The Most Valuable LEGO Sets
Ranked by what they actually sold for on eBay — completed sales, not asking prices. Each set links to its full condition-split breakdown with recent listings. Figures are the headline (best-condition) median.
Most valuable LEGO sets by sold price
| # | Set | Year | Sold median | RRP | vs RRP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cloud City #10123 | 2003 | $7,499 | — | — |
| 2 | Death Star II #10143 | 2005 | $3,612 | $270 | +1238% |
| 3 | Grand Carousel #10196 | 2009 | $2,096 | $250 | +738% |
| 4 | The Mountain Cave #21137 | 2017 | $1,600 | $250 | +540% |
| 5 | Fantasy Era Castle Giant Chess Set #852293 | 2008 | $1,530 | — | — |
| 6 | Cafe Corner #10182 | 2007 | $1,500 | $140 | +972% |
| 7 | Darth Maul #10018 | 2001 | $1,487 | — | — |
| 8 | Super Star Destroyer #10221 | 2011 | $1,435 | $400 | +259% |
| 9 | Imperial Shuttle #10212 | 2010 | $1,344 | $260 | +417% |
| 10 | AT-AT #75313 | 2021 | $1,302 | $850 | +53% |
| 11 | Betrayal at Cloud City #75222 | 2018 | $1,295 | $350 | +270% |
| 12 | The Tower of Orthanc #10237 | 2013 | $1,273 | $200 | +536% |
| 13 | Rebel Snowspeeder #10129 | 2003 | $1,250 | — | — |
| 14 | Green Grocer #10185 | 2008 | $1,138 | $150 | +658% |
| 15 | Imperial Star Destroyer #75252 | 2019 | $1,008 | $700 | +44% |
| 16 | Imperial Flagship #10210 | 2010 | $995 | $180 | +453% |
| 17 | The Joker Manor #70922 | 2017 | $975 | $270 | +261% |
| 18 | Death Star #10188 | 2008 | $972 | $400 | +143% |
| 19 | Colosseum #10276 | 2020 | $972 | $550 | +77% |
| 20 | Modular Construction Site #910008 | 2023 | $951 | — | — |
| 21 | Batcave Shadowbox #76252 | 2023 | $933 | $400 | +133% |
| 22 | Welcome to Apocalypseburg! #70840 | 2019 | $929 | $300 | +210% |
| 23 | Firehouse Headquarters #75827 | 2016 | $911 | $350 | +160% |
| 24 | Y-wing Attack Starfighter #10134 | 2004 | $888 | — | — |
| 25 | NINJAGO City Docks #70657 | 2018 | $876 | $230 | +281% |
| 26 | Millennium Falcon #10179 | 2007 | $874 | $500 | +75% |
| 27 | Town Hall #10224 | 2012 | $849 | $200 | +325% |
| 28 | Cat D11 Bulldozer #42131 | 2021 | $818 | $500 | +64% |
| 29 | NINJAGO City #70620 | 2017 | $800 | $300 | +167% |
| 30 | The Razor Crest #75331 | 2022 | $750 | $600 | +25% |
| 31 | Liebherr Crawler Crane LR 13000 #42146 | 2023 | $750 | $700 | +7% |
| 32 | Market Street #10190 | 2007 | $743 | $90 | +725% |
| 33 | Sandcrawler #75059 | 2014 | $711 | $300 | +137% |
| 34 | B-wing Starfighter #10227 | 2012 | $695 | $200 | +247% |
| 35 | Fire Brigade #10197 | 2009 | $680 | $150 | +353% |
| 36 | The Simpsons House #71006 | 2014 | $675 | $200 | +238% |
| 37 | World Map #31203 | 2021 | $664 | $250 | +166% |
| 38 | Liebherr R 9800 Excavator #42100 | 2019 | $660 | $450 | +47% |
| 39 | Y-Wing Starfighter #75181 | 2018 | $655 | $200 | +228% |
| 40 | Statue of Liberty #3450 | 2000 | $650 | — | — |
| 41 | Gringotts Wizarding Bank – Collectors' Edition #76417 | 2023 | $650 | $430 | +51% |
| 42 | Taj Mahal #10189 | 2008 | $649 | $300 | +116% |
| 43 | Slave I #75060 | 2015 | $644 | $200 | +222% |
| 44 | Brick Bank #10251 | 2016 | $641 | $170 | +277% |
| 45 | Studgate Train Station #910002 | 2023 | $640 | — | — |
| 46 | Mountain Fortress #910029 | 2024 | $633 | $380 | +67% |
| 47 | Porsche 911 GT3 RS #42056 | 2016 | $633 | $300 | +111% |
| 48 | Millennium Falcon #75192 | 2017 | $630 | $850 | +-26% |
| 49 | Real Madrid – Santiago Bernabéu Stadium #10299 | 2022 | $627 | $400 | +57% |
| 50 | Eiffel Tower #10307 | 2022 | $622 | $630 | +-1% |
RRP = recommended retail price, the set’s original launch price (US MSRP). “vs RRP” is how much the current sold price has gained over it. A few older sets show “—” because LEGO didn’t publish a retail price we can source for them (typically pre-2007) — their value is still ranked by real sold price.
Most valuable LEGO sets by theme
Browse by theme: Star Wars (32) · Icons (21) · Creator (19) · Modular Buildings (18) · Technic (17) · LEGO Art (12) · Ideas (12) · BrickLink Designer Program (11) · Harry Potter (8) · Marvel (8) · DC Super Heroes (6) · Ninjago (5)
What makes a LEGO set valuable
Three forces drive secondary value: retirement (once a set leaves shelves, supply is fixed while demand keeps growing), desirability (licensed themes like Star Wars and big display pieces hold value best), and condition (sealed examples top the market, used-complete trails, incomplete drops further). The biggest gains come when all three line up — a retired, beloved set in sealed condition.
How we rank them
Unlike guides built on asking prices or modelled “book values”, this ranking uses the median of real eBay completed sales for each set. Click any set to see the per-condition medians, the seller’s net after fees, and the individual recent sales behind the number. For the sharpest appreciation stories, see rare LEGO sets; for the full list of discontinued sets, see retired LEGO sets.
Why some famous five-figure sets aren’t on this list
You won’t find LEGO’s legendary ultra-rarities here — the employee-only gifts (LEGO Inside Tour sets), San Diego Comic-Con exclusives, VIP gala sets and one-off promos that other “most valuable” lists lead with. That’s a deliberate transparency choice, for two reasons:
- No real market. A set that only ever went to LEGO employees or convention attendees changes hands a handful of times a decade. A “value” built on one or two sales isn’t a market price — it’s an anecdote, and it swings wildly.
- You can’t actually buy or sell it. This tool is for sets real collectors own and trade. Headlining a $10,000 employee gift you’ll never see doesn’t help you value the set in your closet.
Every set ranked here is a retail set with enough genuine eBay sales to compute a dependable median. We’d rather give you a number you can act on than a flashy one you can’t. See how this works for the full methodology.

















































