Play with Braille - Spanish Alphabet
A brick set built to teach reading with your fingertips, not just your eyes.
Brick Rated Score
Set 40724 · 2024
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I sat with this one longer than I expected to, running my thumb over the raised dots on each brick and thinking about how strange it is that a toy company solved a literacy problem better than most classrooms have.
Every brick here doubles as a Braille cell and a printed letter or number, so a sighted parent and a blind child can sit at the same table and actually read the same piece together. It is not flashy, there is no vehicle to roll or minifig to pose, and that is exactly the point. This is a set for teachers, therapy centers, and families raising a visually impaired kid in Spanish, and for that audience it is close to essential.
Best for: parents, teachers, and therapists teaching Braille literacy to Spanish speaking kids
What it is
This is part of the LEGO Braille Bricks line, a project the LEGO Foundation built with national blind and Braille organizations so kids who are blind or have low vision can learn to read by touch using bricks that feel exactly like standard 2x4 LEGO pieces. Every stud pattern matches the real six dot Braille cell for that letter, number, or punctuation mark, and the brick also has the character printed on top so a sighted teacher, parent, or sibling can read along in real time. The Spanish alphabet version adds the letters and accent marks unique to Spanish, including enye, so the full alphabet a Spanish speaking child needs to learn actually fits in the box.
The catch
I want to be upfront about the biggest catch, because it will matter more than any part count or price ever could. LEGO does not sell these Braille Bricks sets through its shop, through Amazon, or on store shelves. They are distributed free of charge to schools, libraries, and organizations that work with blind and visually impaired children, usually through a request process rather than a purchase. So if you are a parent hoping to just buy this for your kid this weekend, the honest answer is you may need to go through an institution rather than a checkout page. It is also, by design, not a display piece. There is no finished model to admire on a shelf, the value is entirely in the activities you build with it over repeated sessions.
Who it's for
If you teach, tutor, or parent a blind or low vision child who is learning to read in Spanish, this is one of the most genuinely useful things LEGO has ever put its name on, and I'd point any special education classroom toward the whole Braille Bricks line without hesitation. If you're after something to build once and put on a shelf, or you don't have a direct line to the intended use case, this one just is not built for you, and that's fine.
The parts story
What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.
There isn't a single build sequence here in the way a Star Wars ship has one, the 287 pieces are the full Spanish alphabet, digits zero through nine, and key punctuation and math symbols, each molded as its own Braille cell. Sorting the box by letter is itself the first lesson, since a sighted helper reads the printed character while a blind learner reads the dots, and matching the two builds the connection between them. The activities that come with it turn that sorting into actual games, spelling out words, building simple sums, or racing to find a requested letter by touch alone.
The standout piece here isn't a new mold or a flashy recolor, it's the concept: every brick is a fully functional Braille cell that still clutches and stacks like any other LEGO brick, so kids get tactile reading practice using a toy that already feels completely familiar in their hands. The printed characters are crisp and consistent across the whole alphabet, and the inclusion of Spanish-specific letters and accented vowels means this isn't just an English set with a sticker swapped, it's a properly localized alphabet.
Fun facts
- 01LEGO Braille Bricks was developed with national Braille authorities and blind advocacy organizations across multiple countries before any sets went into classrooms.
- 02Each brick is fully compatible with standard LEGO bricks, so a child can build regular models with the same pieces they use to learn to read.
- 03The line has been produced in numerous language versions since its first release, with the Spanish alphabet version adding letters like enye and accented vowels specific to Spanish.
- 04LEGO distributes these sets for free to schools and organizations serving blind and visually impaired children rather than selling them at retail.
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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