Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver Helmet
A quietly clever helmet that punches above its slightly obscure subject.
Brick Rated Score
Set 75458 · 2026
Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
I did not expect to fall for a driver helmet from a movie that is barely out, but the shaping on this one won me over fast.
The visor is genuinely one of the smartest bits of building LEGO has put in the Helmet Collection, all angled panels and sneaky geometry that reads perfectly from a shelf. My honest hesitation is the subject: this is a fairly minor Imperial trooper, so how much you love it depends on how attached you are to the Mandalorian and Grogu corner of Star Wars. If you collect the helmets or you like a build that keeps surprising you, get it.
Best for: Helmet Collection completists who love a clever visor build
What it is
This is the fifteenth entry in the LEGO Star Wars Helmet Collection, and it recreates the sharp-angled helmet worn by the Imperial Remnant AT-RT Drivers from the upcoming Mandalorian and Grogu film. It landed on June 1st 2026 at 69.99 dollars for 775 pieces, wears the usual 18-plus label, and sits on a small stand with a printed nameplate. What got me was not the box art but the finished shape. The AT-RT Driver helmet has a lot of hard facets and a wide flat visor, and LEGO has captured the proportions convincingly enough that it genuinely reads as the on-screen version from across a room. It is one of those builds where you keep tilting your head and thinking, how on earth did that panel end up sitting at that angle.
The catch
I will be straight with you about the caveats, because they matter here. The biggest one is not build quality, it is relevance. The AT-RT Driver is a background Imperial trooper, so this is a helmet you buy because you love the technique or the collection, not because it is an icon like a Vader or a Boba Fett. The price is the other honest sticking point. At 69.99 dollars for a single display model with no minifigure, you are paying helmet-collection rates, and if you are not already invested in that shelf it can feel steep for what you get. It is not a huge or lengthy build either, so treat it as an evening of clever engineering rather than a weekend project.
Who it's for
So who should get it? If you already own a row of these helmets, this is an easy yes, because the visor build alone earns its place and the shaping holds up next to the best in the line. Fans of the Mandalorian era and anyone who enjoys a model that teaches you a new trick or two will get real satisfaction out of it. I would gently steer past it if you only want the marquee Star Wars faces, or if you want a big piece-count model to sink hours into, because on both of those counts this one will leave you wanting. Judged as what it actually is, a compact and genuinely smart helmet build, it is very good with one honest asterisk over the subject.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
Building it follows the Helmet Collection rhythm: you start with an interior core that anchors to the display base, then work outward adding angled shell sections that slowly turn a blocky center into that sharp trooper silhouette. It moves along at a nice pace, and the fun is in the sections that build sideways or upside down and only make sense once they click into place. The visor is the showpiece, assembled with SNOT and careful angling that feels closer to a proper geometry puzzle than standard stacking, and it is the part most reviewers single out as the reason to own the set.
Because the palette is mostly grey, black, and off-white, the interest is in the technique rather than flashy new elements, though the printed nameplate is a tidy finishing touch and the clean slopes and curved panels give the surface its convincing shaping. At 775 pieces for 69.99 dollars you land around nine cents a part, which is fair for a licensed display set even if it is not a bargain. The value here is really in the building method more than the parts bin: you come away with a few angling tricks worth stealing for your own builds.
Fun facts
- 01The AT-RT Driver Helmet is the fifteenth model in the ongoing LEGO Star Wars Helmet Collection.
- 02It was released on June 1st 2026 to tie in with the theatrical Mandalorian and Grogu film.
- 03Like every helmet in the collection, it ships with an 18-plus label and no minifigure, just the helmet and a nameplate stand.
- 04It was revealed alongside the up-scaled Darth Vader minifigure (75461), part of LEGO's 2026 Star Wars display wave.
What other builders say
This write-up is grounded in real reviews and builder discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:
More reviews
All reviews
World Map
The biggest LEGO set ever made, and yes, it's really one enormous mosaic.

Eiffel Tower
The tallest LEGO set ever, and it makes you earn every centimetre.

Titanic
The longest LEGO set ever made, and one of the most rewarding builds I've done.