Brickheadz

Alice in Wonderland

Four Wonderland faces lined up on a shelf, and every one of them actually reads as the character.

Brick Rated Score

4.1 out of 54.1/5

Set 40925 · 2026

Pieces601
Minifigsn/a
Year2026
Set number40925

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The verdict

This is one of the rare BrickHeadz packs that gives you four figures instead of the usual two, and the value shows the second you line them up.

Alice, the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat all wear their 1951 Disney colours, and the likenesses landed better than I expected for a cube with a face. If you love the film or you collect Disney BrickHeadz, this is an easy shelf trophy. If you want a proper build with problem-solving, know going in that BrickHeadz are cheerful, repetitive, and over in an evening.

Best for: Alice in Wonderland fans who want a whole cast of BrickHeadz, not just a lonely pair

The full review

What it is

The Mad Hatter is the one that got me. He stands a good inch taller than everyone else purely because of that ridiculous hat, and next to prim little Alice and the twitchy White Rabbit the height difference makes the whole group look like an actual scene instead of four figures that happen to share a box. This is a 2026 BrickHeadz set built around the 1951 Disney film, and it hands you all four of those characters (Alice, the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat) in one 601-piece package. That is double the usual BrickHeadz headcount, and lining them up for the first time is genuinely satisfying.

The catch

I do want to be straight with you about what BrickHeadz are, because the box can flatter them. These are display figures. The building is quick, the technique is stacky and repetitive, and if you sit down expecting the kind of engineering puzzle a bigger set gives you, four blocky heads in a row will not scratch that itch. At around forty dollars it is fair rather than cheap, and because it launches as a LEGO-exclusive there is not much room to shop around for a deal in the early going. None of that is a flaw exactly, it is just the deal you are signing up for.

Who it's for

Get this if you love Alice in Wonderland, or if you already keep a row of Disney BrickHeadz and want the Wonderland gang to join them. The four-figure count makes it feel like a real set rather than a single impulse buy, and the character work rewards a spot where people will actually see it. Skip it if what you crave is a long, absorbing build, or if you are cool on the chunky BrickHeadz look, because no amount of charming detail will convert you on that front.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

Building BrickHeadz is a rhythm more than a challenge. You stack a square body, clip on arms, layer up the head, then finish with the printed and shaped face pieces that do most of the personality work. Across four figures you settle into that pattern fast, which is relaxing if you want a low-stakes evening and a touch monotonous if you were hoping for surprises. The joy here is watching each character resolve in the last few steps rather than anything clever in the middle.

The standout parts are the shaping and printing that sell each face. Alice's hair and headband, the Cheshire Cat's wide grin, the White Rabbit's ears and his tiny pocket watch, and the Mad Hatter's oversized topper are what turn generic cubes into recognisable friends. You also get the small accessory pieces (teacup, umbrella, heart) that give the display little story hooks. As a parts haul it is more about themed colours and printed detail than rare molds, but for the price the printed elements alone give the set real character.

Fun facts

  • 01The set landed in June 2026 as one of three new BrickHeadz alongside Toy Story figures and a Megatron, all exclusive to LEGO channels.
  • 02Most BrickHeadz packs give you two or three figures, so this four-character Wonderland lineup is unusually generous for the theme.
  • 03The Mad Hatter stands around 4.5 inches tall thanks to his hat, noticeably above the roughly 3 to 3.5 inch height of the other three.
  • 04Every figure is styled after the 1951 Disney animated film rather than any later live-action version.

What other builders say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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