AI-powered eBay listing tool for Hot Wheels cars, Treasure Hunts & diecast collectibles
Upload photos of your Hot Wheels car, card, or lot and RGLister's AI reads the car name, collector number, and series name from the card. For Super Treasure Hunts, it identifies the spectraflame paint and Real Riders rubber wheels — the two key visual identifiers that separate a $30-$80 STH from a $1 mainline car — and includes "Super Treasure Hunt" in the listing title. For vintage Redlines (1968-1977), it identifies the era from wheel type and striping style. For Car Culture and Premium series, it reads the series name and car name from the card back.
All eBay item specifics are filled automatically — car name, series, collector number, year, condition (MOC, loose, damaged card), and special designation. No manual Hot Wheels checklist lookups needed.
Super Treasure Hunts are the most sought-after Hot Wheels on eBay — most years' STH lineup sells $15-$80 per car, with popular models like the '67 Camaro STH or Porsche 911 GT3 RS STH reaching $50-$80. Vintage Redlines from 1968-1977 are a serious collector market — a Pink Rear-Loading Volkswagen Bus in good condition sells $100-$300 and common colors sell $20-$60. Hot Wheels Car Culture sets sell $15-$40 per car ($60-$150 per complete set).
RLC (Red Line Club) exclusives sell $30-$150 depending on car and year. Hot Wheels x Pop Culture licensed series (Marvel, DC, Star Wars, Fast and Furious) sell $10-$40 per car. Error cards — manufacturing defects with wrong card art, missing parts, or double cards — sell $30-$200 to error collectors. Convention exclusive Hot Wheels (SDCC, HWCC) sell $50-$200. Lot listings of 25-100 mixed loose Hot Wheels sell $0.25-$1 per car in lots.
Hot Wheels has produced over 10,000 different castings since 1968, with multiple versions of many cars at dramatically different price points. A mainline '69 Camaro is worth $1-$3, but the same casting as a Super Treasure Hunt is worth $40-$80, and as a vintage Redline with pink enamel paint is worth $100-$200. Identifying the correct version requires reading the wheels, paint, and card details — exactly what RGLister does from photos. For resellers processing estate sale lots with dozens of mixed Hot Wheels, this saves hours of individual research per lot.
For carded Hot Wheels, photograph both the front (to show the car) and the back of the card (to show the collector number and year). Card condition matters — a bent card reduces value by 40-60% for MOC collectors, while a mint card with a protective case commands a premium. For Super Treasure Hunts, photograph the wheel tread closely to confirm Real Riders rubber tires since this is the key authenticity detail buyers verify. For vintage Redlines, photograph the axle ends since the original Redline wheels have a distinct ribbed design and red stripe — reproductions exist. For lots, lay cars out in a grid and photograph clearly so buyers can see what they're getting — this dramatically reduces disputes. Always note whether Treasure Hunt flame logo is present for regular TH cars since the logo is the key distinguishing feature.
List your Hot Wheels collection faster with AI
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