Disney Lorcana Rarities Explained (Including Enchanted)
June 20, 2026
Open a few Disney Lorcana packs and you'll notice some cards feel more special than others. That's rarity at work. Understanding the tiers helps you know what you've pulled, what to chase, and roughly what a card is worth. Here's every Lorcana rarity, what it means, and why it matters to collectors.
How rarity works
Each card is printed at a set rarity, shown by a symbol near its collector number. Rarer cards are printed in smaller quantities and appear less often in packs, so they're harder to complete a set with — and usually more valuable. Rarity is about scarcity, not how strong a card is in play: plenty of commons see competitive use, and some legendaries are purely collectible.
The standard rarities
From most to least common:
- Common — the backbone of every set. Cheap, easy to find, and the bulk of what you'll open.
- Uncommon — still plentiful, a small step up.
- Rare — noticeably less frequent; the first tier collectors actively track.
- Super Rare — scarce; often the more striking character cards.
- Legendary — the rarest standard rarity, usually one or two per pack box. Big, premium artwork and the headline cards of a set.
If you're aiming to "complete" a set, the legendaries and super rares are the hardest slots to fill — which is exactly where trading comes in.
Enchanted cards
Enchanted cards are the true chase. They're special alternate-art versions of existing cards — full-art, borderless, with unique styling — printed at an extremely low pull rate. There are only a handful per set, and they command the highest prices. Most collectors won't pull many (if any) from packs, so Enchanteds are typically acquired as singles or through trade.
Promos and special printings
Beyond the pack rarities, Lorcana has promo and other special cards handed out at events, in special products, or as store/league prizes. These sit outside the normal set numbering and vary widely in availability — some are common giveaways, others are genuinely scarce collectibles.
Foils add another layer
Independently of rarity, many cards also come in a foil (shiny) finish. A foil common is still a common, but the foil version is scarcer and often worth more to collectors. That's why a good tracker lets you record normal and foil copies separately — they're effectively different things to own.
How rarity changes your collecting
- Budget collectors can complete most of a set cheaply; only the top rarities cost real money.
- Chase collectors focus on Enchanteds and foils — fewer cards, bigger hunt.
- Set completists use a wishlist and trades to fill the rare slots without ripping endless packs.
New to all this? Start with our guide on how to start collecting Disney Lorcana, then browse the sets to see the rarities in each one.
Whatever your style, knowing the rarities turns a pile of cards into a collection with a goal. Track what you've got, mark the rares you still need, and trade your way to a complete set.