have to accept the only condition it exists in, and that is precisely why a non-pristine grade still cleared a million dollars.
What It Signals for the Market
Two takeaways for collectors watching from the sidelines. First, MVP-driven demand is real and it lags performance — Jokic's card market is finally catching up to a resume that has been elite for years, a reminder that proven, sustained greatness eventually gets priced in. Second, true 1-of-1 patch cards remain the hobby's blue-chip tier, holding and setting records even in a choppier overall market. You do not need a million-dollar budget to apply the lesson: scarcity plus a marquee player is the combination that holds up.