This post features the sales of established comics titles published by Marvel, DC, and Archie during the 1980-1981 sales year. A few series from other publishers are also included. Established titles are ones that have had 20 issues or more. The sales year is approximately the spring of 1980 through the 1980-1981 winter.
The first group is of titles for which U. S. Postal Service Statement of Ownership forms were filed in late 1981. The forms were published in early 1982 in the titles' letter columns. The accompanying numbers are the average per-issue paid circulations reported in the forms. The titles are listed from the highest sellers to the lowest. 
Estimates are provided for select titles that did not publish a Statement of Ownership in early 1981. The estimate number is a rounded average of the title's sales from 1979-1980 and 1981-1982.
Titles with an asterisk by their numbers were new-series launches.  The first issues of new series were often targeted by collectible speculators, and the outsize sales enjoyed by the first issues exaggerate the popularity of the books when looking at the average paid-circulation numbers. With new series, the number given is the sales of the most recent issue at the time of the Statement of Ownership filing.
Mad  1,094,085
X-Men  259,607
Amazing Spider-Man  242,781
Star Wars  229,901
Avengers  221,394
Incredible Hulk  201,497
Fantastic Four  192,731
Dazzler  187,941*
Ka-Zar the Savage  186,920*
Marvel Team-Up  185,818
Conan the Barbarian  184,448
Iron Man  177,520
Spectacular Spider-Man  171,839
Thor  167,915
King Conan  166,044
Captain America  159,647
Moon Knight  156,323*
Superman  148,637
ROM  147,439
Micronauts  132,768
Daredevil  130,239
DC Comics Presents  127,526
Defenders  124,985
Justice League of America  121,714
Ghost Rider  121,227
Master of Kung Fu  120,000  (est.)
Legion of Super-Heroes  117,038
Action Comics  111,729
Batman  110,997
Savage Sword of Conan  110,683
Warlord  109,389
Power Man & Iron Fist  106,168
Sgt. Rock  103,727
Superboy  103,272
Spider-Woman  102,474
Doctor Strange  98,255
Brave and the Bold  92,974
Flash  92,151
Green Lantern  91,321
Unknown Soldier  91,151
Archie's Girls Betty and Veronica  90,586
Detective Comics  89,710
Ghosts  87,664
Archie  87,302
House of Mystery  87,089
Jonah Hex  85,045
Life with Archie  84,886
Wonder Woman  83,796
Unexpected  83,371
Archie's Pals 'n' Gals  82,747
Weird War Tales  80,616
Laugh  80,209
Archie and Me  79,639
Betty and Me  78,607
Jughead  77,812
Archie at Riverdale High  77,714
Pep  77,223
Everything's Archie  76,698
World’s Finest  73,602
Little Archie  73,289
Vampirella  71,923
Jughead's Jokes  71,649
G. I. Combat  69,353
Superman Family  68,688
This is the year when Marvel's X-Men became the field's top-selling color title. Most of the sales year featured the last issues of the John Byrne-Chris Claremont run. It's not clear if X-Men became the top-seller before or after Byrne's departure, but the momentum generated by the issues he and Claremont did was what put it over. Claremont continued with the series, with sales continuing to rise over the next few years.
During the 1981-1982 sales year Marvel's Ka-Zar the Savage, Micronauts, and Moon Knight were moved to exclusive non-returnable "direct sales" distribution in the comics-store market. Comics lore has it that this was done in order to avoid canceling the books for low sales. The Statement of Ownership information shows this to be a misunderstanding of the situation. All three titles, as can be seen above, sold fairly well. The problem Marvel was addressing was that the overwhelming majority of the sales was in the comics-store market. The sell-through in the newsstand market, where vendors returned unsold comics to distributors, who ostensibly destroyed the inventory for credit, was very poor. The returns situation meant it wasn't worthwhile to distribute the books there.
The sales of DC's newsstand offerings continued their decline. Just nine titles reported average sales of more than 100,000 copies. Only one, Warlord, saw a significant sales increase. No books sold more than 150,000 per issue. This does not take into consideration New Teen Titans. This title debuted during the 1980-1981 sales year, and it is reputed to be DC's top-seller during the first half of the 1980s. No Statement of Ownership for the series would be filed until late 1985. 
Sales at Archie Comics continued to fall. The line's top-selling title is Archie's Girls Betty and Veronica for the second year in a row.
The following group are titles that had 20 or more issues published by early 1982, but had no Statement of Ownership filed in 1981. Publishers often did not file the form for titles that had not published at least 20 issues when forms were due to be submitted, so those are not listed. Titles that were published during the sales year, but were cancelled before the Statements of Ownership could be published, are not listed, either.
Marvel Tales
Marvel Two-in-One
 
Other Comics Sales Posts
--1969-1970
--1970-1971
--1971-1972
--1972-1973
--1973-1974
--1974-1975
--1975-1976
--1976-1977
--1977-1978
--1978-1979
--1979-1980
--1981-1982
--1982-1983
--1983-1984
--1984-1985
--1985-1986
--1986-1987
--1987-1988
--1988-1989

 
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