HomeIndustriesTrading card payments

Trading card payments

Built for singles, slabs, sealed drops, and high-trust hobby checkout.

Whether you sell Pokemon singles, sports card slabs, sealed booster boxes, or release-day bundles, Flint gives you a hosted checkout flow that feels more professional than a wallet request and more flexible than forcing everything into a full storefront.

Pokemon singlesSports slabsSealed waxPresales
Single$78

Illustration rare preorder

Shareable checkout for one-card inventory

Graded$420

PSA slab claim

Cleaner records for high-trust purchases

Sealed$139

Booster bundle release

Drop-style checkout that works on mobile

Workflow fit

Built for the hobby payment moments that do not fit cleanly in a normal storefront.

Card sellers often live between catalog and conversation. The buyer sees a post, a livestream, a Discord alert, or a slab claim first, then needs a clean way to pay without confusion about what card, box, or bundle is actually attached to the payment.

Singles and showcase inventory

When the sale starts from a story post, claim thread, or list of freshly pulled cards, Flint lets you convert that interest into a hosted payment flow without building a full PDP for every single item.

Useful for claim sales, story drops, and list-based card updates.

Slabs, sealed product, and mixed bundles

Higher-value card orders need a payment surface that signals trust and stays readable later. That matters when the order includes a slab, sealed product, or a mixed bundle assembled on the fly.

Good fit for PSA/BGS/CGC inventory, booster boxes, and curated lots.

Presales, restocks, and release-day moments

Card inventory moves on short windows and fast demand spikes. Flint gives operators a direct checkout link for release-day inventory rather than routing traffic through manual payment collection.

Useful for restocks, allocation drops, and pre-release product.

Selling moments

The page for when card sales stop being casual

As soon as the transaction carries more trust, more value, or more inventory nuance, informal payment collection starts creating avoidable risk.

Claim sale

The buyer claims a card in a live thread or stream.

That is the point where you need a fast payment path tied to a real item, not a generic amount request that forces both sides to remember context later.

High-value

The order includes a slab or a rare sealed item.

Collectors are less comfortable sending meaningful money through an informal wallet request. A branded hosted page reduces that friction.

Release day

Traffic spikes around a drop, preorder, or restock.

A shareable hosted checkout lets you move quickly across social, text, and email without rewriting payment instructions each time demand shifts.

Why Flint

Why Flint works for card sellers

The trading-card fit is strongest when the operator cares about trust, speed, and keeping the payment tied to the product instead of detached from it.

Brings order to social-first selling

A lot of card inventory gets sold from posts, streams, and community channels before it ever reaches a permanent storefront. Flint gives those sales a cleaner close.

Better buyer confidence on premium cards

A real hosted checkout is easier for buyers to trust when the order is a slab, a chase card, or a sealed release they may not get another shot at.

Flexible enough for one-card sales or stacked bundles

You can use Flint for a single card claim, a release bundle, or a follow-up invoice-style payment without switching stacks.

Cleaner trail for support, pickup, and refunds

When orders change or buyers need confirmation, the operator is not stuck interpreting a raw charge amount with missing context.

Coverage

Trading card operators this page is written for

The copy leans TCG and hobby retail, but the workflow also fits sports and adjacent card categories.

Pokemon-focused shops and social sellers
Sports card sellers moving singles and slabs
Sealed product drops and preorder operators
Livestream and claim-sale sellers
Hobby businesses mixing TCG, sports, and accessories
Small teams that need a better payment flow before they need a bigger storefront

FAQ

Questions operators usually ask before switching off manual collection.

Can Flint work for Pokemon and other TCG inventory?

Yes. Flint is a practical fit for Pokemon-style singles, sealed product, preorder releases, and other TCG inventory that starts from social or community-driven selling.

What if I sell both sports cards and TCG?

That is fine. Flint is not limited to one card category. It works when the checkout problem is the same across singles, slabs, and sealed inventory.

Do I need a full ecommerce site first?

No. Flint is useful precisely when you need a trustworthy hosted checkout flow before investing in a larger storefront build.

Next step

Launch a hosted checkout flow that matches how hobby buyers actually buy.

Start with a payment link in the dashboard, then go deeper through the API if the collectible workflow outgrows manual setup.