Hagrid & Harry's Privet Drive Escape
A tiny escape scene that gets Hagrid right where it counts, the minifigure.
Brick Rated Score
Set 76459 · 2026
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I opened this one expecting a throwaway starter set and closed it genuinely charmed, because the flying motorcycle and sidecar look properly splendid for something built from so few pieces.
This is the smaller sibling to last year's big 76443 motorcycle set, and it strips the idea down to the getaway itself, Hagrid on the bike, Harry in the sidecar, two Death Eaters chasing them off a Privet Drive that flips its own flower planter mid-scene. I will be honest with you, the price feels a little steep for the piece count, but a big chunk of that cost is clearly going into Hagrid's oversized minifigure and the new motorcycle fairing. If you have a gap where Hagrid should be in your collection, this is one of the cheapest ways to close it.
Best for: Harry Potter minifigure collectors who want Hagrid and the flying motorcycle without buying the full-size set
What it is
The first thing that got me was the motorcycle. It is small, it is simple, and it still manages to look like Hagrid's bike, fairing and all, at true minifigure scale for the first time. Pair that with the sidecar Harry rides in and you have a genuinely fun little escape scene rather than just a rack to display two figures on. The Privet Drive side of the set is doing more than I expected too, a lamppost and a chain barrier give it a street feel, and the flowerpot planter is rigged to flip over as part of the chase, which is the kind of small mechanical touch that makes a cheap set feel considered rather than phoned in.
The catch
Where I have to be straight with you is the value math. At around twenty dollars for 124 pieces, you are not paying for plastic, you are paying for Hagrid. He is an oversized minifigure with two face options, one with his goggles down, and that alone accounts for a real slice of the cost, since larger figures and new molds are expensive to tool. If you are the kind of builder who counts pieces per dollar, this one will sting a little. It is also over quickly, there is no substantial build here, just a motorcycle, a sidecar, and a small street corner.
Who it's for
Get this one if you missed Hagrid the first time around and do not want to pay for the full 76443 motorcycle set to get him, or if you collect the wizarding world minifigure lineup and want the two Death Eaters this set includes. Skip it if you are shopping for building satisfaction, this is a display and play piece first and a construction challenge a distant second.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building it takes maybe twenty minutes and most of that is the motorcycle and sidecar, which go together in small clean stages rather than one long grind. The Privet Drive mini build is genuinely the last thing you snap together, the lamppost, the chain barrier, and the tipping planter, and it is over almost as soon as it starts. There is no filler here in the sense of repetitive plates or padding, everything in the box is doing a job, which is the one place the small piece count works in the set's favor.
The standout piece is Hagrid himself, an oversized minifigure with a dual-molded face so you can pose him with or without his riding goggles, a treatment usually reserved for headline characters. The new motorcycle fairing is the other real find, purpose built to nail the shape of the flying motorcycle at this scale rather than reusing an old mold. Beyond that it is mostly straightforward parts doing straightforward jobs, which is honestly the trade-off you are making, you are buying the figures and the mechanism, not a parts bin worth raiding.
Fun facts
- 01This is the first LEGO set to build Hagrid's flying motorcycle and sidecar at true minifigure scale.
- 02It is a smaller, cheaper companion to 2025's larger 76443 Hagrid & Harry's Motorcycle Ride set.
- 03Hagrid's oversized minifigure includes two face options so he can be posed with his riding goggles up or down.
- 04The Privet Drive flowerpot planter is built to tip over as part of the escape scene, not just for display.
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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