No matter who you are or what your eventual end goal is, you are limiting your options by not knowing how to properly ship a Magic card. Now there are some things you can do to make a package special.

The most important thing is to make sure you are shipping something that doesn’t damage the cards. Too many times I’ve received very makeshift packages that people got lucky and survived the mail system. While some of these points will be specific to people living in the United States, packaging is something that is universally lacking.

What do you need?

Ostensibly, you need a lot of things to mail a good secure package but the reality is that it’s not nearly as much as you think. Here is my basic set of tools to send out cards. A box of envelopes, a scissor, a bubble mailer, team bags, penny sleeves, stamps, toploaders, and the card I’m mailing. Depending on where you purchase all of these things, you shouldn’t end up paying more than $20 or so to start up. I’m sure some people are familiar with most of these things, but not with mailing best practices. Let’s take it from the top.

What do I do?



I prefer to buy size 6 3/4 envelopes (9.2cm x 16.5cm) due to their size. They are large enough for a few cards to fit comfortably but not too large that a loose toploader will move around a lot and rip the envelope. Outside of this there are many varieties of envelopes but the most basic security lined envelopes cost you somewhere in the ballpark of $0.03 each.

Penny sleeves, as the name implies, are usually about 100 for $1 (or $0.01 each) and are where the process starts.

The first step is for small orders (1-2 cards) put the cards upside down into the sleeve. Theoretically which side is up doesn’t matter that much but it makes it easier to explain the later steps.

After you put it into the sleeve, fold the open side over to create a small flap. Penny sleeves should be larger than your card and if you can’t make a nice fold then there are probably too many cards in the sleeve.

Put the sleeve into a toploader with the folded side entering first. This will ensure the card doesn’t move around much in the sleeve and get dinged up by the toploader. It also provides some tension to keep the card from sliding out of the toploader after being mailed.

After you finish you should be able to shake the toploader and see little to no movement in the card. Now you may also notice the fit is pretty tight. You probably can’t fit a whole playset of cards into this, so what do we do?

Start the same way, put the 4 cards into the penny sleeve upside down. But here’s where this mysterious “team bag” thing comes in.

Team bags are pretty large self sealing sleeves. They’re called team bags because sports stores use them to make bags of the same team. Rocket science, right?

Well it’s nice because it snugly fits all of our cards and our toploader without having to squeeze them into it. Team bags allow you the storage of a large plastic sleeve while keeping the rigidness of a toploader. I recommend this for 4-8 cards.

Now to finish it all off, put a Post-it note on the sealed team bag with your order number or PucaTrade number and you have one nice package. For single toploader envelopes, you can fold the post-it over the open end of the toploader to keep the card inside.

What is the point of all these weird procedures? To minimize the amount of tape you put on everything. It’s a pretty big waste most of the time and gets the toploader all sticky for the next person. Ideally you will reuse the toploaders you get sent to save money and I’d rather my recipient to not need to clean off the tape after they receive my card.

After you’ve finished packaging your envelope you can address the front and slap a Forever stamp on it and it’s ready to be dropped into a local mailbox.

Damage on the Stack

What’s the total damage?

Envelope $0.03

Penny Sleeve $0.01

Team Bag $0.03

Toploader (Free)

Forever Stamp $0.49

Theoretically, the cheapest you can send a card is $0.53 to $0.56. That’s pretty cheap but sometimes you want more protection for a valuable card.

Most bubble mailers can be available for $0.50 but the real extra cost here is in the shipping and time commitment to go to the post office to get tracking. Unless you use the fantastic Paypal shipping service.

Cheat code shipping

Here is a link to the Paypal shipping service. It allows you to pay with your Paypal account (you must have a Paypal account to use this service) for a label that you can print out and tape to the bubble mailer. This saves money (it’s actually cheaper than the Post Office) and tons of time (you don’t have to go to the Post Office to mail it). I generally choose to ship the cheapest way with tracking. This is USPS First class thick envelope that weighs 3oz. That’s typically enough for a small bubble mailer and packaging for up to 10 cards in a team bag. Shipping this way ends up costing $2.04 for shipping inside the US plus materials ( ~$0.56).

Where do I get this stuff?

I’m glad you asked reader! Well I’ve got another cheat code for you, enter Potomac Distribution. Unfortunately this site will only ship products within the US but you can save a ton of money by buying in bulk. You can find smaller quantities for close to retail but you start saving a lot once you hit case size quantities. While this is not an option for everyone if you do decide to get into Pucatrade or selling on TCGPlayer you can save a lot of money by buying in bulk. Unlike food, sleeves don’t spoil. You can also find cases of KMC and Dragonshield sleeves for much cheaper than usual. Splitting a case with friends can yield up to a 30% savings. For smaller quantities, you can find singleton packs of these sleeves at your LGS or on Amazon.

Final Thoughts