Pyroar
Evolving Skies · #23/203
Pyroar (23/203), the Uncommon from Evolving Skies, has an estimated ungraded market price of about under $1.
As of July 13, 2026 · tracked daily by Riffle · estimates, not financial advice
Image © The Pokémon Company — shown for identification.
Riffle’s market-character rating vs. all tracked cards. Subscores light up as daily market data accrues. Not financial advice.
Heating-up & cooling-off signals appear here as daily market data builds up.
How much is Pyroar (23/203) worth?
Pyroar (23/203), the Uncommon from Evolving Skies, has an estimated ungraded market price of about under $1. Exact price, full price history, and graded (PSA 9/10) comps are available with Riffle.
Other versions of Pyroar
Pyroar appears on 5 different cards across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values. This page covers #23/203 from Evolving Skies — the collector number printed at the bottom of the card tells them apart.
About Pyroar
Pyroar is a Uncommon (23/203) from the Pokémon Evolving Skies set, released August 27, 2021. Ungraded copies currently trade at an estimated market price of under $1. The artwork is by Hitoshi Ariga. Riffle tracks its market price daily; graded (PSA) comps and full price history are available with Riffle.
Price history & trend
Graded comps & eBay market dynamics
Details
FAQ
How much is Pyroar (23/203) worth?
Pyroar (23/203), the Uncommon from Evolving Skies, has an estimated ungraded market price of about under $1. Note: 4 other cards named Pyroar exist across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values — check the collector number.
Which Pyroar card is this — how do I tell the versions apart?
This page covers Pyroar (23/203), the Uncommon (about under $1) from Evolving Skies. The other versions: #200/193 from Paldea Evolved (Illustration rare, about $17–$23); #032/193 from Paldea Evolved (Uncommon, about under $1); #024/132 from Mega Evolution (Uncommon, about under $1); #016/131 from Prismatic Evolutions (Uncommon, about under $1). The collector number printed at the bottom of the card is the reliable way to tell them apart.