Is my Harry Potter book valuable?

by Laura Massey on November 19, 2010

Harry Potter first edition, softcover issue

J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series has gained immense popularity, critical acclaim and commercial success worldwide, and first editions of her books have very quickly become collectable. By far the most valuable book in the series is the first, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, published on 30 June 1997 by Bloomsbury in London. But to have any real collectable value, it has to be a copy of the first edition, first impression (also known as the first printing). This means the very first batch of books off the press, of which there were only a few thousand.  Reprints of Philosopher’s Stone (and even first editions of the later books in the series) have much lower values, in part because so many more of them were printed.

First, what do the books look like? The first printing was bound in two different ways. The rarest is the hardback issue, with a cover of laminated boards. Only 500 copies were bound this way, and 300 of those were sent to libraries. Because library books receive so much wear and tear we are left with only 200 copies in potentially fine collectable condition, and these rarely appear on the market. The other binding was a regular paperback of which a few thousand copies were produced for sale.

Next , how do you tell whether your copy, which may look very similar to the one pictured above, is really a valuable first edition? To be a first edition, in either hard or soft cover, there are four very important issue points, all of which your book must have:

1. The publisher must be listed as Bloomsbury at the bottom of the title page. See photo below:

First edition title page

2. The latest date listed in the copyright information must be 1997.

3. The print line on the copyright page must read “10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1”, ten down to one, exactly. The lowest figure in the print line indicates the printing. (For instance, if your copy has “20 19 18 17”, it’s a less valuable seventeenth printing.)

First edition number line

You may have been told that you have a first printing if the copyright is in the name of “Joanne Rowling”, but that’s not true. All early printings of this title have the same copyright statement.

This is what the whole back of the title page should look like:

Back of title page in the first edition of Harry Potter.

4. On page 53, in the list of school supplies that Harry receives from Hogwarts, the item “1 wand” must appear twice, once at the beginning and once at the end. This mistake was corrected in the second printing of the book.

Mistake on page 53

If your book meets all these requirements then congratulations, you have a first edition! Depending on the binding and condition, it could be worth anywhere from several thousand to tens of thousands of pounds.  If you’re interested in selling it, or would like to have a custom protective box made to house it, then please contact us. To see the Harry Potter books we currently have for sale please click here.

3 Responses to “Is my Harry Potter book valuable?”

  1. Greetings! This is a wonderfully concise and clear article on how to identify the first edition of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone…a query we receive often from people on the forums of Biblio.

    We’ve linked to this article on Bibliology, the blog for Biblio.com. I hope you enjoy!

    http://www.biblio.com/blog/2010/11/the-cataloguers-desk-is-my-harry-potter-book-valuable/

  2. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Perry Willett, Peter Harrington. Peter Harrington said: Is your Harry Potter book valuable? Our guide to identifying a first edition, first printing of Philosopher's Stone: http://bit.ly/bmJxQ9 [...]

  3. What a shame , my book satisfies all the pointers except the 2nd 1 wand. Ah well! Thank you for defining the requirements.