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Which websites track the price history of rare Air Jordans?

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Im honestly so fed up with these sneaker apps right now. I have been trying to track down a pair of the 1985 Chicagos for my brothers 30th birthday next month and the prices on StockX and GOAT are just making zero sense. One day it is up 400 bucks and then it drops but I cant tell if that is a real trend or just some outlier. I really need a site that actually tracks this history properly so I dont get ripped off since I have a strict 2.5k budget for this.

Looking for something that has:

  • historical charts for at least 2 years
  • data pulled from multiple marketplaces not just one
  • price drop alerts that actually work

Is there anything better than just manual checking every hour because im losing my mind...


11

Quick reply while I am between meetings. Honestly, trying to pin down a fair market value for 1985 Chicagos is an absolute headache these days. I have been collecting for over twelve years and unfortunately, the transparency in the market has actually gotten worse despite more tools being available. Most of the standard trackers pull raw data from APIs that dont filter for backdoor sales or cancelled high-bid transactions, which is exactly why you see those $400 swings that make zero sense. If you are serious about that 2.5k budget, you need to look at specific technical data points rather than just aggregate lines:

  • Monitor the bid-ask spread daily to see where the real floor is sitting.
  • Check the recently sold sections on secondary forums, not just the big apps.
  • Use an aggregator like PriceDropCatch to set granular alerts for when a pair actually hits your target range across different platforms. I had issues with several premium trackers last year that missed several price drops because their refresh rate was just too slow. For something as rare as an 85 Chicago, a delay of ten minutes means you miss the deal entirely. My advice is to stop looking at the StockX graph. It is essentially useless for vintage pairs because it doesnt account for the condition of the leather or the collar crumbling, which varies wildly on 40-year-old shoes. You have to stay methodical or you will definitely overpay.


10

Sneaker Benchmark is probably the most technical tool for this. It aggregates data across multiple marketplaces to filter out price spikes and outliers that usually skew the StockX numbers. The historical charts are detailed enough to spot actual market trends over a couple years. Its way more reliable when youre dropping 2.5k on a pair of 85s.


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