The Hidden World of LEGO Supply: Production, Allocation, and Scarcity

Category: Investing

By BrickBucks

How LEGO actually makes, allocates, and retires sets — and why understanding the supply side beats most pricing analysis.

Most LEGO investing analysis focuses on demand: which sets are popular, which themes have momentum, which collectors are willing to pay. The supply side gets less attention but explains more about pricing. Here's how LEGO actually moves from a steel mold in Billund to a sealed box on your shelf — and why understanding the mechanics matters.

The five LEGO factories

LEGO produces sets at five main facilities, with a sixth ramping up:

Why this matters: different factories produce different SKUs based on demand allocation. A Modular Building destined for North American shelves is made in Monterrey. The same set for Europe is made in Hungary. Supply chain disruption at any one plant affects regional inventory but not necessarily global production.

The mold inventory

LEGO maintains roughly 13,000 active mold cavities across its plants. Each mold is a steel tool costing $50,000-$300,000 to produce. Molds are pampered: cleaned regularly, inspected daily, retired before they ever drift out of spec. When LEGO retires a part (an element that's no longer produced for any current set), the mold is decommissioned and the part is genuinely gone from new production.

This is why "rare parts" stay rare. Once the mold for a specific color or shape is retired, no more of that part exists outside the secondary market.

The production calendar

LEGO refreshes its global lineup three times per year:

The retirement decisions get made 6-12 months ahead of each wave. When a January wave is announced, the retirements clearing room for it are already locked in. The "Retiring Soon" badge that appears on LEGO.com 3-6 months before final retirement is the public-facing signal of an internal decision made much earlier.

The allocation mechanics

Within a production wave, LEGO allocates units to:

This is why hot sets often appear "in stock" at LEGO.com but "out of stock" at Amazon — the allocations are managed separately and Amazon may sell through faster than LEGO replenishes its wholesale orders.

The exclusive products tier

Some sets are LEGO.com exclusive — sold only direct from LEGO, never through third-party retail. Examples: many Ideas sets at launch, Modular Buildings (for most of their lifecycle), and certain VIP-only items. Exclusives have a critical investment property: no third-party retailer ever discounts them. The price floor is LEGO.com MSRP (minus 5% VIP points) throughout their entire production run. This is one reason exclusives tend to be strong investment candidates.

Gift With Purchase (GWP) and limited promotional sets

GWPs are small bonus sets given free with purchases over a threshold ($150-$400 typically) during promotional windows. They're produced in very limited quantities and never reissued. Many of them — the Han Solo's Carbonite GWP, the Tantive IV mini, various Marvel polybags — sell on the secondary market for $50-$300 within 2-3 years of their promotional window closing. GWPs are arguably the highest-ROI category in LEGO investing because the entry cost is zero (you got it free) and the storage cost is trivial.

What this means for investors

For broader strategy, see the secret sauce of LEGO investing and the ultimate guide.