From a hand-signed lyric sheet to a sealed 1969 Abbey Road first pressing, this week’s eBay listings span the full spectrum of Beatles collecting — autographed rarities, vinyl treasures, and the kind of peculiar ephemera that only the world’s most celebrated band could generate. These auction links are affiliate links, for which I may be compensated. See updated bids and final closing prices for these and other hot auctions here.

Beatles “Here Comes the Sun” Signed Lyrics on Yellow Paper

Fixed price: $6,999.00 or Best Offer | 👉 View on eBay

The complete handwritten lyrics to “Here Comes the Sun” on vivid yellow paper decorated with the iconic Yellow Submarine cartoon illustration of the Fab Four—all four signatures clearly present, with Lennon and McCartney across the top, Harrison along the left side, and Starr at lower left. The piece arrives in a museum-quality black frame measuring 21” × 25” with suede matting and individual portrait photographs of each Beatle flanking the display.

George Harrison wrote “Here Comes the Sun” in the spring of 1969 while sitting in Eric Clapton’s garden, playing Clapton’s guitar—taking what he later described as a “mental health day” from Apple’s increasingly toxic business atmosphere. It became the opening track of Side Two of Abbey Road, and one of the most beloved songs in the entire Beatles catalog, Harrison’s gentle optimism cutting directly against the tension that was tearing the band apart in its final months. The yellow paper and Yellow Submarine illustration give the piece an additional visual coherence that makes it genuinely display-worthy.

Authentication is by GFA (Guaranteed Forensic Authentication), Certificate #GFAA-22077, examined January 7, 2021, with full forensic analysis of writing style, slant, spacing, pen lifts, stroke patterns, and letter formation. Affirmative results for both medium and signatures. The full Letter of Authenticity and tamper-evident holographic certificate are included. 🎸


The Beatles Signed Cue Sheet from the Final Ed Sullivan Show (PSA/DNA Encapsulated)

Fixed price: $250,000.00 or Best Offer | 👉 View on eBay

This is among the most significant Beatles documents to surface on eBay in recent memory: an original 8.5” × 11” cue sheet from the Beatles’ final Ed Sullivan Show appearance in 1965, signed by all four members. The inscription is personal, penned by Ringo to “Debbie and Carl,” placing the signing in a specific private moment that separates it from fan-event signatures.

The 1965 Sullivan appearance was a defining event in Beatles history for several reasons. It was the performance at which McCartney debuted “Yesterday” as a solo acoustic number—the first time a Beatle had performed entirely alone on stage, backed by a string quartet. The set also included “Help!,” the title track from their second feature film. By this point the band had completed their final American tour, and their relationship with live performance was already shifting toward the studio work that would define their late period. A cue sheet from this specific night is a primary document from one of pop music’s most consequential evenings.

Authentication is by PSA/DNA—the industry’s gold standard—with official hologram, matching Letter of Authenticity, and full PSA encapsulation. Two of the four signers are gone. The window for pieces like this closed permanently decades ago.


Paul McCartney Signed Teenage Cancer Trust Lithograph No. 26/100

Current bid: £2,002.00 (~$2,698.85) | 👉 View on eBay

A limited-edition hand-signed lithograph from Paul McCartney’s Royal Albert Hall performance for the Teenage Cancer Trust on March 29, 2012—number 26 of a run of 100. Eight-color silkscreen print on 350gsm luxury uncoated paper with metallic gold and high-gloss spot varnish. Signed in pencil by McCartney. Mint condition. Comes with MPL (McCartney Productions Ltd.) Certificate of Authenticity.

The Teenage Cancer Trust concerts at the Royal Albert Hall are among the most celebrated annual charity events in British music—McCartney’s 2012 appearance was one of the highlights of the series. A run of 100 signed lithographs sold exclusively through the charity website makes this genuinely scarce, and the MPL COA is among the most credible provenance documents available for McCartney signatures—issued directly by his own production company. At this price, a numbered, charity-issued, MPL-authenticated piece in mint condition represents strong value for the category. 💛





The Beatles In Mono: 14 LP Box Set (Universal Music, 2009)

Current bid: $799.75 | 👉 View on eBay

The 2009 Universal/Parlophone mono remaster box set—14 LPs covering the complete mono catalog from Please Please Me through the White Album, on 180-gram vinyl with the original mono mixes that the Beatles themselves supervised and considered definitive. This copy is in open manufacturer’s packaging with shrink wrap removed but records new and unused.

The mono versus stereo debate among serious Beatles collectors has been settled for years: the mono mixes are the ones the Beatles and George Martin actually worked on. The stereo mixes were largely delegated to engineers while the band focused on mono, which they considered the dominant commercial format through most of their recording career. The 2009 remaster project—the same one that produced the stereo box set released simultaneously—brought these mixes to their highest fidelity since original pressing. For anyone building a serious vinyl Beatles collection, this box set is not optional. 💛


Paul McCartney Signed “The Beatles in Italy” Vinyl Album (JSA LOA)

Current bid: $450.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A rare Italian Beatles pressing signed by Paul McCartney with JSA Letter of Authenticity. Italian Beatles pressings occupy a specific and highly sought-after niche in international collecting — distinct label designs, unique cover art variations, and the romance of Mediterranean Beatlemania all contributing to their desirability. A McCartney signature on an Italian pressing gives the piece a provenance story that connects the band directly to their extraordinary international reach.

McCartney’s Italian fan base was among the most devoted in Europe, and the Italian market produced some of the most visually distinctive Beatles releases anywhere. Rare is a word that gets overused in memorabilia listings, but a signed Italian pressing with authentication credentials genuinely earns it here. 🌟


Beatles ‘65 Original 1964 Mono First Pressing — Factory Sealed

Current bid: $370.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A factory-sealed original 1964 mono first pressing of Beatles ‘65 on Capitol with the rainbow color band label, original dark red Capitol inner sleeve, and condition that the seller describes in exhaustive and convincing detail: mint record, excellent cover, sharp corners, no creases, no bumps, perfect spine, no ring wear, original price sticker intact. Capitol T-2228.

Beatles ‘65 was Capitol’s fifth American Beatles album, rush-released for the Christmas 1964 market and built around tracks from Beatles for Sale alongside session recordings. It hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 within a week of release. A sealed first pressing of any Beatles Capitol album is a significant find; a sealed mono first pressing in this condition is the kind of item that serious American Beatles vinyl collectors actively pursue. The shrinkwrap’s breathe holes confirm the original seal. 🎶


Abbey Road Original 1969 First Pressing — Factory Sealed, Near Mint

Current bid: $294.70 | 👉 View on eBay

A sealed original 1969 Abbey Road first pressing, second version with the sewer cover visible and “Her Majesty” listed on the back. Sharp corners, clean spine, original price sticker, two breathe holes in the shrink wrap, near mint throughout.

Abbey Road’s cover—four men crossing a zebra crossing outside EMI Studios on Abbey Road in St. John’s Wood—became the most recognizable album photograph ever taken within months of release. The “Her Majesty” listing on this version’s back cover identifies it as the second pressing variant, as the first pressings famously did not list the “hidden” track at all. The iconic crosswalk photograph was taken on August 8, 1969 by Iain Macmillan, who stood on a stepladder and had approximately ten minutes to capture the shot. A sealed original pressing of the last album the Beatles recorded together is a legitimate grail for vinyl collectors. ⚡


The Beatles “Eight Days a Week” Italian 45 RPM (QMSP 16377)

Current bid: €162.00 (~$186.99) | 👉 View on eBay

A rare Italian Parlophone 45 of “Eight Days a Week” / “I’m a Loser,” second published cover without the “Globe Photos” writing, dark green label with BIEM on both sides, archive copy condition. Cover mint, vinyl EX+, label near mint.

Italian Beatles singles are among the most aggressively sought international pressings precisely because of the variants — different labels, different cover designs, different typographical details that distinguish one pressing from another and give serious collectors the specific pleasure of hunting down each variant. The BIEM marking on both sides identifies this as a legitimate European rights-period pressing from the mid-1960s. An archive copy in this condition is the kind of find that serious 45 collectors will recognize immediately. 🌍


Beatles Yellow Submarine 4 Plush Doll Figures — Brand New and Boxed

Current bid: £104.00 (~$137.66) | 👉 View on eBay

Official Beatles merchandise—all four members as “Yellow Submarine” plush figures, approximately 9 inches tall, never removed from packaging, licensed by Subafilms Ltd. and Apple Corps. The Yellow Submarine animated film premiered in London in July 1968 and has never fully left popular culture, generating merchandise across five decades that ranges from the serious to the whimsical with equal success.

These figures sit firmly in the whimsical category and are none the worse for it. For the collector who wants a display piece that generates smiles rather than awe, the Yellow Submarine plush set in original packaging is exactly that. 😄


Ringo Starr Signed 8×10 Photograph (Perry Cox COA)

Current bid: $141.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A Ringo Starr signed 8×10 photograph with Perry Cox COA, captioned: “The clever Atouk (Ringo Starr) wins over the lusty Lana (Barbara Bach) in the prehistoric comedy Caveman.”

Caveman (1981) is the film that brought Ringo and Barbara Bach together—they met on set, fell in love, and married the same year. The film is a prehistoric comedy in which the entire script consists of invented cave-speak, which presented Ringo with the specific challenge of carrying a comedic lead performance without any actual dialogue. He managed it, of course, with considerable charm. The film’s lasting legacy is less cinematic than biographical: it produced one of rock’s most enduring marriages. A signed photograph with this caption is a piece of Beatles extended-universe memorabilia with a genuinely romantic footnote. 💛


Beatles Amiga LP Mono — East Germany Import

Current bid: $44.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A Beatles Amiga LP mono pressing from East Germany—the German Democratic Republic, which no longer exists as a political entity, which is part of what makes these pressings so historically fascinating. VG+/VG+.

The Amiga label was the state-controlled record company of East Germany, operating under the communist government’s cultural apparatus. Beatles music was officially discouraged in the Eastern Bloc for much of the 1960s, seen as a vehicle for Western decadent influence. Amiga eventually released limited quantities of Beatles material, making these pressings both musically and politically historical artifacts—vinyl that crossed the Iron Curtain at a time when crossing it in person required considerably more effort. For the collector interested in the geopolitics of rock and roll, the East German Beatles pressing is an essential and undervalued category. 🌍


Capitol Records “The Silver Years 25” Promo LP — Factory Sealed (1967)

Current bid: $71.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A 1967 Capitol Records promotional-only LP celebrating the label’s 25th anniversary, factory sealed, on the original black label with colorband. This item was not offered for sale to the public, and issued in limited quantities to industry personnel only. Includes a copy of the official release letter from Capitol president Alan Livingston. Notably, Livingston was the executive who signed the Beatles to Capitol Records in 1964 after the label had previously passed on them—one of the most consequential A&R decisions in music history.

The LP includes an excerpt of and message about “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” The back cover liner notes are by Livingston himself, with his photograph, making this a document that connects directly to the man who brought the Beatles to America’s dominant record label after multiple rejections. For Beatles history collectors rather than pure memorabilia collectors, this is a genuinely interesting piece at a genuinely modest price. 📖


1966 NEMS Beatles Blow-Up Inflatable Cartoon Dolls — Set of 4

Current bid: $36.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A 1966 NEMS-licensed set of four Beatles inflatable cartoon dolls, 15 inches each, all in excellent condition, dated NEMS on reverse, all holding air, no holes or damage.

NEMS Enterprises was Brian Epstein’s management company—the organization that controlled Beatles merchandise licensing during the period when Beatlemania merchandise was generating extraordinary revenue. The 1966 NEMS mark places these firmly in the original licensing era, and the condition—all four holding air six decades later — is remarkable for inflatable vinyl toys from the mid-1960s. At $36, this is the week’s most accessible entry point for serious vintage Beatlemania collectibles. 🎈


John Lennon McFarlane Toys Beatles Saturday Morning Cartoon Figure (2004)

Current bid: $12.50 | 👉 View on eBay

A 2004 McFarlane Toys John Lennon figure from the Beatles Saturday Morning Cartoon series, in original packaging. McFarlane Toys produced a well-regarded series of Beatles figures in the early 2000s based on the 1965 animated television series, which ran for three seasons and introduced the band to a generation of American children who experienced Beatlemania through Saturday morning cartoons rather than live performances or records.

The animated series is a fascinating artifact of mid-1960s pop culture—the actual Beatles had no involvement in the voice acting, and the animated versions of the band went on adventures that bore little resemblance to reality, which was presumably part of the appeal. McFarlane figures in original packaging hold their value modestly and are the week’s most affordable entry point for anyone dipping a toe into Beatles collecting. 🎨


Vintage 1964 Seltaeb/NEMS Beatles Doll Set with Instruments

Current bid: $76.00 | 👉 View on eBay

A 1964 Seltaeb/NEMS Beatles doll set, all four members with instruments, sold as-is with documented condition issues: Ringo has right-side face fading and a bald spot; George is missing the tip of his right foot and has a bald spot; John has a small spot in his hair; Paul has a different label on the back and a foot marking. All dolls somewhat dirty. Even in like-new condition, any resemblance of these dolls to the real band members is highly questionable. 😂

Seltaeb—Beatles spelled backward—was the American licensing company that managed Beatles merchandise rights in the United States during the original Beatlemania period, operating under the NEMS umbrella. The 1964 Seltaeb dolls are among the most iconic pieces of original Beatlemania merchandise, appearing in toy stores across America during the height of the first British Invasion wave. Played-with condition is the honest reality of most surviving examples — these were children’s toys in the hands of children in 1964, and the fact that complete sets in any condition survive at all is a testament to the devotion of the collectors who preserved them. At $76 for a complete set with instruments, the condition is priced appropriately. 🎸