The Captain America market in 2026 benefits from the film Brave New World and the Sam Wilson/Captain America transition which stimulates two segments simultaneously: the classic Steve Rogers keys (Captain America #100 CGC 7.0 stable at $2,500-3,500, Tales of Suspense #58 CGC 6.0 at $1,200-1,800) and the Sam Wilson keys (Captain America #117, 1st Falcon, CGC 8.0 up to $2,500-3,500). The Golden Age market (Cap Comics #1) remains a safe haven asset with growing institutional demand.
Captain America occupies a unique position on the collectible comics market: the character crosses eras (Golden, Silver, Bronze, Modern Age) with major key issues in each period. The passing of the torch to Sam Wilson in the MCU creates an unprecedented dynamic where the keys to two Captain Americas are actively sought simultaneously.
ThisCaptain America market analysis 2026deciphers the impact of the film Brave New World on prices, the Steve Rogers/Sam Wilson coexistence on the market, and the best opportunities in a catalog that extends from 1941 to today.
State of the market: price of key issues in 2026
Golden Age
- Captain America Comics #1 (1941) CGC 3.0— recent sales: $180,000-220,000. Trend: constant increase (+5-8%/year).
- Captain America Comics #1 CGC 6.0— estimated at $500,000-700,000. Very rarely available.
- Captain America Comics #2-10— CGC 4.0: $5,000-25,000 depending on number. Stable demand.
- All Winners Comics #1 (1941) CGC 4.0— $8,000-12,000. Under-explored segment.
Silver Age
- Tales of Suspense #58 (Cap stories begin) CGC 7.0— $1,500-2,200. Stable.
- Captain America #100 (1968) CGC 7.0— $2,500-3,500. Sustained demand.
- Captain America #109 (Kirby origin) CGC 8.0— $800-1,200. Slightly increasing.
- Captain America #110 (1st Madame Hydra/Viper, Steranko) CGC 8.0— $500-800. Stable.
- Captain America #117 (1st Falcon) CGC 8.0— $2,500-3,500. Increasing (+15% over 12 months).
Bronze/Copper Age
- Captain America #241 (Punisher crossover) CGC 9.4— $150-250. Stable.
- Captain America #332 (1st John Walker as Cap) CGC 9.8— $200-350. Post-FatWS stabilized.
- Captain America #323 (1st Super Patriot/John Walker) CGC 9.8— $150-250. Same dynamic.
“Brave New World” Impact and the Sam Wilson Era
The double Captain America deal
The transition from Steve Rogers to Sam Wilson in the MCU creates an unprecedented phenomenon: two Captain Americas coexist on the collectible market. The Sam Wilson/Falcon keys progress without cannibalizing the Steve Rogers keys:
- Captain America #117 (1st Falcon, 1969)— the main key of the Sam Wilson era in cinema. Increase of 15-20% since the announcement of Brave New World.
- Captain America & The Falcon #1 (2004)— dedicated series, still affordable at $10-20 NM.
- All-New Captain America #1 (2015)— Sam as Captain America in the comics, $15-30 CGC 9.8.
- Captain America: Sam Wilson #1 (2015)— dedicated series, $10-20 CGC 9.8.
Film effect on the Falcon segment
Brave New World projects Falcon/Sam Wilson as the Captain America of the future MCU. Expected impact:
- Captain America #117: potential additional 20-30% increase if the film performs at the box office
- Secondary keys (Red Wing, Leila Taylor): moderate speculative rise
- Thunderbolts connection: Red Hulk in Brave New World boosts Incredible Hulk #1 and Thunderbolts keys
The Golden Age Captain America: institutional asset
Why prices never go down
Captain America Comics #1 is one of the 5 most expensive comics in the world. Its value is based on unassailable fundamentals:
- Absolute rarity: CGC census of less than 100 copies all qualities combined
- Cultural significance: the cover of Cap punching Hitler is an icon of global popular culture
- Institutional demand: museums, foundations, and ultra-heritage collectors create a high price floor
- Immortal Franchise: Captain America cannot “fall into disuse” — he is anchored in American identity
Go to the Golden Age segment
For ambitious collectors, issues #2-74 offer more accessible entry points:
- Captain America Comics #3-10 CGC 2.0-3.0: $3,000-8,000 — affordable for Golden Age Timely
- Captain America Comics #20-40 CGC 3.0: $2,000-4,000 — Hitler covers and wartime stories
- Young Allies, All Winners, USA Comics (Cap appearances): $500-3,000 in mid-grade
Moving segments and opportunities
Clearly increasing
- The entire Falcon/Sam Wilson segment— driven by the MCU, medium-term structural trend
- Captain America #100 High Ranks— scarcity of CGC 9.0+ copies available
- Winter Soldier keys (Cap #1 vol. 5, 2005)— Ed Brubaker run, stabilized at a high level
Stable
- Silver Age mid-grades— mature market, established prices, little volatility
- Golden Age all ranks— slow but steady progression of 3-5%/year
Purchasing Opportunities
- Captain America #110 (Steranko)— undervalued artistic masterpiece compared to Steranko Nick Fury
- Captain America #176-183 (Nomad saga)— lot available for $80-150, historically important content
- Captain America vol. 5 #1-50 (Brubaker)— the best Cap run of the last 40 years, complete lot $80-150 NM
Outlook 2026-2028
The future of the Captain America market depends on several factors:
- Brave New World box office performance— a success confirms Sam Wilson as a viable long-term Cap and stabilizes the Falcon keys
- Possible return of Steve Rogers in the MCU— immediately boosted all classic keys
- Avengers: Secret Wars— the entire Avengers segment will benefit from an increase in 2027
Recommendation: position yourself on the mid-grade Silver Age keys (Captain America #100, #109, #117) and the full Brubaker run. These purchases combine the pleasure of collecting and asset protection in a structurally bullish market in the long term.
Do you own Captain America comics?Estimate the value of your collection for freeto know their current rating.