Harry Potter

Luna Lovegood's House

The house that finally takes Potter LEGO somewhere new, and shines a story on the wall while it does it.

Brick Rated Score

4.2 out of 54.2/5

Set 76467 · 2026

Pieces764
Minifigs5
Year2026
Set number76467

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The verdict

This is the first time we've had Luna's rook-shaped tower in bricks, and honestly it was worth the wait.

The light brick projector that casts The Tale of the Three Brothers onto the kitchen wall is one of the cleverest functions LEGO has done in a while, and Xenophilius finally getting a minifigure made me grin. The price stings a little and the footprint is smaller than the box suggests, but if you want your Potter shelf to be more than another slice of Hogwarts, this is the one. Best for Harry Potter collectors who are tired of castle walls and want a set with real character.

Best for: Harry Potter collectors who want something beyond another chunk of Hogwarts

The full review

What it is

Luna's house has been begging to be a LEGO set for years, and here it finally is. On screen it's that strange black cylindrical tower that Xenophilius tells everyone is shaped like a rook chess piece, and LEGO built half of that tower so you can see straight into the floors. The kitchen sits at the bottom, Xenophilius's Quibbler printing room in the middle with the printing press and the Erumpent horn, and Luna's painted bedroom up top with her Thestral easel and Spectrespecs on the wall. It's a set with actual personality, decorated on the outside with quirky plants and the famous Dirigible Plums, and the first time I got the projector working I sat there running it again just to watch the little artifacts appear.

The catch

I'll be straight with you about the caveats, because they are real. This is $89.99 for 764 pieces, and when it's finished it's smaller than the packaging leads you to expect, just over eleven inches tall and fairly shallow front to back. The three rooms on the back are cosy at best, so if you were dreaming of a deep dollhouse full of play space, temper that. And the minifigure selection is a mixed bag: Xenophilius is wonderful and exclusive, but Harry and Hermione are lifted torso and all from Malfoy Manor, and there's no Ron in his Deathly Hallows outfit despite this being exactly the scene for him. Little things, but they add up when the price is this steep.

Who it's for

So who should get it? If you're a Harry Potter collector who has already built the castle three times over and wants something with a distinct silhouette on the shelf, this is an easy yes. The rook-tower shape, the color palette, and that projector give it a presence most Potter sets don't have. If you mainly buy for interior play or you judge every set on strict price per piece, you'll feel the squeeze here and might want to wait for a discount. For everyone in between, I think the charm wins. It's the rare Potter set that feels like a place rather than a wall, and Luna deserved exactly that.

The parts story

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

The build is more inventive than the modest part count suggests. The star technique is the curved staircase, where semi-circle tiles stack one on top of another to make stairs that spiral up the round tower, and it comes out surprisingly sturdy while looking a little bit magical. Working the tower's cylinder shape while keeping the interiors accessible keeps you engaged the whole way through, and the fresh black-and-blue palette is a nice change from the greys and tans of most Potter architecture.

For parts hunters, the headline is the LEGO light brick tucked into the projector assembly, paired with printed elements that throw the Three Brothers artifacts and the Deathly Hallows symbol onto the wall. There's a good haul of stickers for the bedroom and printing room, plus the printed Erumpent horn and the Dirigible Plum plant pieces for the exterior. Five minifigures with dual-molded heads and wands, an exclusive Xenophilius, and the collectible Hare Patronus round out a parts mix that leans more into printed character detail than raw brick value.

Fun facts

  • 01In the films and books, Xenophilius insists the house is built to resemble a rook chess piece, and LEGO leaned into that by modeling half of the tall black cylindrical tower so you can see all three floors inside.
  • 02The set marks the first time Xenophilius Lovegood has ever been made as a minifigure, and he is the only figure exclusive to this box.
  • 03The middle floor recreates the room where the printing press churns out The Quibbler and where the trio first hear The Tale of the Three Brothers, complete with the Erumpent horn used in the escape scene.
  • 04A light brick projector casts images of the Deathly Hallows and the three magical artifacts onto the kitchen wall, one of the most ambitious play functions in a recent Harry Potter set.

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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