4 Things to Do Before You Start LEGO Investing
Category: Investing
By BrickBucks
Storage, research routine, budget, insurance. The four things to set up before you spend a dollar on a sealed set.
Most LEGO investing mistakes happen before the first set is bought. People order $2,000 of sealed sets in a burst of enthusiasm, find they have nowhere to store them, watch a box get crushed in the garage, and walk away convinced LEGO investing is a scam. The fix is to set up the infrastructure first. Here are the four things to do before you spend a dollar.
1. Set up real storage
This is the single most-skipped step and the single most consequential one. The minimum requirements for storing sealed LEGO as investments:
- Climate-controlled space. Indoor, year-round 60-75°F, humidity below 60%. No garage, attic, or basement with seasonal swings unless you control humidity.
- No direct sunlight. UV fades box artwork in months. A closet, dedicated room, or basement away from windows works.
- Shelving with no weight transfer. Boxes stored flat with nothing on top, or upright on a shelf. Never stack sets on top of each other; pressure dents are permanent.
- Pest control. Mice chew through LEGO boxes. Stable, sealed spaces only.
- Inventory labels on the outside of each shelf. When you want to find a set 5 years from now, future-you will be grateful.
If you don't have space for 20-50 boxes in a climate-controlled area today, you don't have the infrastructure to invest yet. Solve storage first, then buy.
2. Build a research routine
LEGO investing is not "buy what looks cool." It's a research-driven exercise. Before your first purchase, establish where you'll source information:
- Bricklink Price Guide — the primary pricing reference for any LEGO investor. Free with account.
- BrickEconomy — historical price tracking, retirement forecasts, "growth" metrics. Free tier covers most needs.
- eBay Sold listings — reality check on sealed-set prices.
- BrickBucks blog and roundups — see our top retiring sets and price trend analysis.
- r/legoinvesting and r/lego on Reddit — community sentiment and emerging trends.
- LEGO.com — the "Retiring Soon" filter, exclusives, and VIP calendar.
Spend 4-6 weeks reading and watching before buying. The patterns of which sets appreciate and which don't will become obvious.
3. Define your budget and risk tolerance
Three numbers to write down before buying:
- Initial capital deployment — how much you'll spend in the first 6 months. A common starting range is $500-$3,000.
- Monthly contribution — how much you'll add per month going forward. $100-$500 is typical.
- Acceptable hold period — minimum 3-5 years for most themes, 7+ for the highest-appreciation potential. LEGO is illiquid; if you need that money sooner, don't tie it up.
The rule that protects most investors: only invest money you can leave alone for 5 years. Selling under pressure (job loss, surprise expense) consistently locks in lower returns than waiting for the right exit window.
4. Verify your insurance
The piece almost no one checks. Standard homeowner's and renter's insurance policies typically cap "collectibles" coverage at $1,500-$2,500 per claim. A house fire, theft, or water leak above that threshold leaves you holding the bag on the difference.
The fix:
- Read your current policy for collectibles limits and exclusions.
- If your portfolio will exceed the cap (i.e., you plan to hold $5,000+ in sealed sets), add a scheduled personal property rider — typically $5-$15 per $1,000 of coverage per year. Cheap insurance for serious portfolios.
- Keep purchase receipts in a fireproof box or cloud storage. Claims require proof of value.
- Photograph your inventory annually, including barcodes and any unique condition notes. Time-stamped photos help with claims.
Do these four things first. Then start buying. For the buying playbook, see our beginner's guide.