Kakuna
Skyridge · #70/144
Kakuna (70/144), the Common from Skyridge, has an estimated ungraded market price of about $55–$75.
As of July 17, 2026 · tracked daily by Riffle · estimates, not financial advice

Image © The Pokémon Company, shown for identification.
About Kakuna
Kakuna is a Common (70/144) from the Pokémon Skyridge set, released May 12, 2003. Ungraded copies currently trade at an estimated market price of $55–$75. The artwork is by Hisao Nakamura. Riffle tracks its market price daily; graded (PSA) comps and full price history are available with Riffle.
Details
Other versions of Kakuna
Kakuna appears on 10 different cards across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values. This page covers #70/144 from Skyridge; the collector number printed at the bottom of the card tells them apart.
- Kakuna#41/75 · Neo Discovery$3–$5Uncommon
- Kakuna#014/165 · 151$3–$4Common
- Kakuna#33/102 · Base Setabout $1Uncommon
- Kakuna#47/130 · Base Set 2$0.80–$1Uncommon
- Kakuna#002/86 · Chaos Risingunder $1Common
- Kakuna#36/112 · FireRed & LeafGreen—Uncommon
- Kakuna#73/106 · Great Encounters—Common
- Kakuna#66/111 · Rising Rivals—Common
- Kakuna#32/95 · Unleashed—Uncommon
FAQ
How much is Kakuna (70/144) worth?
Kakuna (70/144), the Common from Skyridge, has an estimated ungraded market price of about $55–$75. Note: 9 other cards named Kakuna exist across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values; check the collector number.
Which Kakuna card is this, and how do I tell the versions apart?
This page covers Kakuna (70/144), the Common (about $55–$75) from Skyridge.
The other versions: #41/75 from Neo Discovery (Uncommon, about $3–$5); #014/165 from 151 (Common, about $3–$4); #33/102 from Base Set (Uncommon, about about $1); #47/130 from Base Set 2 (Uncommon, about $0.80–$1); #002/86 from Chaos Rising (Common, about under $1); #36/112 from FireRed & LeafGreen (Uncommon); #73/106 from Great Encounters (Common); #66/111 from Rising Rivals (Common); #32/95 from Unleashed (Uncommon).
The collector number printed at the bottom of the card is the reliable way to tell them apart.