Updated for current market trends (January 2026).
A value-ranked Top 50 list doesn’t just show what’s expensive—it shows what the Bronze Age became: outsiders, art-driven drama, and quirky scarcity books that still move the market. All values are for raw 9.4, so graded copies will almost always sell for more. For a year-by-year view of the full Bronze Age timeline, visit the Bronze Age Archive and select a year. Here are the Top 50 most valuable comics of the 1970s, followed by three patterns the list makes impossible to ignore.
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1st Appearance of the Punisher Incredible Hulk #181 — $5,500 — 1st full appearance Wolverine
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Giant-Size X-Men #1 — $4,500 — 1st appearance of the new X-Men
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Scooby-Doo… Where Are You? #1 — $4,500 — 1st appearance of Scooby-Doo
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House of Secrets #92 — $3,200 — 1st appearance of Swamp Thing
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Marvel Spotlight #5 — $3,000 — 1st appearance of Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze)
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Amazing Spider-Man #129 — $2,660 — 1st appearance of Punisher
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Ebon #1 — $2,300 — 1st Black superhero in own title (small press)
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Incredible Hulk #180 — $1,750 — Wolverine cameo appearance
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2000 A.D. #2 — $1,500 — 1st appearance of Judge Dredd
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Tomb of Dracula #10 — $1,400 — 1st appearance of Blade
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X-Men #94 — $1,400 — All-New X-Men begins
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Batman #227 — $1,300 — Neal Adams haunted mansion cover
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Cerebus the Aardvark #1 — $1,200 — 1st appearance of Cerebus
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Werewolf by Night #32 — $1,150 — 1st appearance of Moon Knight
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1st Appearance of Thanos Iron Man #55 — $1,000 — 1st appearance of Thanos (also Drax/Starfox)
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Batman #232 — $955 — 1st appearance of Ra’s al Ghul
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Green Lantern #76 — $875 — Start O’Neil/Adams social era
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Marvel Spotlight #2 — $875 — 1st appearance of Werewolf by Night
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Batman #251 — $850 — Iconic Joker cover/story
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Savage Tales #1 — $850 — 1st appearance of Man-Thing
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Ghost Rider #1 — $800 — Ghost Rider solo series debut
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Batman #234 — $780 — Two-Face Bronze Age return
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Superman’s Girlfriend Lois Lane #106 — $765 — “Black Lois Lane” issue
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FOOM #10 — $750 — 1st preview of the new X-Men
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X-Men #101 — $750 — 1st appearance of Phoenix
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Tomb of Dracula #1 — $692 — Dracula series debut
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Amazing Spider-Man #101 — $680 — 1st appearance of Morbius
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Conan the Barbarian #1 — $665 — 1st appearance of Conan
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1st Appearance of John Stewart Green Lantern #87 — $665 — 1st appearance of John Stewart
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Iron Fist #14 — $660 — 1st appearance of Sabretooth
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Amazing Spider-Man #121 — $600 — Death of Gwen Stacy
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Detective Comics #411 — $600 — 1st full appearance of Talia al Ghul
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Detective Comics #400 — $585 — 1st appearance of Man-Bat
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Strange Tales #169 — $580 — 1st appearance of Brother Voodoo
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All-Star Western #10 — $570 — 1st appearance of Jonah Hex
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Hero for Hire #1 — $520 — 1st appearance of Luke Cage
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Underdog #1 — $500 — 1st appearance of Underdog
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Batman #222 — $492 — “Beatles” cover
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Werewolf by Night #1 — $470 — Werewolf by Night series debut
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Night Nurse #1 — $465 — 1st appearance of Linda Carter
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Amazing Spider-Man #194 — $440 — 1st appearance of Black Cat
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FOOM #2 — $450 — Wolverine-related fanzine key
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Marvel Premiere #15 — $450 — 1st appearance of Iron Fist
Star Wars #1 — $420 — 1st appearance of several Star Wars characters
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Amazing Spider-Man #100 — $400 — 1st Six-arm Spider-Man
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Amazing Spider-Man #122 — $400 — Death of Green Goblin
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Secrets of Haunted House #5 — $400 — Bernie Wrightson cover
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Superman #233 — $400 — Neal Adams “Kryptonite Nevermore”
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Detective Comics #405 — $380 — 1st appearance of League of Assassins
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Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #134 — $375 — 1st cameo appearance of Darkseid
If you want to go deeper, these are the best places to continue:
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1970: the beginning of the Bronze Age pivot →
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1975: the year the decade explodes into a new era →
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Bronze Age Archive: every year in one hub →
The Outsiders
The 1970s weren’t obsessed with perfect heroes — they were obsessed with outsiders. Monsters, anti-heroes, and morally complicated protagonists flooded the racks, reflecting a world that felt less black-and-white and more unpredictable.
In the 1960s, even when heroes struggled, they still lived by clear rules: Spider-Man chose responsibility over revenge, and Batman’s world kept its “no guns” line. In the 1970s, that line blurred. Characters became armed, haunted, and unpredictable — the Punisher wears his guns proudly, Wolverine feels like a weapon pointed in your direction, and horror characters like Morbius, Blade, and Ghost Rider blur the line between hero and monster.
Today’s market rewards these outsiders—characters who feel cursed, hunted, morally gray, or flat-out monstrous—because the Bronze Age made comics comfortable with imperfect heroes.

Outsiders that define the decade (from the Top 50 list):
Wolverine – Incredible Hulk #181 and Incredible Hulk #180
Swamp Thing – House of Secrets #92 and Swamp Thing #1
Punisher – Amazing Spider-Man #129
Blade – Tomb of Dracula #10
Moon Knight – Werewolf by Night #32
Man-Thing – Savage Tales #1
Ghost Rider – Marvel Spotlight #5 and Ghost Rider #1
Morbius – Amazing Spider-Man #101
Jonah Hex – All-Star Western #10
Werewolf by Night – Marvel Spotlight #2 and Werewolf by Night #1
Dracula – Tomb of Dracula #1
Sabretooth – Iron Fist #14
Man-Bat – Detective Comics #400
Neal Adams Influence
Neal Adams had a gift for turning a cover into a high-stakes moment. Many of his best Bronze Age images feel larger than life—Joker towering over Batman trapped inside a playing card, Man-Bat and Batman struggling above Gotham, Batman keeping watch as a haunted mansion broods on a hill—but the power isn’t about giants. It’s about drama. Adams composes covers like movie posters: bold silhouettes, extreme perspective, and a single emotional beat that hits instantly. Sometimes it’s terror. Sometimes it’s dread. Sometimes it’s pure intensity—like John Stewart screaming in anger on Green Lantern #87, or Superman breaking free from Kryptonite chains on Superman #233. These aren’t just great drawings; they’re covers that feel like the whole story is already happening.
Neal Adams’ covers that define the decade (from the Top 50 list):

Batman #222
Batman #227
Batman #232
Batman #234
Batman #241
Batman #251
Detective Comics #400
Detective Comics #405
Detective Comics #411
Green Lantern #76
Green Lantern #87
Marvel Spotlight #2
Superman #233
Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen #134
Tomb of Dracula #1
Quirky Comics
The most expensive comics of the Bronze Age aren’t all Marvel and DC — and that surprises a lot of collectors. Some of the biggest values come from oddball corners of the decade: tiny print-run independents, early fandom ephemera, imports, and Saturday-morning cartoon books that were read to death. Comics based on kids’ properties might seem quirky, but they hold nostalgia like Scooby holding a Scooby Snack — and because children actually read them, high-grade copies are brutally scarce today.

Quirky comics that define the decade (from the Top 50 list):
2000 A.D. #2 — UK import; 1st Judge Dredd; international collector demand
Scooby-Doo… Where Are You? #1 — kids’ book + high-grade scarcity = monster value
Underdog #1 — same “read-to-death” scarcity pattern as Scooby
Ebon #1 — rare indie; low print run + historic significance
Cerebus #1–#4 — creator-owned momentum; early indie collecting staple
FOOM #2 / #10 — fandom artifacts; early “collector culture” books
If you only skim a Top 50 list, it looks like a pile of expensive comics. But the patterns are simple: the 1970s rewarded outsiders, covers that hit like movie posters, and quirky books where scarcity and nostalgia collide. Taken together, these comics don’t just chart the decade’s biggest keys — they show how the Bronze Age rewired what collectors chase, and why the market still follows those same instincts today.
by Ron Cloer
Writing on Bronze Age comics, cultural history, and market significance
For a year-by-year list of the most expensive Bronze Age comic books and Bronze Age Creator Spotlights, see my archive page. Bronze Age Comic Book Archive
I have a super a comic number 177….
Lois lane number13
Super adventure comic super man and Lois lanes betrayal number 48
I would like to sell these and also some Scrooge and Donald Duck as well
Do you know if they are worth anything
Wayne,
You need to open each book up and look at the indicia. (the small print) That will give you the correct issue and title for the book. From there you can look up each book on Comics Price Guide to get a value.