Every week, we break down the must-have Beatles collectibles currently for sale. As an eBay Partner, I may be compensated if you make a purchase.

Let’s start at the top, because the top this week is genuinely jaw-dropping.

Paul McCartney Signed Hofner Bass Guitar Sketch — Caizzo, Beckett, Roger Epperson

Fixed Price: $499,999.95 View on eBay

A signed Hofner bass guitar sketch with triple authentication — Beckett, Frank Caiazzo, and Roger Epperson — is about as blue-chip as Beatles autograph material gets.

Caiazzo is widely considered the world’s leading authority on Beatles signatures, and having all three letters of authenticity on a single piece is the kind of provenance that removes any doubt whatsoever. The Hofner connection to McCartney is one of the most iconic instrument pairings in rock history, which makes the sketch itself a deeply appropriate canvas. Half a million dollars is not a casual bid, but this is not casual material — it’s the kind of piece that ends up in estates and serious private collections, and stays there.

The Beatles Sealed Sgt. Pepper — Nimbus Supercut, Archive Mint

Current bid: £20,000 (approximately $27,032) View on eBay

The Nimbus Supercut pressing of Sgt. Pepper occupies a specific and fiercely contested corner of Beatles vinyl collecting. Nimbus was a British audiophile pressing plant that used a unique “half-speed cutting” process in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and the resulting pressings are widely regarded among serious collectors as the finest-sounding versions of several classic albums ever produced.

Getting one of these in any decent condition is difficult. Getting one that is effectively still sealed — with only a near-invisible opening at one bottom corner — is the kind of thing that generates actual conversation in collector circles. The seller is not wrong that in this state it outranks a First State Butcher or a mono Please Please Me as a statement piece. This is a room-stopper.

1965 Hollywood Bowl Concert Ticket — Box Seat, Unused, Near Mint

Current bid: $1,600.00 View on eBay

August 29, 1965. Hollywood Bowl. Box seat, highest cover price at $7, light blue ticket stock — this is among the rarer ticket variants from what the seller correctly identifies as one of the four most historically significant Beatles concerts on US soil alongside Shea Stadium, the Washington Coliseum, and Candlestick Park.

Unused, no creases, no stains, no pin holes — near mint condition on a piece of paper that has survived sixty years is remarkable. The Hollywood Bowl audio recordings from this period were eventually released officially in 1977, which gives the venue a documented sonic legacy that adds to the historical weight. Concert tickets from this era have appreciated steadily and show no signs of reversing.

Magical Mystery Tour — Original 1967 Sealed Stereo Capitol Dome Logo LP

Current bid: $439.00 View on eBay

A factory-sealed 1967 Magical Mystery Tour on Capitol stereo with the original dome logo spine print and original price sticker still intact. The wide spine, heavy weight pressing, and Capitol dome logo date this to the original 1967 issue — and finding one still sealed after nearly six decades is genuinely rare.

Minor corner rounding on the cover is exactly what you’d expect from something this old that has somehow survived intact. For context: Magical Mystery Tour was issued in the US as a proper album (with bonus tracks) rather than as the double EP format the UK received, which made the Capitol version the definitive American experience of the record. Original sealed copies have held value exceptionally well.


1964 Sealed Wax Pack — Beatles Black & White Series Bubble Gum Cards (Topps)

Current bid: $60.00 View on eBay

From half a million dollars to sixty, which is part of what makes this hobby so endlessly entertaining. This is an original 1964 Topps Beatles Black & White Series wax pack — still sealed, with the gum inside broken into what feels like two pieces, which the seller correctly notes is completely typical for vintage sealed packs of this age.

These Topps Beatles card series from 1964 are genuine Beatlemania artifacts — they were everywhere in American schoolyards in the spring of 1964, and finding one still sealed with the original gum is the kind of thing that would have been completely unremarkable at the time and is now a legitimate collector’s item. A cool display piece at a very accessible entry point.

Italy 45 RPM — “No Reply” / “Baby’s In Black” (QMSP 16370) — First Cover Issue

Current bid: €505.00 (approximately $582.90) View on eBay

This one is for the serious international singles collectors. The Italian Parlophone pressing of “No Reply” backed with “Baby’s In Black” is desirable on its own, but what makes this particular copy significant is the first cover issue — the black and white sleeve that was released for a limited time before being replaced by the color sleeve from the Beatles for Sale album artwork.

Finding the original black and white cover in archive mint condition is genuinely difficult. Italian Beatles pressings from this era have a devoted collector base and consistently strong secondary market performance, and first-issue covers in this condition are legitimately scarce.

Paul McCartney Signed Holiday Card — BAS and PSA

Current bid: $1,025.00 View on eBay

A signed McCartney holiday card with dual authentication from both Beckett and PSA is solid mid-range autograph material — the kind of piece that provides genuine McCartney provenance at a price point considerably more accessible than the Hofner sketch above.

Holiday cards are among the more personal signed items in any celebrity autograph collection, and McCartney’s signature has remained consistently desirable. Clean dual authentication from the two most respected authenticators in the business removes any concern about provenance.

Lot of 13 Original 1960s US Beatles LPs — VJ Labels and More

Current bid: $98.00 View on eBay

This is a deep-dive lot for the dedicated American catalog collector. Thirteen original US pressings including the Vee-Jay Introducing the Beatles Version 1, the Songs, Pictures and Stories gatefold with the all-black brackets labels (the rarest VJ label variation), the first press Meet the Beatles with no publishing info on the labels, and a run of Capitol mono titles through Revolver and Sgt. Pepper.

The seller is honest about condition — well-loved, played, enjoyed — which means these are playing copies rather than shelf pieces. But the label variations in here, particularly the VJ material, make this a serious collector’s lot at a very reasonable opening price. The all-black brackets Songs, Pictures and Stories alone justifies attention.

Original 1964 Beatles Candy Boxes — Paul, John, and Ringo (World Candies)

Current bid: $127.50 View on eBay

World Candies of Brooklyn made these small candy boxes during the height of Beatlemania, and they are exactly what they sound like — charming, period-specific, completely frivolous, and genuinely fun to own.

Three boxes, orange Paul, green John, and blue Ringo, each measuring about 2⅝ by ⅞ by ⅜ inches. No George in this lot, which is a recurring theme in 1964 US Beatles merchandise and a story for another day. These are pure display pieces — a little slice of what it felt like to be a kid in America in 1964 when the Beatles were absolutely everywhere, including the candy aisle.

Beatles Help! Playtape EP — Partially Sealed

Current bid: $111.00 View on eBay

Playtapes were a short-lived cartridge format from the mid-1960s — smaller than an 8-track, designed for portability, and mostly forgotten by history. A Beatles Help! Playtape EP in partially sealed original packaging, open on two sides but with the tape itself unremoved, is a legitimate format curiosity at a reasonable price.

These survive in any condition relatively rarely, and the novelty factor for a dedicated Beatles format collector is real.

The Beatles vs. The Four Seasons — Original 1964 Vee-Jay DX-30 Mono 2LP Set with Sears Baggy and Promotional Poster

Current bid: $305.00 View on eBay

One of the more audacious marketing moves in the history of the American music industry. Vee-Jay Records, holding the US rights to early Beatles material and facing stiff competition from Capitol, repackaged Introducing the Beatles alongside the Four Seasons’ Golden Hits and called it “The International Battle of the Century.”

It is gloriously shameless and historically significant in equal measure. This first pressing copy comes with the original Sears Roebuck protective baggy, the 11½” x 23” full-color promotional poster (larger than the misprinted dimensions on the cover), and the rare original red “Greatest Gospel Sound on Vee-Jay Records” inner sleeves. The matrix detail in the listing is exhaustive and confirms this as a genuine first pressing from both the American Record Co. plant in Owosso, MI and the Monarch plant in LA. A serious piece of early American Beatles history.

LEGO Ideas 21306 The Beatles Yellow Submarine Set — All Figures, No Box

Current bid: $81.00 View on eBay

Released in 2016 and retired in 2017, the LEGO Yellow Submarine set has become a genuine secondary market piece — retired LEGO Ideas sets tend to appreciate, and this one has the dual advantage of the Beatles license and a genuinely charming design.

Complete with all figures (including the somewhat randomly named “Jeremy” — actually Jeremy Hillary Boob PhD from the film), manual included, no box. A fun crossover piece for the collector who wants something a little different on the shelf.