Daredevil Marvel Comics Price Guide
While the movie was a flop, the Netflix TV show has reignited interest and created new key issues, such as DD #4 (1st Purple Man).
Find out the value of your comics below by clicking any link or image. Or have us appraise them.
Record sale: $38,000
Minimum value: $150
The first appearance by everyone's favorite Hornhead occurred in his very own title.
Marvel jumped right in with Daredevil, believing the character to be strong enough that the comic-buying public would latch on immediately.
They hedged their bets somewhat by making the title bimonthly from Daredevil #1.
Record sale: $26,000
Minimum value: $40
In Daredevil #2, Stan Lee and Joe Orlando combine to give us a very odd sort of comic book story.
The Fantastic Four engages Matt Murdock, Attorney at Law to help them with some legal paperwork regarding the lease of the Baxter Building.
Woven in with this is the super villain Electro, fresh from his appearances in The Amazing Spider-Man, who DD encounters when he busts up a stolen car ring that Electro is running.
Valuable and scarce in higher grade.
Record sale: $8,300
Minimum value: $20
In Daredevil #3, we are introduced for the first time to The Owl, who tries to engage the law firm of Murdock and Nelson to defend him in a tax fraud case.
Foggy says no, but Matt agrees to take the case.
When The Owl doesn't show up for the court date, Matt goes to investigate.
Bada boom, bada bing, Matt finds out that The Owl is up to no good, and ends up battling his goons as DD.
Daredevil #4
1st Appearance of the Purple Man
Record sale: $7,700
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #5
Record sale: $5,300
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #6
Record sale: $5,600
Have Yours Appraised
Record sale: $24,000
Minimum value: $10
In Daredevil #7, Matt puts on his slick, new, all-red DD costume, and battles Namor, eventually convincing him to turn himself in.
But of course, the bureaucratic NYC justice system is too slow for the hot-headed Prince of Atlantis, who busts out of jail after only 24 hours, to return home and resume his duties there.
Daredevil #8
Record sale: $2,000
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #9
Record sale: $2,400
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #10
Record sale: $5,300
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #11
Record sale: $3,600
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #12
Record sale: $1,600
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #14
Record sale: $2,200
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #15
Record sale: $1,500
Have Yours Appraised
Why This Guide is AWESOME for Wannabe Comic InvestorsIf you have either tried (and failed) to make money flipping comic books, or are frustrated by the huge array of choice out there, then this is the eBook for you. It's packed with 32 in-depth analyses of easy-to-buy and sell comic books from the Bronze to Modern ages. These are titles we have personally made a lot of money buying and selling. So can you. Make more than your money back with your first successful trade (or by NOT buying a losing book!). If you are not completely satisfied, we have a 365-day money-back guarantee. Click to read more, or order your copy today! |
Daredevil #16
Record sale: $5,300
Minimum value: $10
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #17
Record sale: $4,000
Minimum value $10
Have Yours Appraised
DD had previously encountered and battled Spider Man in The Amazing Spider-Man #16, with Spider Man hypnotized into attacking DD.
The Spider-Man crossover makes these two issues highly prized by collectors of both these series.
Daredevil #38
Origin Retold
Record sale: $2,800
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #42
First Daredevil Appearance of Kilroy
Record sale: $700
Have Yours Appraised
Record sale: $700
Minimum value: $1
Daredevil may have more famously been linked with Elektra, and Karen Page.
But in Daredevil #81, he first encounters the Black Widow, aka Natasha Romanoff, former Soviet agent and former lover of Cliff Barton, aka Hawkeye.
One of our picks for Black Widow movie comic book investment ideas.
Record sale: $370
Minimum value: $1
It didn't take long for romance to blossom between DD and the Widow, and to team up as crime fighters.
The title change beginning with this issue would last until Daredevil #107, by which time the relationship had ended and the Widow would join the Avengers.
The Black Panther (T'Challa) also makes an appearance in this issue.
Daredevil #111
Villain in the 2013 The Wolverine movie
Record sale: $430
Have Yours Appraised
Record sale: $1,300
Minimum value: $10
By the mid-'70s, Daredevil Marvel Comics had changed.
Somewhat grittier and less-focused on Matt's legal practice, with the Widow long since departed, DD was by now a bit more "urban" in tone.
Daredevil #131 introduces Bullseye, who would prove to be a very durable and popular villain in the Daredevil canon.
Record sale: $925
Minimum value: $1
The less said, the better. Yes, this is worth quite a bit of money, and you are either of the cult of Frank Miller or you are not.
DD #158 was one of the first Bronze Age comics to jump up hugely in value in a collector's market that had by then become part of the industry, and for that, it also has historic value.
Daredevil #168
Origin and First appearance of Elektra
Record sale: $1,000
Have Yours Appraised
Check out our Elektra Comics price guide here
Daredevil #181
Death of Elektra
Record sale: $1,500
Have Yours Appraised
This issue also is the first crossover of The Punisher in DD comics.
Daredevil #254
First Appearance of Typhoid Mary
Record sale: $200
Have Yours Appraised
Daredevil #270
1st appearance of Blackheart
Record Sale: $400
Minimum Value: $1
Daredevil, AKA Matt Murdock, fought crime as an adult to help avenge the death of his father, a prize fighter named "Battlin' Jack Murdock" at the hands of some gangsters who were unhappy with Jack's refusal to throw a fight.
Have Your Daredevil Marvel Comics Valued!
If you've got some Silver Age or Bronze Age copies of Daredevil, especially #1, #2, #3, #7, or #158, then click here to have them valued FREE by Sell My Comic Books!
DD was really most like a certain hero who'd been a DC mainstay for 25 years by 1964, most like a certain dark and serious fellow who spent his life eradicating crime to avenge his parents' deaths, most like a certain Caped Crusader.
In essence, Daredevil was Marvel's attempt at Batman, but in a red suit. He even had horns that in silhouette look quite a bit like Batman's ears. (Listen, don't tell Stan Lee I said that.)
Matt Murdock had been hit on the head, you see, as a child, with a container of toxic and radioactive chemicals that fell from a truck as he saved an old man who was about to be hit by the truck. He woke up without sight, but with super abilities.
Blind or not, Battlin' Jack trained him to box and helped him develop his body. The super-abilities he'd gained in the accident combined with his training so that blind, he was a better acrobat than most sighted tumblers could ever hope to be.
Daredevil was, throughout the Silver and Bronze Ages, a comic of consistently high quality. Some of the best writing and artwork of Marvel's glory years appeared in Daredevil, including scripts by Stan the Man himself, Roy Thomas, Gerry Conway, Steve Gerber, Tony Isabella, Marv Wolfman, and Frank Miller.
There were pencils by Bill Everett, Wally Wood, John Romita Sr., Gil Kane, Frank Miller, and of course, the greatest DD artist of them all, Gene Colan. Legends and greats, all of them.
Daredevil Marvel Comics Superheroes
Learn the value of individual heroes from Marvel, including Spider-Man, the Avengers, Thor, the X-Men.
Female Super Villains Price Guide
Daredevil has quite a thing for the ladies! Find out the value of key issues featuring bad girls.
Tales of Suspense Comic Prices
Find out the value of first Iron Man, Black Widow and Hawkeye appearances...
Amazing Spider-Man Comic Book Prices
We've valued every issue from #1 to #129, and later key issues.