Binders for One Piece and Lorcana

Any binder built around the standard 63x88mm card size holds One Piece Card Game and Disney Lorcana cards without a fit problem, because both games use that exact card size. There's no separate "One Piece binder" or "Lorcana binder" category to shop for. The real decisions are the same ones you'd make for Magic or Pokemon: zip versus strap closure, how many pockets per page, and whether you plan to double sleeve.
Why the same binders work for both games
Standard trading card size is 63x88mm, 0.305mm thick, and that's the template Bandai used for One Piece and the template Ravensburger used for Lorcana rather than inventing a new dimension. It's the same size Magic and Pokemon use. A binder pocket cut for that size doesn't care what's printed on the card, so every binder in our directory built for standard cards, not the smaller Japanese size used by Yu-Gi-Oh!, works the same way for One Piece and Lorcana as it does for anything else in your collection.
Picking a binder: zip, strap, or open pocket
Once size is settled, the choice is about closure and page count. A zip binder keeps dust out and cards from sliding out during transport, which matters if you're taking a binder to a game store or a con. A strap binder is lighter and cheaper but leaves the edge open. Beyond that, it's a capacity question: more pockets per page means fewer pages for the same total card count, but bigger binders also get heavier and harder to flip through one-handed.
| Binder | Pockets | Capacity | Closure | Double sleeved fit? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vault X 4-Pocket Exo-Tec Zip Binder | 4-pocket | 160 cards | Zip | Yes |
| Vault X 9-Pocket Exo-Tec Zip Binder | 9-pocket | 360 cards | Zip | Yes |
| Vault X 12-Pocket Exo-Tec Zip Binder XL | 12-pocket | 624 cards | Zip | Yes |
| Ultra Pro 9-Pocket PRO-Binder | 9-pocket | 360 cards | None | Yes |
| Dragon Shield Card Codex Zipster Binder (Regular, 360) | 9-pocket | 360 cards | Zip | Yes |
| Vault X 9-Pocket Strap Binder | 9-pocket | 360 cards | Strap | Yes |
If you're double sleeving your One Piece or Lorcana cards
Both games see enough table play that double sleeving isn't unusual, especially for Lorcana ink cards and One Piece leaders that get handled every game. Every binder in the table above is marked as a fit for double sleeved cards in our data, so a thicker sleeve stack going into a binder page isn't the constraint here. Toploaders are a different story: none of the standard binders above take a toploadered card, since a toploader's rigid shell runs bigger than any standard pocket. If part of your collection is sitting in toploaders, keep those separate and see do toploaders fit in binders for which binders are actually built for that shape.
Mixing One Piece, Lorcana, and Yu-Gi-Oh in one collection
The one real gotcha is mixing card sizes. One Piece and Lorcana share the standard 63x88mm size with Magic and Pokemon, but Yu-Gi-Oh! runs the smaller Japanese size at 59x86mm. Put a Yu-Gi-Oh! card in a standard-size pocket and it sits loose enough to slide around and eventually work its way to a corner. It's a minor annoyance rather than a real fit failure, but if you collect across both size families, keep separate binders rather than one mixed page.
Quick answers
Are One Piece cards the same size as Lorcana cards? Yes, both use the 63x88mm standard size, identical to Magic and Pokemon.
Do I need a special binder for One Piece or Lorcana? No. Any binder in our directory built for standard-size cards works for either game.
Can I put a One Piece deck sleeved in Dragon Shields into a binder? Yes. Standard sleeves run around 66x91mm, and standard binder pockets are sized to take a sleeved card at that thickness without issue.
What if I collect both One Piece and Yu-Gi-Oh? Keep them in separate binders. The card sizes are close enough to look interchangeable but different enough that a Yu-Gi-Oh! card will sit loose in a standard pocket.
Browse the full binder directory if you're comparing pocket counts and closures side by side, and run a specific pairing through the fit checker before you buy if you're mixing double sleeves into the equation. The gear question here is a short one. Spend your decision-making energy on closure style and page count, not on hunting for a size that doesn't exist.
Not sure your exact combo fits?
Pick your game, sleeves, and container. The fit checker answers with the millimeters shown.