Harry Potter

Privet Drive: Aunt Marge's Visit

The Dursleys finally get a house you can walk all the way around, and it is a proper little dollhouse.

Brick Rated Score

4.3 out of 54.3/5

Set 76451 · 2025

Pieces640
Minifigs5
Year2025
Set number76451

Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

The verdict

This is the Privet Drive I have wanted for years.

Instead of another flat facade propped open at the back, you get a fully enclosed house that swings apart like a dollhouse, and every previous version suddenly looks like a movie set flat by comparison. The inflated Aunt Marge floating up to the ceiling is one of the funniest things LEGO has put in a Harry Potter box. My one real grumble is the sticker sheet, and there are a lot of them.

Best for: Harry Potter fans who want the definitive number 4 Privet Drive on the shelf

The full review

What it is

The moment that sold me on this one was opening the finished house up and realising there was a whole back half to explore. For the first time LEGO built number 4 Privet Drive as a complete, enclosed structure rather than the shallow open-backed facades we got in earlier sets, and it swings apart like a dollhouse to show the kitchen, the living room, Harry's cramped upstairs bedroom and, tucked underneath, the cupboard under the stairs. It is the Prisoner of Azkaban scene where Aunt Marge comes to stay, insults Harry's parents, and then puffs up like a balloon and drifts out of the window, and the whole thing is captured with real affection for the source material.

The catch

I will be straight with you about the two things that give me pause. The first is the sticker sheet. There are 27 stickers in here, and on a 640-piece set that is a lot of careful lining up, especially on the smaller interior details. If stickers make your heart sink, know that going in. The second is value on paper. At 89.99 it actually has 158 fewer pieces than the 2020 number 4 Privet Drive (75968), which stings a little when you are staring at the price tag. The saving grace is that the enclosed build genuinely feels denser and more finished than the older facade did, and the set has already been showing up at a decent discount, which is where it becomes an easy recommendation.

Who it's for

If you are a Harry Potter fan who wants the definitive Dursley house on the shelf, this is the one to get, full stop. It photographs beautifully, it has the whole family plus Ripper the bulldog, and the Aunt Marge gag will make anyone who knows the films grin. If you are chasing pure parts value or you groan at the thought of stickers, I would wait for a sale rather than pay full price. And if you already own the 2020 version and love it, this is an upgrade rather than a must-have, though I think the enclosed design wins easily.

The parts story

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

The build is a comfortable evening or two, aimed at ages 8 and up but perfectly relaxing for an adult. You start with the ground floor and work up, and the clever bit is how the structure hinges so the conservatory and walls open out for access to the interior instead of leaving you fishing through a roof. The stickers aside, it flows nicely, with satisfying little moments like fitting the removable bars onto Harry's window and hiding the secret door through to the cupboard under the stairs.

The headline part is the inflated Aunt Marge, a small buildable figure that captures her ballooning up out of the film, and it is the first time she has appeared as a minifigure at all, so you essentially get two Marges in one box. The regular family minifigures (Harry, Vernon, Petunia, Dudley and Marge) all carry nicely printed torsos and faces, and Ripper the bulldog is a sweet touch. There are no headline new molds, but the printed interior details and the brick-built furniture do a lot of the heavy lifting to make the house feel lived in.

Fun facts

  • 01This is the first time LEGO has ever made an Aunt Marge minifigure, and the set effectively gives you two versions of her: the standard minifigure and a small buildable figure of her inflated and floating.
  • 02It is the first Privet Drive set built as a fully enclosed house rather than an open-backed facade, opening up like a dollhouse to reveal the interior.
  • 03Despite costing the same or more, it contains 158 fewer pieces than the 2020 set 75968 4 Privet Drive, a reminder that piece count alone is a poor measure of a set's value.
  • 04The build recreates the Prisoner of Azkaban scene, including a secret door to the cupboard under the stairs and removable bars on the window of Harry's bedroom.

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