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Star Wars fans and Lego collectors can take advantage of some terrific deals on display models and playsets ahead of Prime Day 2025. Amazon’s sale officially runs July 8-11, but the retailer is price-matching some new Star Wars Lego deals that have popped up at other retailers. Walmart also has an impressive selection of Lego Star Wars deals, including an exclusive Darth Vader and Kylo Ren Helmet bundle that might be the best Star Wars Lego deal of 2025 so far. Between the enticing helmet bundle and Amazon deals on the Millennium Falcon, C-3PO, R2-D2, and more Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary sets, there’s already an exciting collection of offers up for grabs.
We’ve rounded up the best Lego Star Wars deals ahead of Prime Day below. We’ll continue to update this list as more deals go live at Amazon and other retailers, so we’d recommend bookmarking this page and circling back.
You can use this guide in a few different ways. If you simply want to scan lists of deals, the first slide below includes all of the best deals in bulleted list format. After the first slide, we’ve included detailed looks at roughly 15 of our favorite Star Wars Lego deals from the lists. But if you’d rather just look at each set on Amazon instead, the button above will take you to a custom Lego Star Wars Amazon hub we created with everything in one place.
Darth Vader Helmet (834 Pieces) and Kylo Ren Helmet (529 Pieces)
$99 bundle (Valued at $150) – Exclusive to Walmart
Walmart’s exclusive value bundle pulls together the Sith Lords from the Original and Sequel Trilogies.
The Kylo Ren Helmet was a Star Wars Day 2025 release and costs $70 on its own. The 529-piece replica is exclusive to Walmart and the Lego Store; the completed build is 7 x 4.5 x 5 inches and includes a display stand with name plaque.
The Darth Vader Helmet is nearly four years old at this point, but it still often sells for its full $80 price due its popularity. The 834-piece build is 8 x 5.5 x 5.5 inches and is more elaborate than most Lego Star Wars Helmets due to the internal life-support system fans piece together before finishing the helmet’s top layer of armor.
Millennium Falcon: Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary (921 Pieces)
$68 (was $85)
Lego has released a bunch of building sets focused on the most iconic starship from the Star Wars universe. Some have been playsets designed for kids, while others–like the enormous 7,541-piece UCS build–were created with collectors and adult Lego fans in mind.
As mentioned, Lego celebrated the 25th anniversary of its partnership with Star Wars by launching a collection of relatively small display models for adults with lower price tags than usual for black box sets “for adults.”
Unsurprisingly, the 921-piece Millennium Falcon has been the most popular of the bunch. Based on its appearance in A New Hope, this impressively detailed model is 9.5 inches long and 7.5 inches wide. When perched on the included buildable stand, the starship is roughly 5 inches tall and rests at an angle that makes it appear as if it is flying across the galaxy far, far away.
It has a number of cool little flourishes that you’ll notice during the build process while piecing together the cockpit, cannons, satellite dish, and other components.
The display stand has a nameplate instead of an information placard. You won’t get a minifigure with this particular anniversary set, but it does come with one of the exclusive bricks featuring R2-D2 and the text: 25 Years of Lego Star Wars. The 25th Anniversary Brick connects to the base.
C-3PO: Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary (1,138 Pieces)
$112 (was $140)
Lego’s recreation of C-3PO is a 1,138-piece statue measuring over 15 inches tall. It’s based on the Original Trilogy, which means the droid’s right leg is silver. You can move his head and arms to create different poses. The set includes a buildable display stand, information placard, C-3PO minifigure, and a Lego 25th Anniversary logo brick.
R2-D2: Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary (1,050 Pieces)
$80 (was $100)
Also part of the 25th Anniversary lineup, this 1,050-piece R2-D2 figure is 9 x 6 x 4 inches. Though not officially considered a display model for adults, this is another one of those Lego Star Wars builds that treads the line between playset and display piece.
You can rotate R2-D2’s head and attach various tools, including a periscope and radar. R2’s third leg helps stabilize the figure for display. Removing the middle leg increases mobility for play.
The set comes with a buildable information placard, R2-D2 minifigure, and a Darth Malak minifigure with a stand featuring the Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary logo.
For a larger R2-D2 build, check out the 2,314-piece display model for adults. Officially retired earlier this year, this set measures 12.5 x 7.5 x 6 inches and features a more elaborate build process. The end result is a replica with finer details that make it more faithful to the source material. It’s only $5 off right now, but keep in mind that it’s sold out at most retailers and won’t be produced moving forward.
- R2-D2: 25th Anniversary (1,050 pieces) — $80 (
$100) - R2-D2 (2,314 pieces) — $235 (
$240) | Retired
Droideka Destroyer Droid: 25th Anniversary (583 Pieces)
$52 (was $65)
If you love droids but have noticed that your collection mostly features the friendly helper types, you can add a bit of variety by building a replica display model of the terrifying destroyer droid known as Droideka.
Droideka first appeared in The Phantom Menace and then later in the animated movie and TV series. This intricately detailed 8-inch figure has movable blaster cannons–which also happen to be its arms–that mimic Droideka’s primary attack.
Another cool feature is the detachable legs, which can be repositioned to display Droideka as a ball. Yes, Droideka is basically the droid version of Samus Aran from Metroid (if Samus was a soulless killing machine).
Droideka’s 583-piece build is part of the Lego Star Wars 25th Anniversary lineup. Along with the main figure, you’ll build a smaller Droideka figure and an information placard. The small figure can be displayed on one side of the placard, and the 25th Anniversary Lego Star Wars brick is placed on the other.
Darth Vader Helmet (834 Pieces)
$64 (was $80)
At the moment, Lego’s Darth Vader Helmet is on sale for $64 on its own at Amazon and Walmart. For $35 more, you can get the recently released Kylo Ren Helmet with Walmart’s exclusive bundle. But if you don’t care for Kylo Ren, the standalone Darth Vader deal is still worth checking out.
Captain Rex Helmet (854 Pieces)
$56 (was $70)
The 854-piece replica of the 501st Legion Clone Commander is discounted by 20% at multiple retailers. Fans of the animated series The Clone Wars will appreciate the level of detail found on this display model. The completed Captain Rex Helmet is 8 x 5 x 5 inches.
Rebuild the Galaxy: The Dark Falcon Starship (1,579 Pieces)
$145 (was $180)
Lego Star Wars: Rebuild the Galaxy cleverly altered well-known characters, starships, and planets by making the shakeup the central problem. The Star Wars universe is rearranged when a reality-altering Jedi relic is moved. Heroes and villains swap allegiances, leading to characters such as Darth Jar Jar and Bounty Hunter C-3PO and reskinned starships like The Dark Falcon.
The 1,579-piece Dark Falcon playset has a number of interactive features, including spring-loaded shooters, rotating cannons, a removable cockpit, gunner post, and more.
It comes with six minifigures:
- Darth Jar Jar
- Bounty Hunter C-3PO
- Darth Dev
- Darth Rey
- Beach Luke
- Jedi Vader
All six minifigures have their own accessories, four of which are lightsabers. Notably, Darth Jar Jar, the galaxy’s new Sith Lord, wields the double-sided red lightsaber that Darth Maul has in The Phantom Menace. There’s even a removable throne for Darth Jar Jar. The gunner post and cockpit can fit two minifigures each.
The Dark Falcon building set is 17 x 12.5 x 5 inches. It’s classified as a playset and is suitable for builders ages 10 and up, but it makes for a nice display piece. Plus, it’s quite funny to have these characters as minifigures.
The Phantom Menace: Mos Espa Podrace Diorama (718 Pieces)
$54 (was $80)
The Mos Espa Podrace Diorama is part of the 25th Anniversary lineup and it released 25 years after The Phantom Menace kicked off the Prequel Trilogy. The 718-piece diorama measures 12 x 5.5 x 4 inches and is based on the Mos Espa Podracing Circuit on Tatooine. Young Anakin Skywalker’s Podracer and Sebulba’ps Podracer are featured as they pass through the Arch Canyon.
A plaque on the front of the base features a line from the movie spoken by Qui-Gon Jinn, and the 25th Anniversary Logo brick attaches to the front-left corner.
A New Hope: Tantive IV Starship (654 Pieces)
$64 (was $80)
Like the 25th Anniversary Millennium Falcon, the Tantive IV is a mid-scale display model for adults with an impressive level of detail for its relatively low piece count and price.
For longtime Star Wars fans, the Tantive IV is notable as being Princess Leia’s personal starship in A New Hope. It’s actually the first ship shown on screen in general. Lego’s 654-piece recreation of the CR90 corvette includes all 11 engines as well as turbolasers and other small details.
When attached to the display stand, the Tantive IV is 12.5 x 4 x 6 inches. The display stand comes with a front nameplate and a 25th Anniversary Lego Star Wars brick.
Attack of the Clones: Acclamator-Class Assault Ship (450 pieces)
$40 (was $50)
The Acclamator-Class Assault Ship is a display model geared toward collectors. Based on its first appearance in Attack of the Clones, the 450-piece replica is 9 x 5 x 6 inches when attached to the display stand. It has the same style of nameplate and is considered part of the same series of mid-scale starship models as the Tantive IV and Millennium Falcon, but it’s not part of the 25th Anniversary collection.
Return of the Jedi: Home One Starcruiser (559 Pieces)
$56 (was $70)
Captained by Gial Ackbar of the planet Mon Cala, the Home One Starcruiser from Return of the Jedi is an interesting member of the mid-scale ship series. The Home One, at a glance, is less exciting to look at than the other starships on this list. But Lego spiced it up by adding novel elements to the interior portion. The Home One’s siding can be removed to reveal individual sections with unique details. You also get to build a small Nebulon-B Medical Frigate that attaches to the ship.
When perched atop the display stand, the 559-piece Home One Starcruiser is 13 x 5.5 x 5.5 inches. It comes with a nameplate for the front of the stand. Like the Acclamator-Class model, the Home One isn’t in the 25th Anniversary collection, but it pairs well with any of the mid-scale ship models on this list.
A New Hope: Boarding the Tantive IV (502 Pieces)
$46 (was $55)
This diorama depicts the clash on the Tantive IV starship between the Rebels and Darth Vader with his Stormtroopers. The 502-piece kit includes seven minifigures:
- Darth Vader
- 2 Stormtroopers
- 2 Rebel Fleet Troopers
- Captain Antilles
- Clone Trooper Fives (25th Anniversary)
Clone Trooper Fives, to be clear, is not part of the scene. Fives is a commando from The Clone Wars animated series and is featured as an extra minifigure in the set because it’s part of the 25th Anniversary lineup. Fives can be displayed on the included stand emblazoned with the 25th Anniversary Lego Star Wars logo.
If you purchase multiple of these sets, you can connect them together to create a larger scene.
Amazon also has Prime Day deals on official Lego books, including Star Wars titles, that are worth checking out.
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