DGR REPORTS
Detailed Grading Reports
Every LGS-certified collectible includes a DGR Report containing certification details, Precision Score data, digital subgrades, QR verification, and population information.
WHAT IS A DGR REPORT?
DGR stands for Detailed Grading Report. Every LGS-certified collectible receives a digital report connected to its certification record, giving collectors a clearer view of the grade, Precision Score, digital subgrades, QR verification, and available population data.
FINAL GRADE
The official LGS 0–10 certification grade shown on the slab label.
PRECISION SCORE
A detailed condition score out of 100 that gives collectors more grading transparency.
DIGITAL SUBGRADES
Centering, corners, surface, and edges displayed digitally in the report.
QR VERIFICATION
Scan the QR code on the slab to open the digital certification record.
POP REPORT
View available population information connected to the certified collectible.
CERTIFICATION DETAILS
Card name, set, year, certification number, and report status in one place.
DGR REPORT PREVIEW
QR Verified • Pop Report Available
SCAN QR CODE
Use your phone camera to scan the QR code on the back of the slab.
OPEN RECORD
The QR code opens the LGS certification page for that specific slab.
VIEW REPORT
Review the grade, Precision Score, subgrades, and report details.
VERIFY CONFIDENCE
Use the report to confirm slab details before buying, selling, or trading.
WHY DGR REPORTS MATTER
SURFACE REVIEW
Drag the slider to compare the original card image with the LGS surface review view.
SURFACE REVIEW
Compare the original card image against the LGS surface review view to better understand visible scratches, print lines, scuffs, dents, and other surface-level concerns.
SEE MORE THAN THE RAW IMAGE
The LGS surface review view is designed to help collectors visually compare a standard card image with enhanced surface visibility. This helps highlight issues that may be difficult to see under normal lighting.
Helps reveal visible scratches, scuffs, and surface wear.
Useful for identifying lines or factory marks across foil and glossy areas.
Gives collectors a clearer look at why surface condition matters.
Surface review imagery is used as a visual aid and may appear differently depending on lighting, card finish, scan quality, and card type.