Violet ex Pull Rates, Best Cards & Box Value – 2026 Guide
Violet ex (SV1V) is aging better than a normal launch set. It opened the Japanese Scarlet & Violet era on January 20, 2023, introduced the modern ex framework, and still has a clear collector anchor in Miriam SAR. The May 21, 2026 refresh shows a wider box-price signal: Japanese sources sit around ¥9,600-11,400 depending on whether you read market listings or buy-price references, while recent overseas sales are clustering around the $80-90 range.
The practical answer: buy Violet ex sealed if you want early-SV history, a real opening experience, and exposure to Miriam or Miraidon. Buy singles if your only target is Miriam SAR. A box gives you a standard SV rarity structure; it does not give you a rational shortcut to one specific chase.
This May 2026 refresh treats Violet ex the same way we evaluate stronger-performing SST box guides: not just “what are the best cards,” but whether the sealed box still makes sense after several years of market data. The biggest update is the speed of the repricing. Violet ex was still being treated like an accessible early-SV box in March; by mid-May, Japan and overseas data both show a much hotter sealed market.
That last point is important. Violet ex can be a good box without being a good Miriam-chasing strategy. The best articles make that distinction clearly: collectors, sealed buyers, singles buyers, and import buyers are not all trying to solve the same problem. This guide separates those buyer types so the answer is usable before you spend money.

Violet ex Set Overview
Violet ex is the Japanese expansion that launched the Scarlet & Violet generation alongside Scarlet ex. It is built around Miraidon, Paldea’s future Paradox legendary, but the long-term market has been led by Miriam SAR and the set’s status as the first SV-era Japanese box.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Set code | SV1V |
| Japanese release | January 20, 2023 |
| Cards | 78 main-set cards plus 30 secret cards, 108 total |
| Box format | 30 packs per box, 5 cards per pack |
| Headline chases | Miriam SAR, Miraidon ex SAR, Rare Candy UR, Miriam SR, Lightning Energy UR |
| May 2026 box signal | Japan: SNKRDUNK around ¥9,599, Fuji around ¥10,900, Pokeca Box Hikaku high-buy reference ¥11,400. Overseas: recent PriceCharting/eBay sold data clustered around $81-94, with a May median near $87. |

Violet ex vs Scarlet ex
The two launch sets are siblings, but their market profiles are different. Scarlet ex has Koraidon and a cleaner entry price. Violet ex has Miriam SAR, Miraidon ex, and stronger long-term collector demand. If a buyer wants only one launch-era box, Violet ex has the clearer chase-card story.
| Factor | Violet ex (SV1V) | Scarlet ex (SV1S) |
|---|---|---|
| Mascot | Miraidon | Koraidon |
| Top collector card | Miriam SAR | Gardevoir ex SAR / supporter alternatives depending on market |
| Sealed box signal | Higher than Scarlet ex in current SST market data | Slightly cheaper entry |
| Best buyer | Collector chasing trainer-card premium and SV launch history | Buyer wanting the cheaper launch-pair box |
Top 10 Most Valuable Cards in Violet ex
Miriam SAR is the article’s main character. Miraidon ex SAR gives the set its Pokemon identity, while Rare Candy UR, Miriam SR, and Lightning Energy UR add the kind of utility-card depth that keeps a set moving after release hype fades.
| Rank | Card | Rarity | Current signal | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Miriam | SAR | ~$99 raw / top JPN chase | Female-supporter SAR with proven SV-era demand |
| 2 | Miraidon ex | SAR | ~$37 raw | Flagship Pokemon card and early SV competitive icon |
| 3 | Miriam | SR | ~$15 raw | Accessible Miriam collector option |
| 4 | Rare Candy | UR | ~$10 raw | Evergreen trainer utility in gold treatment |
| 5 | Lightning Energy | UR | ~$12 raw | Matches Miraidon and has broad binder appeal |
| 6 | Arven | SAR | Budget SAR | Story-character appeal and low entry price |
| 7 | Miraidon ex | UR | Budget gold chase | Completionist card for Miraidon collectors |
| 8 | Slowpoke | AR | Best AR signal | One of the most loved early-SV art rares |
| 9 | Spidops ex | SAR | Budget SAR | Low price, still a full SAR hit |
| 10 | Iron Treads ex | SAR | Budget SAR | Paradox Pokemon SAR at entry-level pricing |
#1 Miriam SAR
The premium card in SV1V. The draw is not only price; it is the combination of character popularity, soft full-art composition, and the fact that Miriam became the defining trainer chase of the launch pair.
#2 Miraidon ex SAR
Miraidon is the set identity. Its price no longer behaves like a pure competitive card, but the SAR is still the card that makes Violet ex feel like Violet ex.
#3 Utility gold
Rare Candy UR is the quiet long-tail card. Gold trainer cards with universal play history tend to stay liquid even when the spotlight moves to newer sets.
Top 3 Deep Dive
Miriam SAR is the reason Violet ex outpaces Scarlet ex. A specific Miriam pull is much rarer than “any SAR” because the SAR slot has five possible outcomes, so a box buyer should treat Miriam as an upside event, not an expectation.
Miraidon ex SAR is the best Pokemon card in the set. It benefits from mascot status, early SV play history, and the future-Paradox theme that separates Violet from Scarlet.
Rare Candy UR is not a headline character card, but it gives the top 10 more durability. It is a recognizable staple item, a gold card, and a card type that casual buyers understand quickly.
#4-10 Quick Rankings
Miriam SR is the obvious budget alternative to the SAR. It gives collectors the same character focus without turning the purchase into a top-card buy. Lightning Energy UR is the most thematic gold card because it lines up with Miraidon’s electric identity. Arven SAR and Slowpoke AR give the set more personality than the top-three price list suggests.
The lower SARs also matter more than their prices imply. Spidops ex SAR and Iron Treads ex SAR are not expensive, but they make opening a box feel materially different from opening a product where the non-top SARs are forgettable. This is one reason Violet ex remains a pleasant box to open even when the EV math says singles are cleaner.
Budget trainer chase
Miriam SR is the compromise card: still character-led, still binder friendly, but not priced like the SAR. For many buyers, this is the more rational Miriam target.
Best AR flavor
Slowpoke AR gives Violet ex a softer collector lane. It is not the price leader, but it is the kind of card that makes a set memorable beyond raw value.
Entry SAR hit
Iron Treads ex SAR keeps the SAR floor accessible. Pulling a lower SAR is not Miriam, but it still gives the box a premium-card moment.
More Violet ex Card Photos
A stronger Violet ex guide should show more than the top three cards. The set’s real depth comes from the trainer layer, AR flavor, utility gold cards, and lower-entry SARs that make a box feel complete even when Miriam is not inside.
Character SAR that gives the lower half of the SAR pool more story value than a generic low-price secret rare.
A budget SAR that still matters for opening satisfaction because it keeps the premium slot visually distinct.
Miriam SR
The more reachable Miriam card, useful for buyers who want the character without paying SAR pricing.
Slowpoke AR
The best AR personality card in the set and one of the easiest binder pages to recommend from SV1V.
Iron Treads ex SAR
An accessible Paradox Pokemon SAR that helps the set feel specific to the Scarlet & Violet launch era.
Rare Candy UR
Gold utility card with recognizable play history, which keeps liquidity broader than character cards alone.
Demand Tiers
Tier 1 is Miriam SAR. This card controls the set narrative and is the main reason collectors compare Violet ex favorably against Scarlet ex. Tier 2 is Miraidon ex SAR and Miriam SR. These cards keep the top end from being a one-card market. Tier 3 is the utility and binder layer: Rare Candy UR, Lightning Energy UR, Slowpoke AR, and budget SARs. A box with only Tier 3 hits may not beat sealed price, but it can still satisfy an opener.
Why Violet ex Is Special
The First Scarlet & Violet Era Signal
Violet ex is an era-start set. That matters because launch sets become reference points: first ex framework, first Paldea identity, first Japanese SV-era sealed boxes, and first wave of AR/SAR collecting for the generation.
The Miriam Premium
Many modern Pokemon SARs lose value after competitive relevance fades. Female-supporter SARs behave differently. Miriam SAR has remained the set’s clear premium because the demand is character-led rather than playability-led.
Small SAR Pool
The five-card SAR pool gives Violet ex a cleaner chase structure than later, larger sets. You still should not expect Miriam from a box, but a small SAR pool makes the set feel more focused than releases with broad, diluted secret pools.
Competitive History Without Depending on It
Miraidon ex was not just a mascot card; it had real competitive relevance during the early Scarlet & Violet era. That matters for memory. Sets attached to decks people actually played tend to be easier to explain years later. But Violet ex is not dependent on current playability anymore. The collector thesis has shifted from “Miraidon is playable” to “this is the launch box with Miriam and Miraidon.”
Why This Is Not Just Another SV Box
A lot of SV-era standard boxes blur together once their release window passes. Violet ex has three labels that stay easy to remember: first wave, Violet mascot, Miriam chase. That clarity is the unique hook. Even if a newer box has a more exciting short-term chase card, Violet ex is easier to position as a collection piece because its reason to exist is not tied to one month of hype.
| Collector hook | How Violet ex scores | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Era significance | High | Launch-era products stay easier to explain over time |
| Trainer premium | High | Miriam SAR gives the set a character-led top card |
| Mascot identity | High | Miraidon makes the set visually and thematically specific |
| Opening EV | Average | Normal standard-set math; not the main reason to buy |
| Sealed scarcity | Building | Not grail-level scarcity, but supply is no longer launch-window abundant |
Should You Buy Violet ex in 2026?
For Collectors
Yes. Violet ex has a real anchor in Miriam SAR, a mascot SAR in Miraidon, and historical value as one half of the SV launch pair.
For Players
Buy singles. Miraidon ex and Rare Candy have play-history appeal, but sealed boxes are now priced for collectors, not deck construction.
For Sealed Buyers
One clean box makes sense if you want early-SV exposure. The box is still far cheaper than Pokemon 151, Eevee Heroes, or major Sword & Shield grails.
Box vs Singles Decision
| Goal | Better choice | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Hit Miriam SAR specifically | Buy the single | Specific-card odds make sealed chasing inefficient |
| Open an early SV box | Buy a box | Violet ex has strong set identity and a small SAR pool |
| Build a Miraidon binder page | Singles first, box optional | You can target Miraidon SAR/UR directly |
| Hold sealed long term | One or two boxes | Era-launch status matters more as supply tightens |
Japanese Violet ex vs English Scarlet & Violet
The English Scarlet & Violet base set combines the launch experience differently, with larger product formats and a different market depth. Japanese Violet ex is cleaner for collectors who want one exact set code, one mascot identity, and Japanese print quality. English is better if you want local play legality and lower friction for casual buyers.
For Singles Buyers
If the target is one exact card, singles win. Miriam SAR, Miraidon ex SAR, Miriam SR, Rare Candy UR, and Slowpoke AR can all be bought directly. This removes variance and usually costs less than opening enough boxes to find the card naturally. The singles route is especially strong for buyers building a character page or a graded-card submission batch.
For Import Buyers
Violet ex is a friendly import box because the price is still moderate and the product is easy to understand. A buyer does not need deep modern Pokemon knowledge to understand the set: it is the Japanese Violet launch box with Miriam and Miraidon. That makes it better for overseas stores, breakers, and collectors who want products that are easy to explain to their own customers.
Current Box vs Older Grail Boxes
Violet ex is not trying to be Eevee Heroes or Pokemon 151. It is a lower-entry early-SV position. If you want maximum nostalgia, older grails are stronger. If you want a box that still feels accessible while having a clear long-term identity, Violet ex fits better. That middle lane is exactly why it should not be written like a short filler article.
Pull Rates and Box EV
Japanese pull rates are not officially published by The Pokemon Company. The numbers below are estimates from community opening behavior and the known Japanese box structure. Treat them as decision support, not guarantees.
Rarity Pull Rates
| Rarity | Cards in set | Estimated per-box chance | Buyer interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| RR / ex | 6 | Multiple per box | Expected baseline hits |
| AR | 12 | Several per box | Good binder value and visual satisfaction |
| SR | 10 | Most boxes have SR-or-better | Typical premium slot |
| SAR | 5 | ~16% per box estimate | Main excitement slot |
| UR | 3 | Lower than SAR | Gold-card upside |
Box Pattern
Standard pattern: normal RR/ex cards, AR cards, and one SR-or-better hit. This is the box most buyers should expect.
Upgrade pattern: some boxes produce an additional premium result, such as a SAR or UR upgrade. This is why the set feels exciting even when the expected value is below box price.
Specific Miriam Odds
The easiest mistake is to read “SAR chance” as “Miriam chance.” Those are not the same. If any SAR is roughly a mid-teens per-box event and there are five SARs in the pool, the specific Miriam outcome is only a fraction of that. In plain language: a box can be a good product while still being a bad way to force one exact card.
This is why the recommendation changes by buyer. A collector who wants the opening experience can accept variance. A buyer who wants Miriam for a binder, grading submission, or personal collection should buy the single. The set’s small SAR pool helps, but it does not eliminate the normal economics of chase cards.
| Target | Estimated difficulty | Best strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Any AR | Expected in a box | Open sealed if you enjoy the set |
| Any SR-or-better | Expected premium slot | Open sealed |
| Any SAR | Chance upgrade | Open only if lower outcomes are acceptable |
| Miriam SAR specifically | Low specific-card odds | Buy the single |
| Sealed early-SV position | No pull risk | Buy and keep sealed |
Expected Value and Market Repricing

| Component | Practical value | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Box cost | Japan ¥9,600-11,400 / overseas roughly $80-90 | May 2026 latest market signal across SST, Pokeca Box Hikaku, and PriceCharting/eBay sold data |
| Recent repricing | About +30% Japan signal / about +34% overseas signal since March | The move is fast enough that old March article pricing understates the current market |
| Miriam SAR | Highest card in the set | Can exceed box price, but specific-card odds are low |
| Miraidon ex SAR | Mid-tier chase | Strong hit, not enough alone to cover most boxes |
| AR/SR baseline | Opening satisfaction | Helps the box feel fair even when EV is negative |
| EV conclusion | Below sealed price | Normal for Pokemon TCG; buy sealed for experience, history, and upside |
Why Negative EV Is Not Automatically Bad
Most sealed Pokemon products have negative expected value if you price the average pulls against the sealed box. That does not make every box a bad purchase. It means the purchase has to be justified by something beyond raw pull math: entertainment value, sealed collecting, scarcity, historical role, or the possibility of hitting an outlier chase.
Violet ex has enough non-EV support to be reasonable. It has launch-era importance, a major trainer chase, a mascot SAR, useful gold cards, and an accessible box price. The problem only starts when a buyer expects the box to behave like a discounted Miriam SAR lottery ticket. It is not.
Price Trends and Market Outlook
Violet ex has moved from “recent launch set” to “early SV-era reference box.” That shift matters. Buyers are no longer paying only for current cards; they are paying for Miriam, Miraidon, and the launch-year position. The latest market data makes that clearer than the earlier article did.
The important update is the March-to-May repricing. The March baseline used in the old article was around ¥8,800. By May 17, 2026, Pokeca Box Hikaku showed a ¥11,400 highest-buy reference, while SST’s weekly Japanese market signals still placed live sell-side references around ¥9,599-¥10,900. Overseas, recent PriceCharting/eBay sales moved from roughly $65 in March to a May median near $87. In other words, both sides of the market are repricing Violet ex upward, even if each venue prints a slightly different executable price.
Box Price Movement
| Period | Box price signal | Market read |
|---|---|---|
| Launch, January 2023 | Above MSRP during initial demand | Normal launch premium |
| 2023 restock window | Lower and more available | Supply normalized after hype |
| March 2026 article baseline | Around ¥8,800 | Stable early-SV collector box |
| April 2026 market move | Japan signal around ¥11,000 band; overseas median around $75 | The repricing was already underway before the latest May check |
| May 21, 2026 refresh | Japan ¥9,599-¥11,400 depending source; overseas May sold median near $87 | High-demand early-SV box, still accessible but no longer cheap relative to March |
What Happens Next
The most likely path is gradual appreciation rather than a sudden spike. Violet ex does not have Pokemon 151-level nostalgia, but it has a cleaner identity than many later standard sets. The risk is opportunity cost: newer boxes may offer fresher chase cards, while older boxes may offer stronger scarcity. Violet ex sits in the middle as a practical early-SV hold.
Reprint Risk
Any meaningful reprint or restock can cool sealed prices. That is why this article treats Violet ex as a collector box, not a guaranteed investment. The strongest reason to buy is the combination of set identity, Miriam demand, and current accessibility.
What Would Change the Thesis?
The bullish thesis weakens if sealed supply returns in size, if Miriam SAR demand softens materially, or if early-SV nostalgia fails to develop as newer generations release. The thesis strengthens if boxes continue moving above the current ¥9,600-11,400 Japan band and $80-90 overseas band without a broad restock, because that would confirm that the market is starting to price Violet ex as an older collector box instead of a normal available expansion.
Related Set Ladder
Think of Violet ex as a middle-rung SV product. Below it are cheaper standard sets that may have weaker chase identity. Above it are heavy collector products like Pokemon 151 and Eevee-centered boxes where sealed prices already carry a much larger nostalgia premium. Violet ex is attractive because it still gives buyers a clear story without asking them to pay grail pricing.
| Buyer budget | Best fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Lower entry | Cheaper current SV boxes | Better for opening volume, weaker historical identity |
| Middle entry | Violet ex | Era-start box with Miriam and Miraidon at an accessible price |
| Higher entry | Pokemon 151 / older grails | Stronger nostalgia, higher sealed-price pressure |
Where to Buy Violet ex
For overseas buyers, the priority is simple: buy a clean Japanese box from a seller that can explain condition, tracking, and authenticity. Violet ex is still affordable enough that reseal risk is lower than high-end grails, but sealed integrity still matters.
What to Check Before Buying
| Check | Why it matters | Good signal |
|---|---|---|
| Box condition | Collectors care about display quality and sealed integrity | Clear photos, no crushed corners, no vague “random condition” wording |
| Seller location | Japanese domestic sourcing reduces uncertainty for Japanese boxes | Ships from Japan or from a specialist with Japan supply |
| Tracking | International sealed products should not move without traceability | Tracked shipping with carrier handoff visible |
| Price realism | Too-cheap boxes create avoidable risk | Price sits near current market, not far below it |
| Return/support route | Problems are rare but expensive when they happen | Clear contact route and order history |
For shop owners and repeat buyers, Violet ex is also easy to merchandise. “Japanese Violet launch box with Miriam SAR” is a cleaner shelf story than many mid-cycle sets. That matters when you need products customers can understand quickly from a thumbnail, a break menu, or a sealed-box display.
SV1V Violet ex sealed Japanese booster box, tracked international shipping, and direct access to the SV1V card list.
Use the SV1V Violet ex card list for card-level checking, or browse all Japanese Pokemon sealed booster boxes if you are comparing set value across the SV era.
The Bottom Line
Violet ex works because the story is simple: first Scarlet & Violet launch set, Miraidon identity, Miriam SAR premium, and a sealed price that is still reachable. It is not the best EV box, and it is not the cheapest way to own Miriam. It is a strong collector box because the set has a reason to exist beyond a generic top-10 list.
The best comparison is not “can Violet ex beat every modern box on EV?” It cannot. The better question is whether the set has enough identity to deserve a sealed slot in a collection or enough chase depth to justify opening one. On that question, Violet ex is stronger than a generic standard expansion. It has an era-start role, one obvious top chase, a mascot SAR, and several affordable cards that keep the set enjoyable below the top-card level.
That is also why the article should be deeper than a short card list. A buyer needs to understand the split between sealed logic and singles logic. Violet ex is good when bought for the right reason. It becomes disappointing only when the buyer treats a sealed box as the cheapest path to Miriam SAR.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the pull rates for Violet ex SAR cards?
SAR pulls are estimated around the mid-teens per box, often summarized near 16%. The exact rate is not officially published. Your chance of a specific SAR such as Miriam is lower because the SAR pool has five cards.
What is the most expensive card in Violet ex?
Miriam SAR is the clear top card. It is the card that gives Violet ex a stronger collector profile than Scarlet ex.
Is Violet ex worth buying in 2026?
Yes for collectors who want early SV history, Miriam exposure, and a still-accessible sealed box. It is less compelling for players or anyone targeting one exact card.
Should I buy a Violet ex box or Miriam SAR as a single?
Buy Miriam as a single if she is your only target. Buy the box if you value opening, sealed collecting, and the chance at multiple attractive hits.
How many cards are in Violet ex?
Violet ex has 108 total cards: 78 main-set cards and 30 secret cards.
What makes Violet ex different from Scarlet ex?
Violet ex has Miraidon and Miriam. Scarlet ex has Koraidon and a lower sealed entry point. Violet ex is generally the stronger collector pick because Miriam SAR leads the pair.
Can Japanese Violet ex cards be used in tournaments?
Official tournament legality depends on region and event rules. In many international official events, local-language cards are required. Japanese cards are still popular for collecting and casual play.
Where can I see the full Violet ex card list?
Use the SV1V Violet ex card list to check every card, image, and card number.
Why is Miriam SAR so important to Violet ex?
Miriam SAR gives Violet ex a character-led top chase that is not dependent on current tournament play. Female-supporter SARs have historically carried strong collector demand, and Miriam is the card most buyers remember from this launch pair.
Is Violet ex better to open or keep sealed?
It depends on your goal. Open it if you value the early-SV experience and would still enjoy non-Miriam hits. Keep it sealed if you want exposure to an era-start Japanese box and do not need immediate singles value.
What is the biggest risk with Violet ex?
The biggest risk is paying for sealed boxes while expecting a specific chase-card result. Reprint or restock pressure can also cool sealed prices. Treat Violet ex as a collector product first, not a guaranteed investment.