The Best LEGO Star Wars Sets to Build in 2025

https://www.ign.com/articles/best-star-wars-lego-sets

Chris Reed Nov 07, 2025 · 5 mins read
The Best LEGO Star Wars Sets to Build in 2025
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For over two decades, the LEGO and Star Wars partnership has endured and thrived. It is nothing if not consistent; the sets are geared toward every skill level, from beginner to advanced, and all of the sets – even the most rudimentary – are reliably high-quality. The massive ship and droid replicas get the most press. But even the more idiosyncratic sets – like the movie dioramas, for example – still capture the look, feel, and whimsy of their inspirations.

TL;DR: These Are the Best Star Wars LEGO Sets

LEGO is a costly hobby – one that requires a selective eye, so that only la crème de la crème makes it on your shopping list. Here are the Best LEGO Star Wars sets that you can buy in 2025. You can also check out our broader list of LEGO space sets for more science-focused options or dive into our picks for the best Star Wars gifts to buy right now.

Jango Fett's Firespray-Class Starship

This is one of the new LEGO Star Wars sets for May the fourth. The largest iteration of Jango Fett's Starship to date, this vessel (better known to Star Wars diehards as Slave I), can be posed either in its landing mode or its flight mode. It comes with two minifigures of Jango Fett and young Boba Fett and possesses articulable blaster cannons.

Grogu with Hover Pram

This depiction of The Mandalorian's Grogu is not an exact duplicate of the show's depiction; rather, it's been exaggerated for maximum cuteness and presentability. The arms and head move, and the arms rotate via dials on the figure's back. The Hover Pram, Grogu's high-tech space bassinet, is mounted on a square black stand and completes the overall package.

This set was part of the most recent round of new Star Wars LEGO sets to arrive in 2025, and we had the chance to actually build it ourselves.

Droideka

The Droideka are notoriously tough. In The Phantom Menace, two of these droids were able to hold off Qui-Gon Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi by themselves and force the two Jedi to retreat. This replica has the droid's classic battle pose, and like in the movie, it can also roll into a ball for additional mobility.

AT-TE Walker

The new AT-TE Walker (from Revenge of the Sith) looks exactly like what it is: a heavy artillery unit with a massive cannon. The model has room to seat seven Clone Troopers as they take on the Separatist droid army. Its sturdy, bottom-heavy design makes it excellent for play or display.

Check out our list of the best LEGO sets for adults for more options like this.

TIE Interceptor

A complementing, proportionally sized companion to the X-Wing Starfighter (#75355), this TIE Interceptor featured in Return of the Jedi as a defender of the second Death Star. We built this set at its launch, and it is currently available exclusively through the LEGO Store.

X-Wing Starfighter

Jabba's Sail Barge – Collectors' Edition

Jabba the Hutt is the slimiest, greediest gangster in the Dune Sea, and this Sailing Barge, which transports him and his cronies, is appropriately massive. It includes a full kitchen, an armory, and a prison cell for any disobedient servants. The set also comes with a Princess Leia minifigure in her slave costume, so you can recreate the iconic death scene from Return of the Jedi.

Millennium Falcon (Collector's Edition)

LEGO sets usually have a short production lifespan; the old sets get retired to make way for new ones. But the massive Millennium Falcon, which weighs in at 7541 pieces and launched in 2017, is still going strong. It's constantly on backorder, and for good reason; it's a modern classic amongst the LEGO faithful. It comes with two crews – the original crew, with Han, Luke, and Leia, and the sequel crew, with old Han Solo, Rey, and Finn. And it's got fully realized interiors in addition to its articulable exterior.

In 2017, back when this set launched, adult sets were the exception and not the rule. This was a groundbreaking testament to what LEGO could be. Today, with so many other sets that reach its level of complexity, it's a fulfilled example of what LEGO has become and one of the most expensive LEGO sets you can buy.

Battle Droid with STAP

The Battle Droids in Episode I were short on competence, but long on personality and likability. This LEGO set perches a Separatist Droid on a STAP speeder; you can also remove and stand him separately with his blaster gun. The set comes with a minifigure-scaled droid and STAP, which you can pose right next to its big brother.

AT-ST

First introduced in Return of the Jedi, the AT-ST has a distinctive, two-legged appearance, which made them memorable adversaries for the underdog Ewoks, who used logs, slings, and arrows to take them down. This model is rotatable and posable, and its top opens to reveal a two-person cockpit.