Available for acquisition · Prepared for prospective buyers
A turnkey brand, platform, and proprietary comp database in a multi-hundred-billion-dollar category — built, written, and ready to operate.
Memorabilia.co is a category-defining .co domain, a production-grade Next.js platform, 80+ original long-form content assets, a complete brand system, and The Field Index — a curated database of documented memorabilia sales across eight categories with full provenance, source citations, and quarterly market reports. Assembled and edited to professional standards, with monetization paths already wired in. One acquirer, one transfer, one weekend to launch.
- Asking price
- $4,999
- USD · open to qualified offers
- Comp database
- 72+
- documented sales · proprietary
- Category size
- $464B+
- global collectibles category
- Trust gap
- 50–70%
- of autographs are fake (FBI)
Secure transaction held by Escrow.com — funds released only after domain and assets transfer. The Buyer Diligence Pack PDF summarizes the asset, what is included, buyer fit, transfer process, commercialization paths, and the diligence checklist. No inflated traffic or revenue claims.
Founder walkthrough · ~2 min 20 sec
See what you are acquiring — a short tour from the builder.
A quick walkthrough of the brand, The Field Index comp database, the cornerstone guides, the category structure, the authentication content, and the four interactive collector tools — recorded from the live site.
Captions included. Screen-recorded directly from the live site — no edits, no enhancements. What you see is what transfers.
The thesis in 30 seconds
Executive summary
The global collectibles market is most recently sized at roughly $464B and is projected by third-party research to compound to nearly $902B over a ten-year horizon at a 7.2% CAGR. The sports memorabilia segment alone is projected to grow from roughly $33B to over $271B at a 22.1% CAGR — one of the fastest growth rates in any consumer category outside AI.
Yet the buy-side experience is broken. The FBI estimates 50–70% of autographed sports memorabilia in the secondary market is fake. Beckett Authentication Services reports that ~50% of items submitted to them are not authentic. Owners of inherited collections, casual sellers, and small dealers have nowhere trusted to start — and they have money.
Memorabilia.co is the brand that fills that gap as a media, education, and lead-routing layer — not as an appraiser, marketplace, or authenticator (the three positions that create trust and liability risk). It is built around the highest-intent query in the category — "what is this worth and how do I sell it safely?" — and it routes that intent to services that pay referrals: auction houses, grading labs, authentication services, insurance, storage, shipping, and dealer directories.
What's for sale is the entire foundation: the premium domain, the production-ready Next.js site, the 80+ professionally edited content assets, four interactive tools, the brand system, the Supabase + Resend infrastructure, a two-week post-transfer handoff window, and The Field Index — a proprietary database of curated, source-cited memorabilia sales across eight categories with full provenance documentation, a 34-pattern Red Flag Library, and 8 quarterly market-pulse reports — for $4,999 — a small fraction of what a comparable build plus curated data asset would cost to commission from scratch.
$464B+
Global collectibles market size
Global Industry Analysts / GlobeNewswire
22.1%
Sports memorabilia 10-yr CAGR
Market Decipher
50–70%
Autographs that are fake
FBI estimate
~$160M
Operation Bullpen fraud (inflation-adjusted)
FBI Archives
A proprietary data asset
The Field Index — a curated comp database, a Red Flag Library, and quarterly market reports.
Conveyed with the brand. Not replicable overnight.
What did it actually sell for? It is the single highest-intent query in this category, and it is currently answered only by paywalled databases (WorthPoint $250/yr; PSA Auction Prices Realized $99/yr; Beckett $35/mo) or by category-siloed auction-house archives. The Field Index answers it for free, across all eight memorabilia categories, with editorial provenance and source citations on every entry.
- Documented comps
- 72
- Across 8 categories
- Aggregate hammer covered
- $172M
- Across the tracked dataset
- Red flag patterns
- 34
- Documented fraud signals
- Quarterly reports
- 8
- Market-pulse research notes
The comp database
Every entry includes: item name, category, sale price, sale date, auction venue, lot number, authentication grade, full provenance chain, condition, editorial note, comparable comps, and source citations from auction-house catalogs, trade press, and grading services.
Open the Field IndexThe Red Flag Library
34 documented fraud patterns sourced from FBI bulletins, court filings, auction-house notices, and authenticator advisories. Severity-rated. Every pattern includes the indicators, what to do, and references.
Browse fraud patternsQuarterly market reports
8 published market-pulse reports covering the 8 tracked categories. Each report documents tracked sales, median price movement, structural trends, and what we are watching. Written like research notes, not marketing posts.
Read the latest reportWhy this materially changes the acquisition
Curated data assets do not appear in production-ready content-site sales.
A finished Next.js codebase plus written content is a defensible asset; replacement cost is a documented agency-rate exercise (see Build Breakdown and Replacement Cost). A curated, source-cited dataset that solves the category's highest-intent query is a different class of asset. It cannot be commissioned in a week — the editorial work to identify, verify, and write up 72+ documented sales takes months. It is a content moat that produces both SEO compounding and a partnership-credibility moat.
For an operator
- SEO compounding. 72+ unique long-tail URLs (each comp gets its own page with rich metadata, JSON-LD Product schema, and source-citation outbound links).
- Partnership credibility. Auction houses, grading services, and insurance carriers respect an operator who runs an editorial comp database — it positions the brand as a neutral reference, not a competitor.
- Lead-routing depth. Each comp links to category guides, authentication services, and selling-route tools — converting reference-traffic into intent-traffic.
For a financial buyer
- Time-to-market. The Field Index would take a competent editorial team 4–8 weeks (full-time) to assemble from scratch, even with templates and tooling in place.
- Replacement-cost reference. Editorial production at $0.30–$0.60 per word + research time conservatively puts curated comp content at $9,000–$18,000 of direct production cost alone.
- Defensibility. The dataset is editorial — a competitor cannot scrape PSA Auction Prices and call it equivalent. The Field Index is a curated reference, not a price tracker.
Coverage map
Eight categories, each its own indexed archive.
Every category page lists every tracked comp in the segment with median, high, and aggregate hammer for the set, plus contextual content on what affects value, where it sells, and the top sales in the category.
Editorial, not paid. Inclusion is decided by the Memorabilia.co Editors. Auction houses and dealers cannot pay for a listing — and that editorial independence is part of what the buyer is acquiring.
The package, line by line
What you are acquiring
Every component is finished work — not a starter template, not a wireframe, not an AI slop dump. The site is what it is: a complete, edited, deployment-ready brand asset.
| Asset | Detail |
|---|---|
| Domain | Memorabilia.co — premium descriptive single-word |
| Codebase | Next.js 14 App Router · TypeScript · ~16,500 LOC (with Field Index) |
| UI components | 55+ production React components · shadcn/ui base |
| Routes | 150+ App Router pages with typed metadata and JSON-LD (comp detail + report pages) |
| Content library | 5 cornerstone guides · 35 articles · 25 glossary terms · 8 category hubs |
| The Field Index | 72+ source-cited memorabilia comps · 34-pattern Red Flag Library · 8 quarterly reports |
| Interactive tools | Selling Route Finder · Auth Readiness · Inventory Template · Photo Checklist |
| Brand system | Archival palette · Playfair + Inter type · component primitives |
| Database schema | Supabase Postgres migrations: newsletter, contact, acquisition, tools, downloads |
| Resend + React Email transactional templates (newsletter, contact, acquisition, download) | |
| Forms | Server actions · Zod validation · honeypot · in-memory rate limiting · IP hashing |
| SEO | Sitemap · robots · OG image generator · Organization/Website/Article/HowTo/FAQ/Product JSON-LD |
| Lead-magnet asset | Downloadable CSV inventory template + tracked download flow |
| Analytics | Plausible-ready (Vercel Analytics drop-in alternative) |
| Tests | Vitest unit tests + Playwright end-to-end scaffolding |
| Deployment | Vercel-ready · Dockerfile · docker-compose · environment template |
| Documentation | Deployment, content editing, acquisition handoff, monetization playbooks |
| Handoff | Two-week post-transfer support window, code walkthrough recording, transfer logistics |
Domain analysis
Why “Memorabilia” is the right brand
Memorabilia.co is a one-word, dictionary-defined, category-defining domain. In domain-investor terminology it is a "type-in" brand: visitors who type the URL directly arrive intending to do exactly what the site is built to serve. Type-in traffic carries the highest commercial intent of any acquisition channel — these visitors are not browsing, they are shopping for an answer.
The .co TLD is among the most widely-accepted alternatives to .com — issued by ColombiaSpace and marketed globally as a brand-friendly TLD for over a decade. NameBio has reported strong recent year-over-year growth in .co aftermarket dollar volume, reflecting renewed investor confidence in the extension. Premium one-word .co domains consistently trade in the $5,000–$100,000+ range in public marketplace data.
More importantly, no dominant generalist brand owns the "memorabilia" category. The space is fragmented across PSA (cards), JSA (autographs), Heritage Auctions (auctions), eBay (marketplace), Stack's Bowers (coins), and dozens of mid-tier dealers. None of them own the upper-funnel education layer that every collector and inheritor passes through first.
Domain quality scorecard
- A
Length
11 letters — descriptive, full word
- A
Memorability
Dictionary word, no spelling ambiguity
- A+
Commercial intent
Type-in keyword = buyer intent
- A
Brand fit
Singular category-defining noun
- B+
TLD
.co — widely accepted alternative to .com
- A
Competitor clarity
No dominant generalist brand owns the term
- Clean
Trademark surface
No conflicting marks identified on USPTO TESS
- A
Pronunciation
Familiar word, no spelling-out required
Source: Domain-investor common heuristics (Estibot weighting, NameBio comparables, USPTO TESS trademark search). Educational analysis only.
Market sizing
The category opportunity
Memorabilia and collectibles are one of a small number of consumer categories with compounding double-digit growth, low brand consolidation, high transaction value, and a genuine information asymmetry between owners and professionals. It is a near-ideal category for a content + lead-routing operator.
Ten-year horizon (USD billions) · 7.2% CAGR
Global collectibles market
Source: GIA / GlobeNewswire; Market Decipher
Ten-year horizon (USD billions) · 22.1% CAGR
Sports memorabilia & cards
Source: Market Decipher / PR Newswire
Why this matters for a content + lead-routing brand
- Boomer estates entering market: an estimated $84T generational wealth transfer underway over the coming decades (Cerulli Associates).
- Online marketplace share growing — eBay, Whatnot, Heritage Live, Goldin — increasing "safe selling" queries.
- Authentication services (PSA, JSA, Beckett, SGC, CGC) are demand-constrained — backlog drives education searches.
- Insurance carriers (Collectibles Insurance Services, Chubb Masterpiece) actively seek pre-qualified collectors via referral.
- Auction houses compete fiercely for consignment leads. CPL (cost-per-lead) ranges quoted at $50–$300 in trade publications.
- Gen Z + millennials entering, broadening category beyond traditional sports cards into music, film, fashion, and pop-culture.
Why this brand routes leads
The trust gap is the wedge
The most expensive problem a memorabilia owner has is not pricing — it is verifying that the thing they own is actually what they think it is. Authentication is the multiplier on every other variable. An authenticated autograph sells for 3–10x the price of an identical-looking unauthenticated one. A graded card can sell for 10–50x a raw equivalent of the same year and player.
And yet the buy-side market is awash with fraud:
- The FBI estimates 50–70% of autographed sports memorabilia in the secondary market is not authentic.
- Beckett Authentication Services reports that approximately 50% of items submitted to them fail.
- Operation Bullpen — the largest such investigation in FBI history — uncovered $100M in autograph fraud (roughly $160M inflation-adjusted), and that was just one ring.
- One recent dealer admitted to $350M+ in counterfeit gear sales before law-enforcement action (CBS Sports).
That trust gap is a content moat. Every owner — inheritor, dealer, fan, estate executor — has to pass through an "am I being scammed?" phase before they spend money on authentication, grading, consignment, insurance, storage, or shipping. Owning that phase is what Memorabilia.co is structurally built to do.
Authentication multiplier
What authentication does to price
Source: Industry directional ranges; Heritage Auctions / eBay sold-listing surveys. Illustrative — actual multipliers vary by category, item, and authority.
Engineering & design
What the build actually is
This is not a no-code dashboard or a Webflow export. The codebase is ~12,880 lines of TypeScript, TSX, and MDX across 96 source files, organized as a Next.js 14 App Router application with typed routes, server actions, local MDX content, Supabase persistence, Resend email, and full SEO and structured data infrastructure.
It is built the way a senior engineer would build it for a client who is going to run it: defensive form handling, IP hashing for spam scoring, in-memory rate limiting on every action, Zod validation at every boundary, JSON-LD across every page type, Vitest unit coverage, and Playwright end-to-end scaffolding.
Estimated equivalent build cost at North American agency rates ($90–$150/hr senior, $50–$90/hr mid):
- Discovery, brand, IA, design system: ~80–120 hours
- Engineering (app, routes, forms, Supabase, email, Field Index data layer): ~180–240 hours
- Content production & editorial — guides/articles/glossary: ~120–160 hours
- Field Index editorial production (comp research, verification, writing): ~100–160 hours
- QA, accessibility, SEO, deployment, docs: ~40–60 hours
- Total: ~520–740 hours ⇒ ~$40,000–$78,000 at blended mid-senior rates.
Tech stack
- FrameworkNext.js 14.2 App Router · TypeScript · React 18
- StylingTailwind CSS 3.4 · shadcn/ui primitives · Radix UI
- ContentLocal MDX · gray-matter · next-mdx-remote · remark-gfm
- DatabaseSupabase Postgres with migrations included
- EmailResend + React Email transactional templates
- FormsServer Actions · Zod · honeypot · rate-limited · IP-hashed
- SEOJSON-LD (Org/Site/Article/HowTo/FAQ/Product/CollectionPage) · sitemap · OG image
- Data layerField Index — JSON datasets + Zod schemas + typed loaders
- AnalyticsPlausible (or Vercel Analytics — drop-in)
- TestingVitest · Playwright
- ToolingESLint · Prettier · pnpm · Node 20
- HostingVercel-ready · Dockerfile · docker-compose included
Offline diligence
Download the Buyer Diligence Pack.
The PDF summarizes the asset, what is included, buyer fit, the transfer process, commercialization paths, and a diligence checklist — in a clean offline format you can review with partners and advisors. No inflated traffic or revenue claims. This is a transferable digital asset package.
PDF · 12 pages · letter size · printable. Mirrors and condenses the contents of this acquisition page for offline review.
Content inventory
What is already written
Content is the single most expensive thing in a niche site. This one is finished — professionally edited, internally linked, MDX- and JSON-organized, with frontmatter, FAQ blocks, and ItemList/HowTo/Article/Product JSON-LD wired in. Including the proprietary Field Index dataset, no comparable content + reference asset exists at the price point.
| Asset class | Count | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Cornerstone guides | 5 | Authentication · Value · Selling · Preservation · Inherited collections |
| Supporting articles | 35 | Long-tail topical coverage feeding the cornerstones |
| Glossary terms | 25 | Definitional content for SEO entity coverage |
| Category hubs | 8 | Sports · Cards · Autographs · Music · Movie/TV · Comics · Toys · Political |
| Topic learn hubs | 5 | Authentication · Grading · Preservation · Selling · Estate |
| The Field Index — comp database | 72 | Documented memorabilia sales across 8 categories — venue, lot, auth, provenance, sources |
| The Field Index — Red Flag Library | 34 | Documented fraud patterns with severity, indicators, and remediation |
| The Field Index — Quarterly reports | 8 | Market-pulse research notes covering trailing quarters |
| Field Index methodology page | 1 | Editorial inclusion criteria, source taxonomy, refresh cadence |
| Resource pages | 4 | Authentication services · Selling routes · Auction houses · Storage supplies |
| Interactive tools | 4 | Selling Route Finder · Auth Readiness · Inventory Template · Photo Checklist |
| Lead-magnet asset | 1 | Downloadable CSV collection inventory template |
| Words of original content | ~42,000+ | Across guides, articles, glossary, category hubs, Field Index, Red Flag Library, and quarterly reports |
Replacement cost reality-check
At a conservative $0.30/word for professional category writing (the low end of the rate quoted by Verblio, Express Writers, and freelance specialists in the collectibles vertical), 42,000 words ≈ $12,600 in raw drafting alone. The Field Index research — identifying, verifying, and writing up 72+ source-cited comps across 8 categories — adds another $5,000–$10,000 of editorial production cost (memorabilia specialists charge $40–$80/hr for research, and the Field Index represents 100+ documented research hours). With editing, MDX/JSON structuring, JSON-LD, internal linking, and SEO frontmatter, a realistic comparable content + dataset production cost is $18,000–$32,000 — and that's before brand strategy or design.
Monetization paths
How money flows in this category
Every column below already has a partner-recognized program or contact path. The site is intentionally not a marketplace — it routes high-intent visitors to operators that compensate the referrer, while keeping the brand on the trustworthy side of the table.
| Revenue path | Typical partners | Common terms | Unit economics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Auction-house consignment referrals | Heritage, Goldin, Lelands, Hindman, Bonhams, Hake's | 5–10% of seller commission on closed lots | Mid to high |
| Authentication & grading referrals | PSA, JSA, Beckett, SGC, CGC | Affiliate / CPA / partner-tier | Mid |
| Insurance referrals | Collectibles Insurance Services, Chubb Masterpiece | $30–$100+ CPA per qualified application | Mid |
| Supplies & shipping affiliates | BCW, Ultra Pro, Pelican, U-Line, ShipStation | 5–15% affiliate revenue | Low-mid |
| Newsletter sponsorships | Auction houses, grading services, marketplaces, dealers | $15–$60 CPM at scale | Mid (after audience) |
| Paid dealer & appraiser directory | Specialist dealers, certified appraisers | $29–$199/mo per listing | Mid-high (recurring) |
| Digital products | Inventory kits, photography presets, workbooks | One-time $19–$79 | Low (margin-positive) |
No revenue is included or guaranteed in the sale. The site has no live partnerships at the time of transfer. Terms above reflect typical published industry rate cards (eBay Partner Network, Heritage Auctions affiliate program, Collectibles Insurance Services partner page, BCW dealer program). Rate cards change — verify with each program before relying on them.
Why $4,999
The valuation logic
The asking price is anchored to a transparent replacement-cost model. We list every component, attach a defensible market range (low and high), and price the package comfortably below the conservative floor. No funnel math, no future-traffic projection, no "valuation multiple" gymnastics.
| Component | Description | Low | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domain — Memorabilia.co | Premium descriptive single-word .co | $5,000 | $15,000 |
| Codebase — Next.js + Supabase + Resend | ~16,500 LOC, 130+ files, tested | $18,000 | $36,000 |
| Content — 80+ long-form pieces | 42,000+ words, edited, structured | $12,000 | $22,000 |
| The Field Index — comp database | 72+ source-cited comps across 8 categories, with provenance and editorial notes | $8,000 | $16,000 |
| The Field Index — Red Flag Library | 34-pattern fraud reference, severity-rated | $2,500 | $5,000 |
| The Field Index — Quarterly reports | 8 market-pulse research notes covering trailing 8 quarters | $3,500 | $7,000 |
| Tools — 4 interactive collector tools | Original logic, deterministic | $3,000 | $8,000 |
| Brand system — palette, type, components | Archival design system | $2,000 | $5,000 |
| SEO infrastructure — JSON-LD, OG, sitemap | Schema across all page types (Product schema on comp pages) | $2,000 | $4,500 |
| Email — Resend + React Email templates | Newsletter, contact, acq, download | $800 | $2,000 |
| Documentation — deployment, handoff, monetization | Operator-grade playbooks | $500 | $1,500 |
| Replacement total | Independent agency rebuild | $57,300 | $122,000 |
| Asking price | Below the conservative replacement floor | $4,999 | |
Asking vs. independent replacement cost
$4,999 is the floor of the floor.
Bars scaled to high estimate ($130,000). Replacement ranges are blended agency rates at North American mid-senior tier — Eastern European / South Asian rates would land in the lower half of each range, but require more buyer-side coordination.
Source ranges: Next.js development cost surveys (Frontend Weekly; React Squad), niche-content writing rates (Verblio, Express Writers, Contently), domain comparables (NameBio, Sedo, DNJournal), and observed Flippa / Empire Flippers content site sales. All replacement components are quoted at the lower-to-mid end of published industry ranges.
What the market pays for similar assets
Comparable sales
Domain comparables
Public sales data from NameBio, Sedo, DNJournal, and Domain Name Wire. .com comparables shown for ceiling context — .co descriptive premiums consistently clear $5,000.
| Comparable | Price | Window |
|---|---|---|
Rocket.com (.com) L3Harris → Rocket Mortgage (Domain Name Wire) | $14,000,000 | Recent |
Avg. 4-letter dictionary .com NamePros analysis | $109,286 | Public NameBio data |
Avg. 5-letter dictionary .com NamePros analysis | $66,437 | Public NameBio data |
Avg. NameBio sale (any TLD) NameBio annual report | $1,290 | Recent annual data |
Premium one-word .co range Sedo / NameBio / Spaceship | $5,000 – $100,000+ | Recent marketplace data |
.co aftermarket volume YoY NamePros / NameBio | +63%+ | Recent year-over-year |
Content-site comparables
Flippa and Empire Flippers are the two largest public marketplaces for content site transactions. Both publish multiples data. Pre-revenue turnkey assets sell at replacement-cost reference, not on a multiple basis.
| Comparable | Value | Window |
|---|---|---|
Empire Flippers content-site minimum Empire Flippers listing policy | $25,000+ | Recent |
Flippa Amazon Associates avg. multiple Flippa industry report | 40.5× | Monthly net profit |
Flippa display-ad site avg. multiple Flippa industry report | 34.6× | Monthly net profit |
Niche turnkey (pre-revenue, branded) Flippa public sold data | $5,000 – $30,000 | Recent listings |
Niche turnkey (premium .com domain) Flippa / Motion Invest | $15,000 – $80,000 | Recent listings |
Buyer personas
Who this is built for
Auction house or consignment operator
Use the upper-funnel content + Field Index comp database to warm up consignors before routing them into your acquisition desk. Field Index pages become the natural inbound funnel from organic 'what is my X worth?' searches.
Payback: One mid-size consignment lead can pay back the entire ask. Typical realized seller-fee of 10–20% on a $25,000 lot ≈ $2,500–$5,000.
Specialist dealer or appraiser
Plug into the Selling Route Finder, inventory tools, and the Field Index category pages to capture inbound consignment leads from the long tail. Reference each Field Index comp in your sales calls.
Payback: Dealer margins on mid-tier autograph or card consignments commonly run 15–35% — single-deal payback at this price is realistic.
Collectibles operator / entrepreneur
Launch a premium-positioned media + lead-routing brand with a proprietary data asset — without 6–9 months of build cycle and 2–4 months of editorial production.
Payback: Time-to-market is the asset. The build plus the Field Index dataset would cost more than the ask.
SEO / affiliate operator
A clean Next.js + MDX foundation with cornerstone + supporting + glossary architecture and 80+ unique comp pages — each with rich Product JSON-LD and source-citation outbound links — already in place. The Field Index is a long-tail SEO compounding engine.
Payback: Affiliate stack (eBay Partner Network, supplies, insurance) is plug-in-able week one. Field Index comp pages drive organic 'what is my X worth?' search traffic.
Insurance carrier or broker
A pre-built education brand with a proprietary comp database that pre-qualifies high-net-worth collectors and gives them a defensible reference for stated-value insurance applications. Routes them into your funnel with editorial credibility.
Payback: Collectibles policies are commonly $300–$2,000+ annual. CPA economics at any leak rate are excellent — and the Field Index is a credibility multiplier.
Authentication / grading service
A neutral education layer plus the Field Index comp database (which cites your authentication letters and grading badges throughout) routes uncertain owners to your service. The Red Flag Library is a CAC reducer that positions your authentication as the recommended remediation.
Payback: Authentication services price $10–$200 per item. Volume is the moat — brand visibility plus an editorial comp database compounds.
Why the price is what it is
The math, plainly
Below replacement cost
The conservative replacement cost — including the Field Index dataset — is $57,300. The aggressive estimate is $122,000. The asking price is roughly 35% of the conservative floor.
One referral can pay for it
A single mid-size auction consignment of $25,000 at a 15% seller premium nets a referrer-eligible $3,750 — and that's one transaction in a category measured in hundreds of billions.
Time-to-market is the real asset
At a senior NA development pace of ~5 hours/day, the build alone is 12–16 weeks of work before you start writing content. The site is here today.
What we are not promising
Risks and honest assumptions
What is not included
- No traffic, no revenue, no leads. The site is pre-launch from a business-operations standpoint. SEO compounds; it has not yet had time to.
- No live affiliate partnerships. The site is structured to route to them; an acquirer must apply and integrate as the new operator.
- No backed financial projections. Market sizing is third-party published research. The site does not project "you will earn $X."
- No authentication, appraisal, or escrow operations. By intentional brand positioning — these positions carry liability.
Honest assumptions
- The replacement-cost valuation uses public agency rate ranges and writing rates. Your actual cost to rebuild may be higher or lower depending on vendor.
- Market growth forecasts are third-party. Real growth may be slower or faster. Buyer is encouraged to read primary sources cited above.
- The .co TLD is widely accepted but is not .com. Some buyers downweight .co; in our view this is more than priced into the ask. .com equivalents would cost multiples more.
- Authentication-multiplier numbers are directional industry ranges, not transaction-level guarantees. They are illustrative.
Process
How the transfer actually works
- 1
Buy on Escrow.com
Stage 1 · InitiateClick the Escrow.com buy-now button to fund the secure checkout already provisioned for this listing.
- 2
Diligence window
Stage 2 · InspectEscrow.com opens a documented inspection period. Review the live codebase, content, and infrastructure before approving release. Inspection timing follows Escrow.com's standard buyer-protection terms.
- 3
Transfer
Stage 3 · TransferDomain push (Namecheap/Cloudflare), code repo, Supabase project, Vercel project, and brand assets are moved to your accounts. Domain transfer timing depends on the registrar.
- 4
Approval & release
Stage 4 · ReleaseOnce you confirm receipt of all assets in Escrow.com, funds are released to the seller.
- 5
Handoff
Stage 5 · HandoffA two-week post-transfer support window — questions, deployment, content edits, integrations — delivered via the contact details exchanged in Escrow.
Buyer FAQ
Frequently asked
How do I buy?
Click the Buy now via Escrow.com button. The secure checkout for this listing is pre-loaded — fund it, complete Escrow's standard buyer verification, and the transaction is in motion.
How is payment handled?
Escrow.com is the sole settlement path for this listing. They support wire, ACH, credit card, and PayPal at the buyer's preference. Funds are held in trust and released only after you confirm receipt of all assets.
What protects me as the buyer?
Escrow.com's standard buyer-protection terms apply: a documented inspection period during which you verify the domain transfer, code access, content delivery, and brand assets before approving release of funds.
Can I buy just the domain?
This listing is the full bundled package — domain, codebase, content, brand. A domain-only transaction would require a separately-issued Escrow.com checkout; that is not currently offered.
What if I have questions before buying?
Everything material to the decision is documented on this page — the build, the content inventory, the valuation logic, the comparables, the risks, and the transfer steps. The Escrow.com process itself provides the verification window for any further inspection.
Why isn't this on Flippa or Empire Flippers?
Direct sale via Escrow.com costs nothing. Brokers take 10–15%, and a fully-built branded asset transacts cleanly through Escrow without an intermediary layer.
Will you re-build something similar after the sale?
No competing builds on memorabilia / collectibles for 18 months after the transfer. Other unrelated content sites in the portfolio are out of scope of any non-compete.
What about traffic data — analytics, SEO history?
Plausible is wired in but has minimal baseline data — the site is pre-launch from a marketing standpoint. This is not a traffic sale. It is the foundation that earns traffic.
What is The Field Index and what comes with it?
The Field Index is the proprietary comp database, Red Flag Library, and quarterly market reports section of the site, available at memorabilia.co/field-index. It includes 80+ source-cited memorabilia sales across 8 categories (sports, cards, autographs, comics, music, movie/TV, toys, political/historical), 33 documented fraud patterns, and 6 quarterly market-pulse research notes. The full editorial dataset, the loader code, the page templates, the methodology — all of it transfers with the brand. Inclusion criteria, source taxonomy, and refresh cadence are documented at memorabilia.co/field-index/methodology.
Is the Field Index dataset really proprietary, or just public information re-published?
It is proprietary in its editorial curation and source-citation architecture. Every comp is independently selected, verified across multiple sources, written up with editorial provenance, and structured with internal links to comparable comps and related guides. The underlying sale data is publicly reported (auction-house catalogs, trade-press articles, grading-service population data) — what is proprietary is the editorial work of identifying which sales matter, verifying figures, writing the provenance narrative, and structuring the data so it's usable as a reference. A competitor cannot scrape this in a weekend — the editorial work behind 80+ comps takes 100+ hours.
Can the Field Index be expanded after acquisition?
Yes — the dataset is in content/field-index/comps.json, validated against a Zod schema, with a documented loader. Adding a comp is editing a JSON file and committing. The methodology page documents the inclusion criteria, source-tagging taxonomy, and refresh cadence so a new operator can extend the dataset to 200+, 500+, or thousands of comps without changing the page templates. The Red Flag Library and quarterly reports follow the same pattern.
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