The 365 Collectibles Card Show is a monthly Miami-area collector event built around cards, collectibles, buying, selling, and trading in a familiar South Florida venue. The July show gives local collectors a straightforward Saturday stop for browsing sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, other TCGs, and mixed hobby items without a paid show-admission barrier.
Hosted in the Florida Room at Zoo Miami, 365 Collectibles Card Show fits collectors who want a manageable local show rather than a full convention weekend. The 2026 schedule points to a recurring second-Saturday rhythm, which makes the July date useful for anyone trying to keep a local collecting routine going through the summer.
A Full Day of Cards & Collectibles
The flyer for 365 Collectibles Card Show highlights sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, TCG and collectibles activity, plus buy-sell-trade energy. For sports collectors, the branding and examples point toward baseball, basketball, football, and general modern-card staples, with familiar product lanes such as Topps, Panini, and Prizm represented on the promotional artwork. That makes the show a practical place to look for singles, slabs, inserts, rookies, team lots, and bargain-box finds.
The TCG side is also clearly part of the event identity. Pokémon is called out prominently, and One Piece appears on the flyer as another named category. Other TCGs or mixed collectibles may show up depending on the vendor lineup, but collectors should treat sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, and general collectibles as the confirmed public focus for this stop.
A focused show window can be an advantage if you arrive with a plan. Bring a want list, check recent comps before making larger purchases, and leave enough time to walk the room once before committing. In-person browsing is especially useful when condition matters, because you can compare corners, edges, centering, surfaces, and slab labels before deciding whether a card belongs in your collection.
More Than Just a Card Show
The biggest attendee-friendly details are the free show admission and free parking. Zoo admission is separate and not included, so collectors going only for the card show should pay attention to the event location and the organizer's latest instructions before heading out. The show is listed for the Florida Room, giving it a defined indoor destination inside the broader Zoo Miami property.
The organizer, 365 Collectibles, is also an active card and collectibles seller with an online shop featuring vintage cards, graded cards, autographs, baseball cards, basketball cards, football cards, memorabilia, comics, and non-sports cards. That background matches the show theme: a collector-first environment where the draw is hands-on hobby shopping, conversation, and trade opportunities rather than a single autograph guest or tournament feature.
Because this is a recurring show, collectors should also check the organizer's website or social links in the Event Details area for any date-specific updates before attending. The organizer often uses current posts and flyers for the next show, so last-minute details such as vendor highlights, room notes, or other reminders may appear closer to the July date.
A Show for All Levels of Collectors
Newer collectors can use 365 Collectibles Card Show as a low-pressure way to learn the local market. Free admission lowers the cost of walking in, asking questions, comparing cards, and getting a feel for how vendors price raw cards, graded cards, sealed items, and mixed collectibles. Families can also treat the show as a relaxed hobby outing, especially if younger collectors are focused on Pokémon or modern sports cards.
More experienced collectors can approach the room differently. A monthly show is a chance to build vendor relationships, revisit dealers from prior dates, move trade inventory, and search for cards that may not be easy to inspect online. If you are chasing condition-sensitive vintage, modern parallels, graded sports cards, or TCG singles, the in-person format gives you a better look at the details before money changes hands.
The buy-sell-trade format also helps collectors who are cleaning up boxes, shifting between sports, or turning duplicates into something more focused. Keep trade cards organized by value or category, protect anything higher-end, and be ready to explain what you are looking for. Even when a deal does not happen, those conversations can make future local shows more productive.
Final Thoughts
The 365 Collectibles Card Show is shaping up to be a useful summer stop for collectors in Miami and the surrounding area, especially anyone looking for sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, TCGs, and collectibles in a free-admission show setting. If you attend, let the organizer or other attendees know you found the show on Card Show Dex, and stay tuned for more upcoming events across Florida.
Keep an eye on the full Miami card show calendar for more local dates.