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The 2025 Lego F1 kits give us something for every fan

Lego sets can be very expensive, but the F1 series this year offers options at prices every fan can afford.

Seamus Byrne
Seamus Byrne
3 min read
A promo image of a Lego Ferrari race car swooping round a speed bend, with bright reds and speed lines everywhere. It is being chased by other cars behind.
So many cool Lego F1 sets are here for 2025. (Lego Group)

Fun fact. Lego F1 sets date all the way back to 1975, giving the relationship a 50 year history. But 2025 is solidly next level in its approach to giving every kind of F1 fan something they can enjoy at every price point and every skill level of builder.

All ten F1 racing teams are represented this year, letting fans fly their flag with a cute kit they can build and have on their desk or shelf – or sitting under the TV when they're watching the races. And kit prices start from $5.99 for cute little collectible cars in every team design, with further team kits at a range of prices through a list of affordable prices before heading up into the serious enthusiast kits at $150 and beyond.

Here's the list:

  • F1 Collectible race cars ($5.99 each)
  • McLaren race car ($19.99)
  • F1 Williams Racing & Haas F1 race cars ($29.99)
  • F1 pit stop and pit crew with Ferrari car ($39.99)
  • F1 Grid with VCARB & Sauber race cars ($39.99)
  • Mercedes-AMG F1 W14 E Performance Pull-Back ($39.99)
  • Race cars in every team livery ($39.99)
  • F1 Team race cards and drivers set ($69.99)
  • NEOM McLaren Formula E race car ($69.99)
  • Ayrton Senna McLaren MP4/4 ($99.99)
  • F1 Garage & Mercedes-AMG & Alpine cars ($129.99)
  • Nigel Mansell Williams FW14B ($129.99)
  • F1 Truck with RB20 & AMR24 F1 cars ($149.99)
  • McLaren F1 car ($299.99)
  • Mercedes-AMG F1 W14 E Performance ($299.99)
  • Ferrari SF-24 F1 car ($349.99)
  • Oracle Red Bull Racing RB20 F1 car ($349.99)

What a range! The garage, grid, pit stop, and truck sets bring a whole added world of playability to the list, while the cars at so many price points and build levels just makes it fun for everyone. I can absolutely imagine buying the tiny cars for F1 fan friends (they're blind packs but I bet there are forums telling people how to check codes for specific pulls), or even the very well designed $39.99 kits.

Close up of a McLaren Lego F1 set in orange and black with a driver minifig behind.
That's definitely Piastri under that helmet. (Lego Group)

Lego sent me two of these $39.99 sets to play with and at 269 pieces they're a really fun afternoon make and the team liveries (and team drivers) are nicely detailed for every team fan to really enjoy. The $5.99 sets are all 29 piece builds but they're just so nicely designed too. They're tiny but they're definitively cute little F1 cars.

A shot of 12 very small Lego F1 cars on a blue desk.
12 collectible little cars would be really cute on any desk. (Lego Group)

I'm not sure I've ever seen a line up like this, and it's heartening for the thinking that has gone into making every kind of kit in the F1 range so attractive. Lego did say in late 2024 that its new deal with F1 was going to be big, with a multi-year partnership including fan events at Grand Prix events around the world. It's just great to see that it is also a solid "something for everyone" approach to the kits they're offering too.

There's a great full rundown of all the 2025 F1 kits at the Lego site. Most kits are now available while the collectibles drop in June.

Lego

Seamus Byrne

Founder and Head of Content at Byteside. Brings two decades of experience covering tech, digital culture, and their impacts on society.


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