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The Ten Most Expensive LEGO Sets Of All Time

6 Minute Read
Apr 23 2026
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From massive Star Wars ships to feats of engineering and functional cranes, check out the most expensive LEGO sets of all time!

LEGO was founded in 1932, offering simple wooden building sets. The company released its first interlocking brick sets in 1958, which cost around $0.50-5.25 each and topped out at around 60 pieces. Over the decades, sets have gotten more complex with thousands of pieces, and that has come with ever-higher price tags. Here are the sets with the highest MSRPs…

#10: Star Wars – UCS The Razor Crest (75331)

The first of the two (the N-1 Starfighter drops next month) Mando inspired UCS sets arrived in 2022, and it’s the cheapest on this list. The ship is large, at two feet long. It’s packed with little details from the show, including an opening cockpit, a cargo compartment with a weapons cabinet, and a minifigure-sized carbon-freezing chamber. The Razor Crest retired last year, but you can still find it for close to MSRP on third-party sites.

  • 6,187 pieces
  • 4 minifigs
  • Released in 2022
  • Retail Price: $599.99

#9: ICONS – Eiffel Tower (10307)

This retiring set might not be the most expensive LEGO set, but it holds the record for the most pieces and is the tallest set ever made. Like Gustave Eiffel’s tower, it is assembled in 4 sections that let builders follow the way the wrought iron marvel was in 1889. The build also includes modern conveniences like elevators, several observation platforms, and the park that sits below the tower. I’m not sure if LEGO will ever be able to top this architectural model.

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  • 10,001 pieces
  • Released in 2022
  • Retail Price: $629.99

#8: Venusaur, Charizard, and Blastoise (72153)

The newest set on the list includes three fan-favorite pocket monsters and is one of the first-ever Pokémon sets. Each buildable fig is ready to battle – Venusaur has movable vines and feet, Blastoise has an articulated head, arms and water cannons, and Charizard’s wings, legs, arms and head are posable. The set also contains some easter eggs for longtime fans.

  • 6,838 pieces
  • Released in 2026
  • Retail Price: $649.99

#7: Star Wars – UCS Venator-class Republic Attack Cruiser (75367)

At 3.5 feet, this is one of the longest sets out there (though it is beat out by another set on this list). It’s more of a scale model to be displayed than a playable set, but it is a faithful recreation of the on-screen ship. It features striking red stripes, a command bridge, and a hangar containing a brick-built scale model of a Republic Gunship. This is one of several UCS sets on its way out this year.

  • 5,374 pieces
  • 2 minifigs
  • Released in 2023
  • Retail Price: $649.99
LEGO clone wars

#6: The Most Expensive LEGO ICONS Set – Titanic (10294)

This 1:200 scale brick model aims to get as close to the famous ocean liner as possible. It splits into three sections so you can build and see the detailed interior that includes the grand staircase, first-class dining room, promenade deck, reading lounge, swimming pool, cabins from the different passenger classes, and other passenger amenities. It has over 300 portholes, lifeboats, and a crane to load cargo. Plus a working engine.

  • 9,090 pieces
  • Released in 2021
  • Retail Price: $679.99

#5: Star Wars – UCS Imperial Star Destroyer (75252)

The Ultimate Collectors series entered in to a new era in 2016, focusing on massive builds of famous ships from the sci-fi series. Darth Vader’s flagship got the UCS treatment in 2019, updating the original 2002 set and adding over 1,000 pieces to the build. The screen-accruate ship came complete with a to scale version of the Rebels’ Tantive IV starship that ‘flies’ next to it.

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  • 4,784 pieces
  • 2 minifigs
  • Released in 2019
  • Retail Price: $699.99

#4: The Most Expensive Technics LEGO Set – Liebherr Crawler Crane LR 13000 (42146)

This is the most expensive LEGO set in the Technics range, and one of the largest. This isn’t just a giant model; it moves and lifts. It has tank steering, a rotating turntable, and a luffing jib that move using 2 smart hubs and 6 large motors. The real thing is the most powerful conventional crawler crane in the world, able to lift 3,000 tons. The LEGO version can lift 12-14 pounds when it has the proper counterweight, which is impressive.

  • 2,883 pieces
  • Released in 2023
  • Retail Price: $699.99

#3: Star Wars – UCS AT-AT (75313)

This two-foot-tall walker retired in 2024. It’s fully posable with articulated joints and an interior that can house an army. The main bay fits forty minifigs (nine included), four speeder bikes (two included), and an E-Web heavy repeating blaster. Plus, the cockpit can house two pilots and a passenger. It’s become a white whale for a lot of Star Wars collectors – fetching more than twice the MSRP on the third-party market.

  • 6,785 pieces
  • 9 minifigs
  • Released in 2021
  • Retail Price: $849.99

#2: Star Wars – UCS Millennium Falcon (75192)

After nearly ten years in production, this hunk of junk is retiring this year. The largest version of the frieghter they’ve ever made (at 8 inches high, 33 inches long, and 23 inches wide) features intricate details both in and out, including an upper and lower quad laser cannons, landing legs, a lowering boarding ramp, and a 4-minifigure cockpit with a detachable canopy. You can remove hull plates to reveal the main hold, rear compartment, and gunnery station. This is truly one of the best kits LEGO has ever put out.

  • 7,541 pieces
  • 8 minifigs
  • Released in 2017
  • Retail Price: $849.99

The Most Expensive LEGO Set: Star Wars – Death Star (75419)

Last year’s version of the Death Star takes the top spot on the most expensive LEGO set list at nearly $1k. The iconic space station is sliced in half vertically (standing 20.6 inches tall, 18.9 inches wide, and 15.1 inches deep when fully constructed), revealing several floors that feature legendary moments from the movies. The giant build also comes with 38 minifigs, and droids from across the franchise.

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The price points only go up from there. We’ll have to see if they decide to top this MSRP with some of the rumored LotR sets in the coming months.

  • 9,023 pieces
  • 38 minifigs
  • Released in 2025
  • Retail Price: $999.99

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Author: Mars Garrett
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