What's actually worth owning.
Organised by format — Japanese first prints, the Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine keys, and the English editions. Every entry assumes a first print in high grade; a later printing is a different, lesser asset.
Volume 1 Grail
A member of the grail trio (with One Piece and Dragon Ball) and, for many, the most globally recognised of the three. First-print, high-grade copies are the anchor of any Naruto collection.
Volume 72 Finale
The final volume, closing a 15-year run. Finale volumes of landmark series carry sentimental and collector weight — a clean modern milestone hold.
Akamaru Jump 1997 · "Naruto" one-shot Prototype
Kishimoto's original Naruto pilot one-shot, printed in a special the year before serialization. A true prototype key — the earliest printed Naruto anywhere, and almost nobody kept these.
Weekly Shōnen Jump 1999 #43 Series Debut
The issue where Naruto began serialization. The true magazine debut, trading on the same first-appearance logic that drives a landmark comic #1.
Shonen Jump (US) #1 First EN
Viz's US Shonen Jump launch carried Naruto — a cornerstone of the Western manga boom and an accessible crossover key.
Viz Volume 1 Accessible
The English Vol. 1 first print — the affordable on-ramp, with the same first-print, high-grade instincts as the Japanese grail.
Is your Vol. 1 a first print?
The tells that separate a scarce first print from a common reprint.
- Find the colophon (奥付) at the back — it lists the printing and date.
- A first print reads 初版 / 第1刷; later printings increment the number.
- The date should sit near the 2000 debut, not the reprint waves that followed the anime.
- An intact original obi (paper band) is rarer and adds a premium.
Should you grade it?
The Naruto grading calculus, in short.
- Grade Vol. 1 and the finale in high grade — they reward it.
- Because Naruto printed in huge numbers, condition is everything: only clean, high-grade copies command a premium.
- Skip grading common mid-run volumes — the cost outweighs the lift.
- Rule of thumb: grade when a half-grade swing moves the price $100+.
Naruto calls & reports.
Independent theses on the desk — each publishes to the newsletter first, so join the list and you'll get every one as it drops.
Naruto Vol. 1: the grail trio's value gap
Global fame vs. graded comps — why the ninja grail may still be catching up.
The 1997 pilot nobody grades
Kishimoto's original one-shot as the true prototype key — and why it's overlooked.
English Naruto: the Western on-ramp
Where Viz first prints and the US Shonen Jump #1 sit for a crossover buyer.
The Naruto board.
The desk's current read at a glance. Status reflects our thesis, not a price quote — always confirm with live sold comps.
| Volume / Item | What makes it key | Tier | Desk status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vol. 1 (JP, 2000) | Grail-trio debut; global blue chip | Grail | Core hold |
| Naruto one-shot (1997) | Earliest printed Naruto; true prototype | Prototype | Watch — undervalued |
| WSJ 1999 #43 | Serialized debut, Chapter 1 | Debut | Watch |
| Vol. 72 (2014) | Series finale | Finale | Accumulate |
| Shonen Jump US #1 (2003) | First English serialized Naruto | First EN | Entry buy |
| Viz Vol. 1 (EN, 2003) | English first-print tankōbon | Accessible | Entry buy |