Point the camera at a sleeve, a center label, or a barcode. In five seconds Mint tells you what pressing you're holding, what it's worth, and where to hear it.
Each mode is tuned on a different backend pipeline. Mint picks the best one automatically — or you can force it when the obvious shot won't cut it.

Photograph the sleeve. Reverse-image search plus Gemini recognize common releases in under three seconds, even when the artwork is creased or sun-faded.

Shoot the center label when the sleeve is beat up, foreign-language, or missing. OCR reads catalog and matrix numbers; an LLM reasons about the exact pressing.

For modern reissues and CDs. Pixel-level barcode extraction gives you an exact SKU — and an exact pressing — with no ambiguity.

Drop the needle and let Mint listen. Shazam-style audio fingerprinting identifies the track — useful when the sleeve is nowhere in sight.
Artist, pressing, market price, community demand, and a 30-second preview. Every card is built to be read in one glance in dim light with one hand free.
Every scan is saved, searchable, and exportable. Pull up that white-label 7" you found six months ago in Brooklyn without remembering a single character of the catalog number.




Scan a crate, tag each record with a suggested price based on current Discogs market data, export to Shopify or your POS. No more squinting at matrix numbers. No more $90/month API wrappers.
Book a business demo ↗Across 14M+ Discogs releases, Mint lands a correct first match 98.4% of the time on clean sleeves, 94% on damaged or foreign-language labels. When confidence drops below 85% we show the top three candidates with reasoning instead of guessing.
Scans require a connection — we query Discogs and run recognition in the cloud. But cached scans, your history, and favorites all work offline, and previously-scanned records re-recognize instantly.
Label mode uses OCR tuned on 19 scripts — Hebrew, Japanese, Russian, Greek, and 15 more. For hard cases, a reasoning pass cross-references catalog and matrix numbers against the Discogs index.
Yes. Scans are associated with your account but never surfaced publicly. We don't sell data. You can delete your history or export it as CSV (Pro) at any time.
CDs yes — barcode mode is tuned for them. Cassettes are in closed beta; scan the J-card or the shell and we'll do our best, but recognition accuracy is lower than on vinyl.
If you flip records, one lucky find pays for a lifetime. If you collect, unlimited scans and the AI pressing stories turn crate-digging into a research tool. If neither, stay on Free — it's not going away.