Of the 3,340 retired LEGO sets currently on sale in Polish stores, 891 (27%) cost more today than their launch RRP. The median value gain is +56%, and 488 sets gained at least 50%. The highest recorded gain is +399%. 504 of these gains are backed by offers from at least two independent stores.
Data from Polish stores, updated daily. This is not financial advice; a historical price gain does not guarantee future returns.
27%
retired sets priced above launch
+56%
median value gain
488
sets up 50%+
3,340
retired sets tracked
Retiring soon, worth watching
These LEGO sets are still on sale, but the manufacturer has flagged them as ending production. Historically, some of them get more expensive after retirement, though this is not a rule. Add a set to your wishlist or set a price alert to catch it before the price goes up.
891 retired sets with a current price above the catalog price (RRP). The ranking is computed from the lowest tracked offer; for each set we show how many stores that price is based on.
How we compute value growth and what this ranking does not promise
Value growth is the difference between the catalog price (RRP, the manufacturer's suggested launch price) and the lowest current offer we track in Polish stores today. We only count retired sets (status “retired”), with a catalog price from 50 zł and an offer seen in the last 24 hours. We reject extreme, implausible results (a price more than 20 times higher than the RRP), because they usually come from an incorrect catalog price rather than a real gain.
The number of stores next to each set shows how many independent offers a given price is based on. One store means low confidence: a single, expensive marketplace offer need not reflect real market value.
This is not financial or investment advice. A historical price gain does not guarantee future returns, and LEGO is above all a toy and a collectible, not a financial instrument. You make purchasing decisions at your own risk.