The White House Cards and Collectibles Show is a free, collector-friendly card show just north of Nashville, returning for a July 2026 edition (date follows the show's recurring monthly cadence — please confirm with the operator before you go). For collectors in Sumner and Robertson counties, this is a convenient hometown alternative to driving into the city, offering a relaxed room of sports cards, Pokémon, other TCGs, and mixed collectibles close to home.
The floor mixes a little of everything. Sports card dealers bring MLB, NBA, NFL, and NHL inventory across eras — vintage Topps and Bowman, junk-wax-era boxes, and modern Panini Prizm, Donruss Optic, Topps Chrome, and Bowman, with graded slabs in cases and bargain boxes of raw singles. Pokémon is a reliable draw, from modern Scarlet & Violet sealed product and chase cards to older singles for binders, and you will often find Magic: The Gathering, Yu-Gi-Oh!, One Piece, and Lorcana mixed in. Surrounding tables typically carry autographs, memorabilia, comics, and other collectibles, giving groups with different interests plenty to browse.
As a free-admission community show, it is built to be approachable. There is no ticket cost to walk in, parking is easy, and the smaller, local footprint makes it far less overwhelming than a giant convention hall — a real plus for families, kids, and first-time attendees. Typical hours for a show like this run mid-morning into the early afternoon; confirm the exact window with the operator before heading out, since recurring local shows occasionally adjust their schedule.
White House sits right off I-65 about 25 minutes north of downtown Nashville, making the show an easy stop for collectors from White House, Hendersonville, Gallatin, Goodlettsville, Springfield, and the northern Nashville suburbs. The local setting keeps things friendly and low-key, the kind of room where dealers have time to talk shop and negotiate.
This show fits every kind of collector. Beginners and younger collectors get an easy, no-cost introduction to the hobby, with room to compare cards in person and ask vendors questions about condition and pricing. Casual collectors can hunt favorite teams, players, and characters or grab affordable singles and sealed packs without a big-show crowd. Families appreciate the free admission and manageable size. Serious buyers still find vintage and graded gems worth digging for, set and team collectors can fill holes, and competitive TCG players can scout singles for upcoming events around the region. Smaller shows like this often have the most negotiating room, so polite offers can pay off.
For the best experience, arrive near opening for first crack at fresh inventory, bring cash plus a payment app as backup, and carry a want list sorted by sport and game. Pack penny sleeves and top loaders for your pickups, and consider bringing a few cards or a small lot to trade or sell. Do not hesitate to make reasonable offers, especially later in the day when dealers are most flexible. Check the Card Show Dex Nashville calendar and local White House and Sumner County collecting groups on Facebook for the confirmed July date, hours, and vendor lineup before you go.