Altaria
Platinum · #18/127
Altaria (18/127), the Rare from Platinum, has an estimated ungraded market price of about $4–$6.
As of July 19, 2026 · tracked daily by Riffle · estimates, not financial advice

Image © The Pokémon Company, shown for identification.
About Altaria
Altaria is a Rare (18/127) from the Pokémon Platinum set, released February 11, 2009. Ungraded copies currently trade at an estimated market price of $4–$6. The artwork is by Naoyo Kimura. Riffle tracks its market price daily; graded (PSA) comps and full price history are available with Riffle.
Details
Other versions of Altaria
Altaria appears on 9 different cards across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values. This page covers #18/127 from Platinum; the collector number printed at the bottom of the card tells them apart.
- Altaria#1/107 · Deoxys$65–$90Rare
- Altaria#2/97 · Dragon$50–$70Rare
- Altaria#12/106 · Great Encounters$14–$18Rare
- Altaria#2/102 · Triumphant$10–$13Rare Holo
- Altaria#GG19/70 · Crown Zenith Galarian Gallery$8–$11Rare
- Altaria#106/203 · Evolving Skiesunder $1Rare
- Altaria#160/197 · Obsidian Flamesunder $1Uncommon
- Altaria#134/191 · Surging Sparksunder $1Uncommon
FAQ
How much is Altaria (18/127) worth?
Altaria (18/127), the Rare from Platinum, has an estimated ungraded market price of about $4–$6. Note: 8 other cards named Altaria exist across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values; check the collector number.
Which Altaria card is this, and how do I tell the versions apart?
This page covers Altaria (18/127), the Rare (about $4–$6) from Platinum.
The other versions: #1/107 from Deoxys (Rare, about $65–$90); #2/97 from Dragon (Rare, about $50–$70); #12/106 from Great Encounters (Rare, about $14–$18); #2/102 from Triumphant (Rare Holo, about $10–$13); #GG19/70 from Crown Zenith Galarian Gallery (Rare, about $8–$11); #106/203 from Evolving Skies (Rare, about under $1); #160/197 from Obsidian Flames (Uncommon, about under $1); #134/191 from Surging Sparks (Uncommon, about under $1).
The collector number printed at the bottom of the card is the reliable way to tell them apart.