The Coral Springs Trading Card Show is back for a Sunday card show built around browsing, buying, selling, and trading in South Florida. The show is set up for collectors who want a practical day on the floor with sports cards, Pokémon, other TCGs, collectibles, and memorabilia all under one roof.
This July event also marks a move into a new location at Reign Volleyball Club, giving the organizer more room to work with and a more comfortable setup for attendees. For collectors coming from Coral Springs, Pompano Beach, Deerfield Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, or the wider Miami area, it gives the local hobby scene a straightforward weekend stop with free admission and free parking.
A Full Day of Cards & Collectibles
The flyer lists 130 tables, which should give collectors a broad room to walk, compare, and circle back through before making final pickup decisions. That table count matters because the best local shows are often won by patience: checking display cases first, digging through bargain boxes, looking through binders, then returning to the cards that still feel right after a second pass.
Collectors can expect the show to lean into a mixed hobby floor. Sports cards are a natural fit, with possible interest around rookies, inserts, slabs, vintage pieces, team lots, autographs, memorabilia cards, and affordable singles depending on what vendors bring. For Pokémon collectors, a show like this can be useful for checking condition in person, comparing graded cards, hunting set needs, browsing sealed product, and finding cards that are harder to evaluate from photos alone.
The event also points to broader TCGs, collectibles, and memorabilia, so the room should not be treated as a sports-only or Pokémon-only stop. Other trading card games and mixed collectibles are common show-floor staples, though exact vendor inventory can vary from table to table. That variety is part of the appeal: one aisle might be better for slabs and display-case pieces, while another may have low-cost boxes, binders, supplies, or collectibles that reward slower browsing.
More Than Just a Card Show
The biggest confirmed change is the new location. The organizer highlights more vendor tables, brighter lighting, more room to shop and trade, and improved air conditioning, all of which matter for a summer South Florida show. Better lighting helps when checking corners, surfaces, centering, and print quality, while more aisle space makes it easier to step aside, inspect cards carefully, and talk through trades without feeling rushed.
Free admission also changes the feel of the day. A no-cost entry point makes the event easier for families, newer collectors, and casual hobby fans who may want to browse before deciding how much to spend. Free parking adds to that accessibility, especially for groups planning to meet up, trade, or make the show part of a relaxed Sunday outing.
The show is also positioned as an all-ages event, which fits the mix of sports cards, Pokémon, TCGs, collectibles, and memorabilia. For younger collectors, the room can be a hands-on way to see cards outside of packs and online listings. For longtime collectors, it creates a local place to compare inventory, talk with vendors, and find out what other South Florida hobby fans are chasing in the middle of the summer.
A Show for All Levels of Collectors
Beginners can use The Coral Springs Trading Card Show as a low-pressure way to learn the room. Walking vendor tables helps newer collectors understand how prices vary by condition, grade, player, set, rarity, and demand. It is also easier to ask questions in person, especially when deciding between raw cards, graded cards, sealed product, or a stack of lower-cost singles.
Casual collectors may find the most value in the search itself. A local show gives you the chance to bring a want list, compare similar cards across multiple tables, and make decisions after seeing the same player, character, set, or team in different forms. If you collect with friends or family, it also gives everyone room to split up by interest, then compare finds before checking out.
Serious collectors can treat the show as a condition-checking opportunity. Photos can hide surface issues, whitening, print lines, soft corners, or case scratches, but an in-person table lets you slow down and look more carefully. The ability to talk through price, trade possibilities, and future inventory with vendors is also part of what keeps local shows useful even when collectors already buy online.
Families should also have a simple path into the event because admission is free and the listed collecting categories are broad. A parent bringing a young Pokémon collector, a sports fan looking for favorite teams, or a hobbyist browsing memorabilia can all approach the same room differently without needing the event to be built around one narrow category.
Final Thoughts
The Coral Springs Trading Card Show is shaping up to be a great day for collectors in Pompano Beach and the surrounding area. 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 Miami card show calendar for more South Florida hobby dates.