Retired LEGO Deals — May 18, 2026

Retired LEGO Deals — May 18, 2026

Today's 8-set roundup ranked by rarity and discount strength: Gringotts Collectors' Edition available below MSRP with retirement in ~10 weeks, Ferrari Daytona SP3 at a secondary-market discount, and the Art World Map as the top appreciation story at 111% above original retail. Plus 5 confirmed July 2026 retirements with pricing windows analyzed.

Vintage LEGO Marketplace Radar
2026. 5. 18. · 23:07
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Eight sets worth your attention today: three fully retired pieces with strong secondary appreciation, and five sets confirmed to leave shelves by July 31, 2026 — some priced below retail right now, including one with a 7% appreciation forecast the moment it retires.

Quick-scan summary

#SetMSRPSecondary market avgActive listingDiscount vs. marketStatus
131203 Art World Map$249.99$527.75 (BrickRanker)~$625–$660At marketRetired Dec 2023
276417 HP Gringotts — Collectors' Ed.$429.99$390.07 (BrickRanker)$399.99 (eBay)Below MSRPRetiring Jul 2026
310332 Icons Medieval Town Square$229.99$258.20 (BrickRanker)~$275–$325At-to-above marketRetired Oct 2025
442143 Technic Ferrari Daytona SP3$399.99$337.33 (BrickRanker)~$350–$390 sealedBelow MSRPRetiring Jul 2026
521332 Ideas The Globe$229.99$221.56 (BrickRanker)~$175–$215Below marketRetired Nov 2024
621042 Architecture Statue of Liberty$119.99$75.11 (BrickRanker)$79–$119 sealedBelow MSRPRetiring Jul 2026
775356 SW Executor Super Star Destroyer$69.99$49.99 (eBay)Below MSRPRetiring Jul 2026
842151 Technic Bugatti Bolide$49.99$33.13 (BrickRanker)$8–$35Well below MSRPRetiring Jul 2026

#1 — 31203 Art World Map ⭐ Top rarity pick

Set 31203 | LEGO Art | 11,695 pieces | Retired December 2023
The World Map retired roughly 18 months ago and has climbed steadily since. BrickRanker's 6-month average sale price is $527.75 against an original MSRP of $249.99 — a 111% gain1. BrickEconomy shows annualized appreciation of 37.4% since retirement2, with sealed listings in the $449–$660 range on PriceCharting. An open-box copy sold for $649.97 on eBay as recently as April 20, 20263.
Why the premium holds. The piece count (11,695) is second-highest in LEGO Art history. It ships as a four-panel mosaic with no conventional play value, so loose parts rarely circulate; almost every copy on the market is a sealed box from a reseller's shelf. That keeps supply artificially tight.
Buy signal: Sealed copies below $500 represent a 5–10% discount off the trailing 6-month average. Worth watching for estate lots where it surfaces with little demand context.
Authentication note. The World Map has seen counterfeit mosaic plates in circulation. Genuine sets use printed instructions with a specific pixel grid; fakes sometimes substitute generic instruction booklets. Check the instruction book barcode — it should match the set number. Plates should be LEGO-stamped on each stud.

#2 — 76417 Harry Potter Gringotts Wizarding Bank — Collectors' Edition

Set 76417 | LEGO Harry Potter | 4,803 pieces | Retiring July 31, 2026
LEGO currently lists this at full MSRP of $429.99 (temporarily out of stock on lego.com as of this writing4). An eBay listing was flagged at $399.99 — below retail — in recent days5. At the same time, PriceCharting shows a sealed copy sold for $630 on eBay in April 20266.
This is a rare window: a set within two months of confirmed retirement, available from a secondary seller at 7% below MSRP, while comparable sealed copies on the same platform fetch $630. BrickEconomy's new-sealed secondary market range is $621–$717, with the average holding above MSRP at $4637.
Buy signal: $399.99 is a legitimate entry, assuming the listing is authentic (see below). The spread between that price and post-retirement comps is meaningful even at conservative estimates.
Authentication note. This is an 18+ Collector's Edition and a high-counterfeit-risk theme. The full Gringotts model is a complex internal structure — fakes typically show mismatched goblin minifig face printing (the authentic set has detailed wrinkle-line printing on Griphook and Bogrod). Check the bank teller window brickwork for uniform tan/gold color — knockoffs often use slightly off-tone bricks sourced from cheap ABS. Seller should have 98%+ feedback and ideally show original LEGO shipping box in photos.

#3 — 10332 Icons Medieval Town Square

Set 10332 | LEGO Icons | 3,304 pieces | Retired October 2025
The Medieval Town Square sold out permanently at LEGO.com US before its retirement date8, confirmed retired October 2025. BrickRanker's current secondary market average is $258.20 (MSRP was $229.99)9; BrickEconomy values it at $324, up 41% from retail, with 23.62% annualized appreciation10. Active listings range from roughly $275 to $325 sealed.
Why collectors are holding. This set is a modern reinterpretation of the 2009 Classic Castle theme — it carries nostalgia premium on top of standard retirement scarcity. The 3,304-piece modular-adjacent format appeals to both Castle fans and City modular builders, expanding its buyer pool.
Authentication note. Counterfeit medieval/castle LEGO is rarer than Star Wars or Harry Potter, but watch for: printed tile misprints on the market stall signs (authentic printing is sharp, single-color text on tan tile), and loose horseshoe-shaped knight helmets — fakes often substitute incorrect mold variants. Box typography should have standard LEGO orange-and-white with set number visible in lower right.

#4 — 42143 Technic Ferrari Daytona SP3

Set 42143 | LEGO Technic | 3,778 pieces | Retiring July 31, 2026
The Ferrari Daytona SP3 launched at $399.99 in June 2022. As of today, the secondary market average (BrickRanker) is $337.33 — meaning this set is currently trading below its original retail price11. PriceCharting shows sealed copies around $390 based on a March 2026 completed eBay listing12. A sealed listing was live on eBay in late April 202613.
BrickEconomy's retirement analysis projects the value range to reach $522–$544 within five years of retirement14. With retirement confirmed for July 31 and the secondary market currently at a slight discount to original retail, this is a buy-below-MSRP window with post-retirement appreciation expected.
Facebook Marketplace and private sellers are listing it in the £185–£200 range in the UK — check comparable conversion before committing.
Authentication note. Technic counterfeit risk is moderate. The real tell on the Ferrari Daytona is the gearbox mechanism — fakes frequently use a simplified gear assembly that doesn't replicate the sequential gearbox function. Run through the transmission manually before completing any sale. Sticker sheet authenticity: LEGO uses a specific silver metallic finish for the Ferrari script decals; off-brand versions appear matte or slightly thicker.

#5 — 21332 Ideas The Globe

Set 21332 | LEGO Ideas | 2,585 pieces | Retired November 2024
The Globe retired about six months ago and has not yet seen the post-retirement surge typical of high-profile Ideas sets. BrickRanker's 6-month average is $221.56 — essentially flat against the $229.99 MSRP15. BrickEconomy projects 19.54% annualized appreciation once the market digests post-retirement supply16.
Active listings on secondary platforms show sealed copies between $175 and $215. At the lower end, this is below both MSRP and the trailing secondary average — a patient collector's entry point.
Buy signal: only if you can source at $175–$185 sealed. At $215+ you're paying near the current average with no near-term spread.
Authentication note. The Globe's base mechanism is structurally complex and difficult to fake convincingly. The main risk is incomplete sets — verify that the globe sphere itself is fully assembled and the brass-tone metallic ring pieces (part 11833 in gold) are all present. These are the first parts to go missing in open-box resales.

#6 — 21042 Architecture Statue of Liberty

Set 21042 | LEGO Architecture | 1,685 pieces | Retiring July 31, 2026
This is the weakest appreciation play in today's roundup. BrickRanker puts the current secondary value at just $75.11 — well below its $119.99 MSRP17. PriceCharting shows an eBay sold price of $79 sealed in March 202618. BrickEconomy forecasts growth to $150–$160 within two years of retirement (roughly 8% annually)19.
Skip or low-priority hold. Even a $79 sealed copy needs around two years to exceed MSRP at projected rates. Architecture sets have the slowest post-retirement growth curve in the LEGO lineup — the buyer pool is narrower and the piece counts are lower than Icons or Ideas flagships.

#7 — 75356 Star Wars Executor Super Star Destroyer

Set 75356 | LEGO Star Wars | 630 pieces | Retiring July 31, 2026
A small but fan-relevant set: the Executor Super Star Destroyer, 630 pieces, originally $69.99. A sealed listing on eBay surfaced at $49.99, which is 29% below MSRP20. No strong secondary market data available yet — the set has not retired.
Buy signal only for Star Wars completists. At $49.99 you're buying well below retail with retirement in ~10 weeks. Small Star Wars vehicles typically see 20–30% appreciation in the 12–18 months post-retirement, based on historical patterns for comparable sets. Not a high-conviction investment, but a reasonable pick-up for fans who want it.
Authentication note. Small Star Wars sets attract fake minifigures more than fake sets. The Executor set includes an Admiral Piett minifig — verify the face printing has clean detail lines and a LEGO-stamped torso. Sellers asking suspiciously low prices ($20–$30) for a "new" sealed set warrant scrutiny.

#8 — 42151 Technic Bugatti Bolide (skip)

Set 42151 | LEGO Technic | 905 pieces | Retiring July 31, 2026
BrickRanker value is $33.13 against a $49.99 MSRP, down 33.7%21. Active listings are as low as $8–$35. This is a mid-range Technic car with surplus retail inventory still circulating — retirement will not flip the economics.
Verdict: skip. The Bolide has no collector premium driver, no licensing tie-in to a currently-hot IP, and a value trajectory pointing down. Pick it up at $10 if you want to build it; not worth holding as retired inventory.

This week's retirement context

The July 2026 retirement wave is unusually large — StoneWars confirmed over 100 sets marked "Last Chance to Buy" on LEGO.com EU as of four days ago22, with 130+ sets expected to fully retire by mid-year. That scale typically pressures per-set premium growth, as supply competes for the same collector attention. Notable sets in the retirement queue beyond today's picks include 42143's Technic stablemates, several Harry Potter builds, and a wide Star Wars sweep covering sets 75325, 75333, 75337, 75347, and 75356.
If you're watching from a buy-to-hold angle: the Gringotts and Ferrari Daytona are the two sets in today's roundup with the widest gap between current secondary price and confirmed retirement momentum. The World Map remains the strongest pure-appreciation story — but at $625+, the entry cost assumes a multi-year hold.

Price data sourced from BrickRanker, BrickEconomy, and PriceCharting based on 6-month rolling averages and completed eBay sales through May 2026. Secondary market prices fluctuate daily. Verify listings independently before purchasing.

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