How to Sell Used LEGO: A Complete Guide for 2026

Category: Selling

By BrickBucks

From a bin in the basement to cash in your account — the complete used-LEGO selling playbook.

You have a bin (or a closet, or a basement) of used LEGO and want to turn it into cash. The good news: there's a healthy global market for used LEGO at every level, from individual rare minifigures selling for thousands of dollars down to bulk bricks sold by the pound. The complication: the right way to sell depends entirely on what you have. Selling a complete sealed Modular Building is a completely different operation from selling a bin of mixed loose bricks. This guide walks through both ends and everything in between.

Step 1: Sort what you actually have

Before you can sell, you need to know what you're holding. Pull everything out and sort into four piles:

  1. Sealed sets. Original box, factory shrink-wrap intact. These sell highest — see our investing guide for current values.
  2. Complete used sets with box and instructions. Built or unbuilt, all parts present. Worth 30-60% of sealed prices.
  3. Complete used sets without box but with instructions. Worth 20-40% of sealed prices.
  4. Loose mixed bricks. Sold by weight or by part.

Sealed and complete sets are sold individually. Loose bricks have two paths: parted out on Bricklink (more money, much more work) or sold in bulk by the pound (less money, far less work). The break-even on which is worth it depends on what's in the pile.

Step 2: Clean everything (this matters more than you'd think)

Dirty LEGO loses 20-40% of its market value instantly. The process:

Step 3: Value what you have

The pricing tool every LEGO seller uses is Bricklink Price Guide (free, requires account). Look up each set or part by item number and check both "Last 6 Months Sold" prices and current listings. Don't price off active listings alone — sold prices are reality, active listings are wishful thinking. For sealed retired sets, cross-check eBay Sold listings using the filter "Sold Items" + "Complete listings."

Three pricing benchmarks to keep in mind:

Step 4: Pick a platform

Each platform optimizes for a different thing:

Step 5: Photograph properly

Good photos add 20-40% to realized price. Bad photos lose 20-40%. Minimums:

Step 6: Write a clear listing

The buyer's biggest fear is missing parts. Address that head-on. A good title includes set name + set number + status ("Sealed" / "Used Complete" / "Bulk Lot"). The description should cover: set number, year released, piece count, condition (sealed / used complete / used with X parts missing), whether instructions and box are included, number of minifigures, any printed-or-stickered pieces, and shipping options.

Step 7: Ship without losing money

Step 8: Know the tax basics

In the US, if you receive $5,000 or more from a marketplace in a year (the 2026 IRS 1099-K threshold), the platform will report your gross receipts to the IRS. If you're selling personal property at a loss (most used LEGO sales are technically this), you don't owe income tax — but you do need to be prepared to document cost basis. If you're flipping sets for profit, that's ordinary income or capital gains depending on your activity level. Talk to a tax professional if you're selling at any volume.

Quick decision tree

For platform-specific deep dives, see where to sell LEGO, eBay tips, and Facebook Marketplace tips.