Top-five most expensive 1/24 diecast sales of February 2026
Kevin Harvick captured his sole Cup Series championship in 2014, capping off a season that included five wins, 14 top-fives and 20 top-10s. Harvick secured the title — in his first season with Stewart-Haas — by winning the last two races of the season, including beating out Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and Ryan Newman for the title at Homestead.
Harvick’s 2014 Homestead Raced Win had a notable run with a bevy of special finishes available, including just 36 Elite Color Chrome versions. One example sold Feb. 25 for $799.95, the No. 5 priciest sale of the month.

Two Dale Earnhardt Jr. cars tied this month for the No. 3 spot.
In 2010, Earnhardt Jr. ran a blue and yellow No. 3 Wrangler-sponsored scheme in the 2010 Subway Jalapeno 250 Nationwide Series race at Daytona, a “Salute to Dale” one-off honoring Junior’s late father. Junior led a race-leading 33 laps to put the No. 3 in victory lane, beating out Joey Logano, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Brad Keselowski and Kevin Harvick in the debut of the new-gen Nationwide Series car.
Both “clean” and Raced Win versions of the Wrangler Impala were produced. The clean version had a wide run that included standard, Elite, Color Chrome, Copper, Flashcoat, Gold, Liquid Color, Platinum and White Gold versions. One White Gold version, one of 33 produced, sold Feb. 25 for $800.

Also sold for $800 is Junior’s 2014 Martinsville Raced Win 1/24.
Earnhardt Jr.’s win in the 2014 Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, his only career win at Martinsville, was his fourth victory of the season.
Seven-hundred Elite versions of the National Guard Martinsville Win were produced, with the latest example commanding $800 on Feb. 10.

For the second straight month, a 1/24 from NASCAR’s earliest days signed by some of the sport’s most iconic names lands on the top-five list. This month features a custom 1956 Ford signed by the Wood Brothers.
The seller states the 1956 Ford was originally a Curtis Tuner car from NAPA’s run of diecasts celebrating NASCAR’s 50th anniversary. The car was customized to appear as the car Glen Wood piloted for three races in the 1956 season. It was then signed by Glen, Leonard, Delano and Ray Wood. The Wood Brothers’ 1956 Ford custom 1/24 sold Feb. 23 for $825, the No. 2 most expensive sale of February.

The title for the priciest 1/24 sale of the month is from a driver who has not yet appeared on the list, and the car is certainly a unique find.
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. ran a one-off Hungry Jack scheme for the 2020 Yellawood 500 at Talladega. To commemorate the partnership, Hungry Jack ran a promotion in which contestants videoed themselves aiming to “get Hungry Jack pancakes on to the griddle” faster then Stenhouse’s Daytona qualifying time of 46.253 seconds. The timer would start when the box was opened and stopped when the first pancake hit the griddle. The top-five fastest times earned prizes like a year’s worth of free pancakes and syrup, two tickets to a 2021 Talladega race, merchandise, and what proved to be an extremely desirable prize to collectors — a 1/24 promotional diecast of Stenhouse’s 2020 Hungry Jack car.
Diecast Mag is unable to verify how many of these promotional diecasts were produced, but an eBay seller states there was only one 1/24 produced (promotional materials suggest five were offered, but this cannot be verified, and the DIN suggests there were at least 90 produced). If the seller is correct, then this one-of-one diecast now has a new owner. The 2020 Stenhouse Jr. Hungry Jack promo 1/24, signed by Stenhouse, sold Feb. 15 for $1,000.

Top-five priciest 1/64 diecast sales of February 2026
Kicking off the 1/64 sales this month is the first truck diecast to appear on the top sales list since Diecast Mag began tracking 1/64 sales last May. It’s also the first 1/64 custom to appear on the list.
Kyle Larson began his full-time Cup Series career in 2014 and remained plenty busy by competing in eight Nationwide races and three truck series races that year. Larson racked up three starts in the No. 32 Chevy Silverado for owner Steve Turner in the Camping World Truck Series in 2014, the second of which was at Pocono. Driving the Cartwheel by Target Chevy, Larson won the pole and finished 18th on the Tricky Triangle.
A custom of Larson’s 2014 Pocono ride garnered plenty of attention and 24 bids before selling Feb. 19 for $152.50.

For the second straight month, Denny Hamlin’s 2016 Daytona 500 Raced Win appears at No. 4 on the list, only for February it takes that spot for 1/64 sales.
Even with shelf wear and a small rip on the box, Hamlin’s 2016 Daytona 500 winner commanded $170 when it sold Feb. 1.

It is safe to assume that eventually the bubble will burst on extremely pricey Team Red Bull 1/64 cars. But if this month is any indication, it hasn’t popped yet.
At No. 3 this month is Brian Vickers’ 2007 Red Bull No. 83 Toyota, which sold for $175 Feb. 9.
A Vickers Red Bull also earns the No. 1 priciest sale of February. His 2010 Red Bull COT sold Feb. 1 for $250. As such, Red Bull Racing cars account for three of the top four most expensive 1/64 sales of 2026.


The only exception is another diecast that regularly commands high prices when sold — Josh Wise’s 2014 Dogecoin No. 98.
In 2014, redditors of the r/NASCAR community funded Wise’s No. 98 Phil Parsons Racing Ford, a campaign led by a 16-year-old. In less than a week, redditors raised 67 million Dogecoins, which covered the $50,000 sponsorship costs to sponsor No. 98 at the Aaron’s 499 at Talladega.
The latest version to find a new owner sold Feb. 20 for $180. This marks the third time the Dogecoin car has appeared on the 1/64 list. One example sold for $169 last October and another garnered $200 when sold last April.






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