Disney

Main Street, U.S.A.

A whole slice of Disneyland's Main Street, and 16 figs to fill it.

Set 43302 · 2026

Pieces3,899
Minifigs16
Year2026
Set number43302

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The verdict

If you've walked down the real Main Street, U.S.A.

and got a bit misty about it, this LEGO® set is going to hit you right in the nostalgia. You get three connected shopfronts, a fire truck, a popcorn wagon, and a genuinely great crew of 16 minifigures for around 400 dollars. Just go in knowing it's more facade than mansion, so it rewards people who love the theme more than folks chasing pure brick-for-your-buck value.

Best for: Disney park fans who want Main Street on the shelf

The full review

What it is

So here's the pitch: this is Disneyland's Main Street, U.S.A. shrunk down into a 78cm-wide row of shops you can put on a shelf. You get three buildings side by side, the fire station (with a sneaky nod to Walt Disney's 'secret' family apartment upstairs), the Emporium, and the Crystal Arcade, plus a little fire truck and a popcorn wagon out front. It landed in June 2026 to mark Disneyland's 70th anniversary, and honestly, if you've done the walk down that street with a churro in hand, the set nails the feeling of it. The turn-of-the-century small-town Americana look, the ornate trim, the shop windows crammed with tiny Disney merch references. It's a love letter to the park, and it wears that on its sleeve.

The catch

Now the honest bit, because your wallet deserves it. At around 400 dollars for 3,899 pieces the price-per-piece is fine on paper, but a lot of builders take one look and go 'that's it?' The buildings are pretty flat. There's not much depth behind those lovely frontages, so it genuinely does have that spaghetti-western film-set quality where it's all about the front and there's not a ton going on behind. One reviewer summed it up as three okay sets thrown together, which is a little harsh but not wrong. A big chunk of the Disney signage that gives it charm arrives on a sticker sheet, too. And because it's a LEGO exclusive, you won't be snagging it at 20 percent off from a third party any time soon. If you measure a set by wow-per-dollar or by playable interiors, this one's going to feel thin.

Who it's for

But here's who should absolutely grab it: park people. If Disneyland means something to you, if you can hear the Dapper Dans in your head right now, this set is built for you and it'll make you grin every time you walk past it. The minifig lineup alone carries a huge amount of the joy, and the theming is spot on. Who should skip it? If you're a general LEGO fan hunting for a big architectural centerpiece with proper mass and depth, your money goes further elsewhere (a Modular Building or two would give you more actual building). Worth knowing there's no Brickset community rating yet since it only launched in June 2026, so early buyers are going off reviews alone. Our take: it's a passion piece, not a value pick, and that's completely fine as long as you know which one you're buying.

The parts story

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

The build breaks cleanly into three shopfronts, so it's got a modular rhythm to it, knock out one building, take a breather, start the next. It builds a lot like the Modular Buildings line in feel, with detailed little shop interiors and a fair bit of stickered signage and window dressing to bring the storefronts to life. The ornate upper-floor trim is where the fun techniques hide, with quarter domes and canopy work giving the frontages that period gingerbread look. Because the depth is shallow, most of your time goes into decorating those faces rather than deep interior architecture, which some builders love (constant visual payoff) and others find a touch repetitive across three similar structures.

For parts nerds this box is a proper treasure chest. The headline molds are the new Mickey ears as an actual minifigure headpiece and Minnie bows as a hair accessory, plus a new tan straw boater hat the Dapper Dans wear that MOC builders are already eyeing for architecture. There's a genuinely useful haul of recolors too: sand blue slopes in several shapes (including the 30th color of one of them), dark red quarter domes for those fire station canopies, and the very first white version of an 18-year-old container box mold. Add three new Mickey-ears dome bricks in magenta, medium azure, and lime green, and you've got a set that keeps paying off in the parts bin long after the shelf photo is taken.

Fun facts

  • 01The set dropped in June 2026 to mark Disneyland's 70th anniversary, recreating the park's famous entry street where every guest's day begins.
  • 02The fire station hides a nod to the 'secret' apartment Walt Disney actually built for himself above the real Main Street fire station.
  • 03Mickey's iconic ears show up as a brand-new 2x2 dome brick mold in magenta, medium azure, and lime green, plus a first-ever Mickey ears minifigure headpiece.
  • 04Seven of the park-guest minifigures wear all-new exclusive torsos referencing Disney properties like Pixar, Toy Story, Marvel, and Star Wars, with the Star Wars one printed double-sided.

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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