LEGO Lot Calculator
Paste minifigure or set codes and get the total value instantly. Supports quantities and auto-detects item types.
One per line, comma-separated, or space-separated. Add quantities with x2 or (2).
How to Use the Lot Calculator
Find your codes
Every LEGO minifigure has a BrickLink ID like sw0001a (Star Wars) or sh001 (Super Heroes). Set numbers look like 75192-1 or 10030-1. If you don’t know your codes, use the brick’em scanner to identify figures from a photo, or search set inventories on BrickLink.
Paste codes into the calculator
Enter your codes in any format: one per line, comma-separated, or space-separated. Add quantities by typing x2 or (2) after a code. You can mix minifigure and set codes in the same batch, up to 200 unique items.
Get your lot value
Hit Calculate and see the estimated total value based on average used prices from BrickLink. Each item is shown with its name, image, type, and individual price. Items with quantities show the per-item and total line price.
Why You Should Know Your LEGO Lot Value
Whether you're buying a bulk lot on Facebook Marketplace, pricing inventory for a Whatnot stream, or curious what that tub of minifigures is actually worth, knowing the real numbers changes the game. Without a quick way to check, most people either overpay when buying or underprice when selling. A lot calculator eliminates the guesswork by pulling real transaction data for every item.
The brick'em lot calculator covers both minifigures and sets in a single lookup. Paste your codes, add quantities where needed, and get a total in seconds. All prices come from BrickLink, the world's largest LEGO marketplace, using six-month rolling averages of completed sales. These are the same numbers professional sellers use to price their inventory.
Understanding Minifigure and Set Codes
LEGO minifigure codes follow a theme-based prefix system on BrickLink. Star Wars figures start with "sw" (sw0001a for the first Battle Droid), Marvel and DC Super Heroes start with "sh", Harry Potter figures start with "hp", and Collectible Minifigures start with "col". These IDs are the universal standard across the LEGO resale community.
Set numbers are simpler: they use the official LEGO set number followed by a variant suffix. For example, 75192-1 is the UCS Millennium Falcon. The calculator accepts set numbers with or without the -1 suffix, so both 75192 and 75192-1 will work. If your figures are loose and you don't know the codes, use the brick'em scanner to identify them from a photo.
Tips for Accurate Lot Valuation
Condition matters. The prices shown are averages for used items in complete condition. Figures with cracked legs, heavy scratching, or missing accessories will sell below the average. Mint-condition figures with no play wear sell at or above. Be honest about condition when estimating your lot's real sale value.
Watch out for minifigure variants. Many characters have multiple versions that look nearly identical but carry very different prices. A 2002 Boba Fett and a 2022 Boba Fett are not the same figure or the same value. Using the wrong BrickLink ID means your valuation is off from the start. When in doubt, use the brick'em scanner to narrow down which variant you have.
If you're selling the lot as a single bundle rather than parting it out, expect the actual sale price to be 10-30% below the sum of individual values. Buyers pay a premium for the convenience of buying one item, but they also expect a discount for buying in bulk. The lot calculator gives you the ceiling: the maximum value if every item sold individually at market average.
Common Pricing Mistakes
The most common mistake is using eBay listing prices as a reference instead of actual completed sales. Just because someone listed a figure for $50 does not mean it sold for $50. BrickLink averages reflect what buyers actually paid, which is why they are the standard reference across the LEGO community for fair market value.
Another common mistake is ignoring that prices fluctuate. A new movie release, a set retirement, or a popular YouTube video can all move prices significantly. The six-month rolling average helps smooth out short-term spikes, but checking back periodically gives you a better sense of trends. What was worth $20 last year might be worth $40 today or $12 next month.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is the lot calculator?
The calculator uses real BrickLink market data based on six-month rolling averages of actual completed sales. These are the same prices professional sellers and buyers reference. Keep in mind that actual sale prices vary based on condition, completeness, and current demand, so treat the total as a reliable estimate rather than a guaranteed sale price.
Can I look up both minifigures and sets?
Yes. The calculator automatically detects whether each code is a minifigure or a set. Minifigure codes like sw0001a and set codes like 75192-1 can be mixed freely in the same batch. Each item is labeled as either Minifig or Set in the results so you can see what matched.
What format should I use for codes?
The calculator is flexible. You can enter one code per line, separate them with commas, or even paste them space-separated. Common formats include BrickLink minifigure IDs (sw0001a, col243, sh001) and set numbers (75192-1, 10030-1). Set numbers work with or without the -1 suffix.
How do quantities work?
Add a quantity after any code using x followed by a number. For example, sw0001a x3 means three of that minifigure. You can also use parentheses: sw0001a (3). If the same code appears multiple times, quantities are added together. Codes without a quantity default to 1.
Why doesn’t my code show a price?
Some items don’t have enough recent sales data on BrickLink to calculate a reliable average. This is common for very new releases, extremely rare promotional figures, or regional exclusives. The calculator will still identify the item by name but won’t include it in the total if no price is available.
Is the calculator free?
Yes. The first seven items in every lookup are shown with full details at no cost and with no account required. If your lot has more than seven items, create a free brick’em account to see the complete results and save them to your collection.
How do I sell my lot at the calculated value?
The calculated value gives you a market-informed starting point. To sell, create a free brick’em account to manage your inventory, then export directly to BrickLink, Whatnot, or eBay. Pricing competitively around the average used price typically leads to faster sales. For bulk lots, most buyers expect a discount of 10-20% below individual item values.
What’s the maximum number of codes?
You can look up 200 unique codes in a single batch. If you have more, run the calculator in multiple batches and add the totals together. Duplicate codes within the same batch are automatically combined, with their quantities summed.
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Turn Knowledge Into Action
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