TAG Grading launched in 2025 as an AI-powered alternative in the collectibles authentication market, offering transparent scoring algorithms and faster turnaround than incumbents, according to Athlon Sports. The platform targets card collectors frustrated by PSA's service pauses and opaque grading criteria. Early adopters cite consistent turnaround and detailed AI-generated grade breakdowns as advantages. But resale data from marketplace listings show TAG-graded cards commanding 15-30% lower prices than identical PSA-graded cards, per the same source. The company built its offering on visible process: submitters see exactly how the AI weighted centering, edges, corners, and surface, with numerical subscores published on each slab.
TAG's mechanics layer machine vision on top of human final review. Scans capture the card at 2400 dpi across multiple angles, then the AI model scores each attribute on a 100-point scale before assigning the familiar 1-10 grade. The slab itself prints those subscores in small type below the main grade, a departure from PSA's single number. Turnaround averages 10 business days for standard service, competing with PSA's stretched timelines during demand spikes. The platform also published its grading standards in a 42-page public document, according to Athlon Sports, compared to legacy firms that keep criteria largely internal.
The mechanism works because transparency lowers friction for new entrants in a trust market. Collectors fear inconsistency—submitting the same card twice and receiving different grades. By exposing the AI's logic and subscore breakdown, TAG reduces perceived arbitrariness, even if the algorithm itself remains proprietary. The detailed slab also arms resellers with defense when a buyer questions the grade: "Edge score was 92, here's the number." That shifts some authentication trust from the brand to the data on the card itself. The risk is that the brand still lacks the resale premium that comes from decades of market acceptance. A PSA 9 sells higher than a TAG 9 not because PSA's process is demonstrably better, but because more buyers recognize and trust the holder.
A small physical-product brand can steal the transparency scaffolding without building an AI. If you sell anything that benefits from grading or ranking—coffee by roast profile, hot sauce by heat, skincare by active concentration—publish the criteria and print the subscores on the package or insert. Example: a 3-pack of hot sauce labeled Heat 7/10, Flavor 9/10, Vinegar 4/10 with a QR code to the rubric. Cost: design time plus $0.08 per printed card at 5,000 units. The brand that shows its work earns trust faster than the brand that asks buyers to believe. Run it on your next product drop: add a graded spec card in each box, post the scoring guide on your site, and mention the transparency in the product description. Watch for support ticket volume on "why this grade"—if it drops, the system is working.
The broader pattern is that process visibility can partially substitute for brand equity when you lack the latter. TAG cannot yet command PSA resale prices, but it can win submissions by proving it is not arbitrary. A new brand in any category with subjective quality—art prints, aged goods, hand-finished items—can borrow the same lever. Show the scores, publish the rubric, let the customer argue with the data instead of doubting the brand.