The first LEGO set to reach $1,000 is rumoured to launch in 2025, and it can be more than just a simple PR gimmick – but the newest Death Star has to deliver…
The LEGO Group is no stranger to generating headlines with its products, whether it’s by bringing back a classic theme or partnering with a new intellectual property. One other thing it does is break records: here’s the tallest set ever; the most pieces in a set ever; and sometimes the most expensive set ever. It’s these kinds of stories that often get picked up by wider media, calling attention to new releases outside the remit of the company’s established audience.
75192 Millennium Falcon did that back in 2017, becoming the biggest and most expensive LEGO set of all time in one fell swoop. It’s since been surpassed in piece count, but 75313 AT-AT matched its lofty price tag in 2021. Importantly, though, those huge Ultimate Collector Series sets did more than just exist to fulfil a price tag or generate a headline. They weren’t merely there for the LEGO Group to say ‘look how wild our products can get’. They were – and are – each stunning sets and feats of LEGO engineering.

Fast forward to 2025, and the LEGO Group is rumoured to be gearing up to debut its first-ever set clocking in at $999.99 (in US dollars). We all knew that one day we’d reach that milestone – it was only a matter of time – and now it’s said to be happening with 75419 Death Star.
You can imagine the pitch meeting. “We want to generate press around LEGO Star Wars. Let’s put out the first $1,000 set.” It’s a statement piece on its price tag alone and you know that wider media will pick it up and give the LEGO Group and LEGO Star Wars plenty of publicity, which wouldn’t necessarily happen for even other LEGO Star Wars UCS sets, like last year’s
Another way in which 75419 Death Star is said to break records is by including the most minifigures of any LEGO set to date (around 40), although it’s unlikely to have the most pieces: LEGO Star Wars usually falls under the typical 10 cents per piece price ratio that many fans consider the gold standard (whether relevant in 2025 or not). 75313 AT-AT came in at 12.5c per piece, for example, while 75192 Millennium Falcon retails for 11.3c per piece.
You can expect 75419 Death Star to incorporate at least a few larger elements for the space station’s central structure (whichever direction the rumoured set ends up taking), so it probably won’t beat 10307 Eiffel Tower’s 10,001 pieces, let alone 31203 World Map’s 11,695 pieces. But beyond its attention-grabbing headlines – the most expensive set, the most minifigures – a $1,000 Death Star needs to offer substance. It can’t just be an exercise in publicity for the LEGO Group. But there’s a genuine risk that could happen.
Looking at the wider scope of LEGO Star Wars in 2025, things are getting more expensive and the value is being felt less and less – see
There was also backlash in 2024 to both the price and minifigure line-up of

For starters, there’s the minifigures. We saw plenty of shortcuts taken with the Sail Barge’s characters, whether skimping out on C-3PO’s dual-moulded silver leg (currently in production and even included in
Take LEGO Marvel’s modular buildings, for example – 76178 Daily Bugle and 76269 Avengers Tower both have sky-high minifigure counts to match their sky-high buildings, but they manage to climb to such heights by reusing characters and pieces already in circulation across other sets. Both of those skyscrapers only include a handful of genuinely exclusive minifigures. But when you’re asking $1,000 for a LEGO set, a ‘limited budget for new elements’ isn’t an excuse that will cut the mustard.
The good news is that the characters associated with the Death Star likely wouldn’t require much in the way of new moulds. Chewbacca is the only non-human/droid we really see aboard the space station, and he hasn’t changed since 2014, so you know what you’re getting there. That means we can probably tick off a lot of minifigures using existing parts that are appropriate to the scene(s) in question – but that alone won’t be enough for $1,000.
We’ll still need something that takes this set above and beyond in the minifigure department – the equivalent to the Daily Bugle’s Punisher and Daredevil, or the Avengers Tower’s Vision – and a laundry list of Imperial Officers who may be specific in name but are generic in appearance isn’t the answer. Instead, we should be looking towards highly-detailed versions of existing characters, with dual-moulded pieces and arm and leg printing wherever possible – Threepio’s silver leg, Han’s leg printing, and so on.
And then there’s that price tag. What will we actually get for $999.99? Can 75419 Death Star ever hope to justify that price? Or will it ultimately end up feeling like a set that ought to have been $900, or $950, but was bumped up after the fact purely for the headlines it could generate? It’s such a nice, neat, round number that at this point it does feel led by price tag first, rather than the other way round – the demands of a UCS Death Star dictating the price point, as happened with the first UCS Millennium Falcon in 2007.
That’s because all we have to go on at the moment is the set name and price tag, though. For all we know the LEGO Group really has managed to cook up something that can deliver on its lofty, record-breaking price, and hasn’t just taken a Death Star from the LEGO Star Wars team and slapped a $1,000 price tag on it as a PR gimmick. But it’s a question worth contemplating right now given the landmark moment this set will represent for the company as a whole, amidst the context of a continued conversation within the community around the rising prices of LEGO (and LEGO Star Wars in particular).

We’ll find out for sure if and when the LEGO Group pulls back the curtain on 75419 Death Star – if it exists at all. It’s still only rumoured for now, so take it with the customary grain of salt reserved for all LEGO rumours. It’s currently said to be launching in October 2025, occupying the same release slot as last year’s
LEGO Star Wars sets confirmed and rumoured for 2025
| LEGO set | Price | Pieces | Release date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30708 Millennium Falcon | €3.99 | 74 | March 1, 2025 |
| 75399 U-wing Fighter | $69.99 | TBC | May 1, 2025 |
| 75400 Plo Koon Microfighter | TBC | TBC | June 1, 2025 |
| £39.99 / $44.99 / €44.99 | 290 | January 1, 2025 | |
| 75402 ARC-170 Starfighter | £59.99 / $69.99 / €69.99 | 497 | January 1, 2025 |
| 75403 Grogu with Hover Pram | £89.99 / $99.99 / €99.99 | 1,048 | January 1, 2025 |
| 75404 Acclamator-class Assault Ship | £44.99 / $49.99 / €49.99 | 450 | January 1, 2025 |
| 75405 Home One Starcruiser | £69.99 / $69.99 / €69.99 | 559 | January 1, 2025 |
| 75406 Kylo Ren’s Shuttle | $69.99 | TBC | May 1, 2025 |
| 75407 Star Wars Logo | $59.99 | 700 | May 1, 2025 |
| 75408 Jango Fett Helmet | $69.99 | TBC | May 1, 2025 |
| 75409 Jango Fett’s Starship | $299.99 | 2,970 | May 1, 2025 |
| £24.99 / $29.99 / €29.99 | 92 | January 1, 2025 | |
| 75411 Darth Maul Mech | TBC | TBC | June 2025 |
| 75412 Death Trooper & Night Trooper Battle Pack | $19.99 | 119 | June 2025 |
| 75413 UT-AT | $149.99 | 813 | August 2025 |
| 75414 [Rebuild the Galaxy] | $49.99 | 349 | August 2025 |
| 75415 Kylo Ren Helmet | TBC | TBC | May 1, 2025 |
| 75416 Chopper | $99.99 | TBC | May 1, 2025 |
| 75417 AT-ST Walker | $199.99 | 1,513 | August 2025 |
| 75418 Star Wars Advent Calendar | $44.99 | TBC | September 2025 |
| 75419 UCS Death Star | $999.99 | TBC | October 2025 |
| 75428 B1 Battle Droid | $99.99 | TBC | August 2025 |
| 75429 AT-AT Driver Helmet | £69.99 / $69.99 / €79.99 | 730 | March 1, 2025 |
| 75430 Ewok | $89.99 | TBC | August 2025 |
| 75431 327th Star Corps Battle Pack | $39.99 | 258 | August 2025 |
| 75432 V-19 Torrent | $59.99 | TBC | August 2025 |
| 75433 Jango Fett's Starship | $69.99 | 707 | August 2025 |
| 75434 K-2SO | $89.99 | TBC | TBC 2025 |
| 75435 Clone Wars MTT | $149.99 | TBC | August 2025 |
Further reading
- How could a $1,000 LEGO Death Star reach 40 minifigures?
- The non-negotiables of a $1,000 LEGO Star Wars set
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